T.C. Memo. 1997-448
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
DHARMA ENTERPRISES, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER
OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket No. 16756-95. Filed September 30, 1997.
Charles W. Tuckman, Richard A. Saffir, and Robert C.
Alexander, for petitioner.
James P. Thurston, for respondent.
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
GERBER, Judge: Respondent determined deficiencies in
petitioner's Federal income tax and accuracy-related penalties
under section 6662(a)1 for taxable years ending May 31 as
follows:
1
Unless otherwise indicated, all section and subchapter
references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the
years in issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court
Rules of Practice and Procedure.
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Year Deficiency Penalty
1991 $209,006 $41,801
1992 192,075 38,415
1993 204,804 40,961
After concessions, the issues for consideration are:
(1) Whether the royalties paid to Dharma Mudranalaya for certain
intangible assets were reasonable in amount, (2) whether
petitioner is entitled to deduct net operating loss carryovers in
taxable years 1991 and 1993, (3) whether petitioner must increase
gross sales by $7,095 in taxable year 1992, and (4) whether
petitioner is liable for a section 6662(a) accuracy-related
penalty for each of the years in issue.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Petitioner had its principal place of business in Oakland,
California, at the time the petition in this case was filed.
Petitioner operates a sheet-fed, lithographic commercial printing
business and provides typesetting, prepress, printing, and
binding services. Petitioner also prints religious calendars,
postcards, and greeting cards through its Amber Lotus division.
Petitioner claimed deductions under section 162(a) for the
payments to Dharma Mudranalaya (DM), a related entity, pursuant
to a license agreement for certain intangible assets in taxable
years ending May 31 as follows:
Year Deduction Claimed
1989 $648,000
1990 785,000
1991 680,817
1992 854,840
1993 788,189
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Deductions claimed by petitioner in 1989 and 1990 produced
net operating losses (NOL’s) of $55,918 and $26,854,
respectively, which petitioner carried forward to 1991.
Similarly, petitioner claimed deductions in 1992 that resulted in
an NOL of $4,957, and petitioner carried forward the NOL to 1993.
Respondent disallowed the deductions as in excess of fair market
royalties for the licensed assets. Petitioner reported taxable
income for the taxable years in issue of:
Year Taxable Income
1991 $200,338
1992 (4,957)
1993 115,160
Petitioner was incorporated in June 1987 as a nonprofit
mutual benefit corporation under the nonprofit mutual benefit
corporation law of the State of California. Cal. Corp. Code sec.
7110 (West 1990). It is a taxable subchapter C corporation for
Federal income tax purposes but has not issued any capital stock.
Petitioner's profits are to be used for a common purpose of its
members, who do not personally benefit from its profits.
Petitioner's articles of incorporation provide that petitioner
was formed "to contribute financially and in other ways to the
activities and welfare of non-profit organizations dedicated to
the transmission and preservation of the Buddha Dharma". Despite
petitioner's stated purpose, petitioner has not made a charitable
contribution to a Buddhist organization since its inception. A
secondary purpose of petitioner is to provide a work environment
in which to practice Buddhist principles.
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Petitioner is part of a network of organizations established
under the leadership of Tarthang Tulku (Tulku), a Buddhist lama
with active lineage of the Nyingma school of Tibetan Buddhism.
The organizations are dedicated to the preservation of Tibetan
Buddhism and include, among others: (1) DM, (2) the Tibetan
Nyingma Meditation Center (Meditation Center), (3) the Nyingma
Institute in Berkeley, California, and a branch campus in
Boulder, Colorado, and (4) Nyingma Centers Corp. (collectively
Nyingma organizations or Dharma organizations). Individuals
associated with these organizations are referred to as the
Nyingma community; i.e., individuals who practice and/or are
interested in the teachings of the Nyingma school of Tibetan
Buddhism.
Tulku has adapted Tibetan Buddhist teachings for the West.
The Nyingma community refers to the practice of Buddhist
teachings, or Dharma, in the West as "skillful means". In 1978,
Tulku wrote a book titled Skillful Means, which describes the
practice of Buddhist teachings in everyday life. Skillful means,
as taught by Tulku, involves work as a spiritual practice with
certain spiritual value. The book suggests that the application
of Buddhist principles enables individuals to become more
successful in their work, which makes work more satisfying and
meaningful. The Nyingma Institute offers classes in skillful
means.
DM prints and publishes rare Tibetan Buddhist texts and art.
DM's goals are to preserve traditional Tibetan Buddhist texts, to
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transmit Buddhist teachings in the West, and to provide a work
setting in which to practice Buddhist teachings. DM was a
section 501(c)(3) organization for Federal tax purposes from
December 1, 1987 to November 30, 1992. From its inception in
1975 to 1985, DM was also engaged in the commercial printing
business. In 1985, employees of DM who were members of the
Nyingma community formed Skillful Means Enterprises, also known
as Skillful Means Press (SMP), to take over DM's commercial
printing business, and DM ceased its commercial printing
operations. Most of SMP's employees were members of the Nyingma
community. DM provided a startup loan and rented printing
equipment and building facilities to SMP. DM intended that SMP
would not own any assets. DM also licensed the right to use
certain intangible assets, including the name "skillful means",
to SMP in exchange for royalties.
A member of the Nyingma community, Arnaud Maitland
(Maitland), formed petitioner in June 1987 to provide binding
services to SMP. Maitland earned a master’s degree from the
Nyingma Institute and served as its dean from 1980 to spring
1987, first at its Boulder campus and then in Berkeley. Maitland
has taught classes at the Nyingma Institute, including classes in
skillful means. He lived at the Nyingma Institute for rent of
$200 per month. Maitland was petitioner's chief executive
officer.
One month after petitioner's incorporation, in July 1987, DM
notified SMP that its license and rental agreements would
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terminate in March 1988. DM terminated the agreements in part
because SMP had been behind on the royalty payments since its
inception. DM terminated SMP's license even though SMP had
become a profitable business and was growing rapidly. In 1987,
SMP had over $2.8 million in gross sales. Petitioner's ability
to take over SMP's printing business also instigated DM's
decision to terminate SMP's license.
DM immediately entered into negotiations with petitioner for
the license of intangible assets and the sale of printing
equipment. DM did not contact any other party regarding the
license. Maitland represented petitioner in the license
negotiations. Jack Petranker (Petranker) negotiated the license
agreement for DM. Petranker was a director and officer of DM and
replaced Maitland as dean of the Nyingma Institute. Petranker,
who had a law degree, prepared and filed the articles of
incorporation for petitioner and signed as petitioner's sole
incorporator. Petranker is not involved in petitioner's business
operations. Petranker also lent petitioner startup capital. In
March 1988, petitioner owed over $70,000 to Petranker.
When he formed petitioner, Maitland did not have any
experience in the printing industry. Maitland began working at
SMP as a production manager, without compensation, in July 1987
to learn about the printing business. SMP allowed Maitland to
work for it despite the fact that DM planned to enter into a
license agreement with petitioner. Maitland relied on SMP's
business plans to determine petitioner's expected profits and did
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not prepare his own business plans. Maitland also examined SMP's
financial information and met with SMP's customers and suppliers
and with industry experts to determine SMP's production capacity
and profitability. SMP also trained petitioner's newly hired
employees. Several months after SMP provided this assistance to
petitioner, a merger of petitioner and SMP was proposed.
The merger occurred upon the termination of SMP's license
and rental agreements with DM. Petitioner remained as the
surviving corporation. All of SMP's members became members of
petitioner, and three became directors of petitioner. In
addition, the majority of SMP's employees began working for
petitioner. Petitioner took over SMP's printing business and
completed SMP's work in progress. Pursuant to the merger
agreement, petitioner assumed all of SMP's assets and
liabilities, including a $70,000 loan from Petranker.
Petitioner and DM entered into a sales agreement for the
printing equipment in November 1987 and a license agreement in
December 1987 to become effective at the termination of SMP's
license and rental agreement. The parties amended the license
agreement on two occasions.2 First, they amended the license in
1989 to list the licensed assets and clarify the terms of the
original license agreement. Second, they amended the license in
2
The stipulation of facts provides that the license
agreement was amended on three dates: June 1, 1989, Jan. 25,
1990, and Feb. 1, 1990. The Jan. 25, 1990, and Feb. 1, 1990,
amendments are similar in substantive terms, and both reduce the
royalty payments in equal amounts. For our convenience in this
opinion, we refer to the Jan. 25, 1990, and Feb. 1, 1990,
amendments as one amendment.
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1990 to reduce the amount of the royalty payments. When
petitioner and DM amended the license agreement, they were
represented by the same attorney who worked for the various
Nyingma organizations.
The license agreement, as amended, granted to petitioner the
right to use the name "Dharma" and the trade names "Dharma
Enterprises", "Skillful Means Press", "Amber Lotus", and
"Dharmart Designs". Tulku personally approved petitioner's use
of "Dharma" in its name. DM has not registered any of these
trade names or the name Dharma as trademarks with either the
Federal or State government. The license provides that
petitioner's Dharma name identifies it as an approved Dharma
organization. Members of the Nyingma community and the Nyingma
organizations recognize petitioner as a Dharma organization.
Petitioner also licenses a moon/cloud logo, which DM designed at
petitioner's request.
Pursuant to the amended license agreement, petitioner
received the right to "Certain proprietary Know-How, including
DM's expertise, [and] management techniques * * * for achieving
increased production and efficiency with a minimal workforce" and
the right to market this management technique. Petitioner
referred to this licensed asset as skillful means management
technique (SMMT).3 SMMT involves the application of Dharma
3
Use of "skillful means management technique" and SMMT
does not express any decision with regard to DM's proprietary
interests in the materials pertaining to Buddhist principles
given to petitioner or the value of those materials.
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principles in a business setting and is derived from the
principles set forth in the 1978 "Skillful Means" book.
Petitioner refers to "Skillful Means" as a general introduction
to the practice of Dharma and the licensed SMMT as an advanced
version. SMMT focuses on three distinct aspects of human nature
to make work more successful and more satisfying: Awareness,
concentration, and energy. Employees record their level of each
of these three resources, such as low, medium, or high, during
different times of the workday. Then they graph the results in
order to determine which of the three resources supports their
work activity, their state of mind, and their ability to
communicate and cooperate with coworkers at the different periods
of the day. Employees engage in this exercise to become more
productive and efficient in their work. In addition, they
attempt to determine the amount of time and energy wasted during
work hours from thinking about things unrelated to their jobs.
Petitioner hired employees who were interested in practicing
Buddhist principles in a commercial work setting and who wanted
to work for a company whose profits were used to preserve Tibetan
Buddhist texts and art. Approximately 30 percent of petitioner's
75 employees practiced SMMT in their work (Nyingma employees).
Petitioner's Nyingma employees did not have prior experience in
the printing business, except for the employees who had worked at
SMP. Nyingma employees had practiced skillful means, or Buddhist
teachings, in previous jobs, read Tulku's "Skillful Means", and
taken skillful means classes at the Nyingma Institute before
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coming to work for petitioner. Petitioner also hired employees
with printing experience who did not practice Tibetan Buddhist
teachings at work (non-Nyingma employees).
DM provided manuals and essays on SMMT to petitioner and
consulted with petitioner regarding the practice of SMMT by
petitioner's employees. Petitioner held weekly classes on SMMT
for its Nyingma employees. At the classes, Nyingma employees
discussed their own experiences with SMMT in their work. Nyingma
employees also participated in individual discussions with each
other regarding their work experiences. Petitioner and the
Nyingma Institute subsidized the costs of classes that Nyingma
employees took at the Nyingma Institute. Petitioner did not
distribute the SMMT manuals that it received from DM to
nonmanagerial personnel. It did hand out SMMT pamphlets and
essays to Nyingma employees during class. Nyingma employees were
asked not to photocopy the materials and were required to return
them at the end of the class.
Petitioner paid its Nyingma employees significantly less
than it paid non-Nyingma employees with similar responsibilities.
Nyingma employees generally made less than $5 per hour, while
non-Nyingma employees made from $15 to $25 per hour. The wages
of petitioner's Nyingma employees were below the average wage of
nonunion employees in the printing industry in Northern
California. Nyingma employees worked at least 60 hours per week,
while non-Nyingma employees worked 40 hours a week. Also,
Nyingma employees had low absenteeism and low turnover as
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compared with non-Nyingma employees. Many of the Nyingma
employees lived at the various Nyingma organizations. Petitioner
estimated that it saved over $500,000 a year in labor costs
because of Nyingma employees' below-market wages and efficiency.
During the years in issue, SMMT was continually being
developed and revised. Petitioner contributed to these revisions
by sharing its experiences with the use of SMMT. Tulku wrote
some of the SMMT materials. Maitland wrote an article about his
experiences with SMMT that became part of the SMMT materials
given to petitioner under the license. In 1994, DM published
"Mastering Successful Work", written by Tulku, as a sequel to the
1978 "Skillful Means". "Mastering Successful Work" is related to
SMMT and is based on the SMMT materials transmitted to petitioner
under the license agreement. Members of the Nyingma
organizations, other than petitioner, also applied Dharma in
their work. For example, Maitland practiced Dharma principles as
dean of the Nyingma Institute, and employees of SMP had also
practiced skillful means, which SMP had licensed from DM. SMMT
materials have been given to at least one other Nyingma
organization which did not have a license agreement with DM or
pay either petitioner or DM for use of the materials. During the
years in issue, petitioner did not market SMMT. In 1995,
petitioner held a 5-day seminar on SMMT, earning $7,500.
As part of the 1990 amendment to the license agreement, DM
also agreed not to compete with petitioner in the commercial
printing industry for 5 years and to refer commercial customers
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to petitioner. In addition, the amended license agreement
granted to petitioner the right to two computer software
programs, including software that prepares price estimates for
printing jobs. An employee/director of petitioner updated the
computer software as necessary. Petitioner did not solicit bids
for the computer software from other companies before licensing
it from DM.
Petitioner also received a list of DM's commercial customers
from its 1985 business. Neither the original license agreement
nor the subsequent amendments specifically identified a customer
list as a licensed asset. However, both parties understood and
intended that the agreement conveyed to petitioner the right to
use DM's customer list. DM had previously licensed the same
customer list to SMP in 1985. When SMP's license terminated,
DM's 1985 customer list reverted to DM pursuant to the license
agreement.
Petitioner was formed without any capital contribution from
its members and primarily relied on DM, other Nyingma
organizations, and members of the Nyingma community for
financing. DM and another Nyingma entity financed petitioner's
purchase of the printing equipment. Petitioner borrowed money
from the Nyingma Institute and from various individuals,
including Petranker, for startup capital. Petitioner also
received favorable credit terms from suppliers that enabled it to
start business with capital contributions from its members. In
1989, DM and the Meditation Center financed petitioner's purchase
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of a $1 million, four-color printing press. The purchase of the
four-color press prompted petitioner and DM to amend the license
agreement to reduce the amount of the royalty payments. An
unrelated bank denied petitioner a loan for this press unless the
royalty payments were decreased. Although petitioner borrowed
the money from DM and the Meditation Center instead of the bank,
petitioner and DM still decreased the royalties to ensure that
petitioner would be able to repay the loan.
Tulku serves as honorary chairman of petitioner's board of
directors. Petitioner views Tulku's chairmanship as a public
endorsement of petitioner as a Nyingma organization. Petitioner
paid the following amounts to Tulku for his chairmanship in
taxable years ending May 31:
Year Compensation
1991 $25,440
1992 26,140
1993 26,640
Tulku is not active in petitioner's business operations and has
never attended a board meeting. However, Tulku frequently
discusses SMMT with Maitland.
During the years in issue, all of petitioner's directors
were associated with, had studied and practiced, or were
interested in, the Nyingma school of Tibetan Buddhism and the
general Buddhist teachings known as Dharma. In addition, most of
petitioner's directors lived at the various Nyingma
organizations. DM and petitioner had two common directors. Two
of petitioner's directors, one of which was Maitland, served as
directors of the Nyingma Centers Corp., an umbrella corporation
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which oversees and coordinates the activities of the various
Nyingma organizations. Two directors, including Maitland, had
taught skillful means classes at the Nyingma Institute and served
as its dean.
Petitioner's market for its commercial printing business,
with the exception of the Amber Lotus division, encompassed the
greater San Francisco Bay Area. It did not advertise its
commercial printing business and primarily relied on customer
referrals and cold calls to obtain new customers. Petitioner had
a reputation as a high-quality, low-priced printer that provided
good customer service. Petitioner's Amber Lotus division
advertised through a variety of methods. The Amber Lotus
division accounted for approximately 7 percent of petitioner's
gross sales during the years in issue. Amber Lotus was started
by DM in 1986.
In taxable year 1991, petitioner reported gross sales of
$6,239,139 on its tax return. Respondent determined that
petitioner underreported its gross sales by $8,301. Petitioner
concedes an increase in its gross sales of $1,206. Petitioner
reported gross sales of $7,095 less than reflected on its books
and records because petitioner double counted sales on its books
and records by this amount. Petitioner had issued two invoices
to a customer for the same print job and recorded both invoices
as gross sales on its books and records. The customer paid both
invoices and then informed petitioner about the overbilling.
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Petitioner issued a credit to the customer in the amount of
$7,095 to adjust for the prior overbilling.
OPINION
The primary issue for our consideration is whether
petitioner's royalty payments to DM were reasonable in amount.
To the extent petitioner's payments to DM are disallowed as
royalties, petitioner argues that it is entitled to deduct the
payments under section 162 as payments to a charitable
organization in expectation of commensurate financial benefit.
Taxpayers are entitled to deduct royalty expenses incurred
in carrying on a trade or business that are reasonable in amount
under section 162(a)(3). Sierra Club Inc. v. Commissioner, 86
F.3d 1526, 1531 (9th Cir. 1996), affg. in part and revg. in part
103 T.C. 307 (1994); Surloff v. Commissioner, 81 T.C. 210, 232
(1983); Differential Steel Car Co. v. Commissioner, 16 T.C. 413,
423 (1951). Reasonableness is a question of fact to be
determined from all the facts and circumstances. Petitioner
bears the burden of proving the reasonableness of royalty
payments. Rule 142(a); New Colonial Ice Co. v. Helvering, 292
U.S. 435, 440 (1934). Respondent agrees that petitioner may
deduct the royalty payments under section 162(a)(3) to the extent
they were reasonable.
Royalty payments between related parties require special
scrutiny to determine whether they are reasonable in amount.
Royalty payments are reasonable if an unrelated third party
dealing at arm's length would have agreed to the payments.
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Merritt v. Commissioner, 39 T.C. 257, 270 (1962), revd. on
another issue sub nom. Paragon Jewel Coal Co. v. Commissioner,
330 F.2d 161 (4th Cir. 1964), revd. 380 U.S. 624 (1965); Belknap
v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1989-210. Typically two parties are
considered closely related if they have common owners. However,
petitioner is a nonprofit corporation under the laws of the State
of California and does not have shareholders. Nevertheless, we
find that petitioner is closely related to DM for Federal income
tax purposes and that petitioner and DM did not negotiate the
amount of the royalty payments at arm's length.
Petitioner and DM have a common purpose, to preserve Tibetan
Buddhism. Petitioner's payments to DM satisfy its stated purpose
to financially support the Buddha Dharma. Petitioner has a tax
incentive to characterize the payments to DM as fully deductible
royalties as opposed to charitable contributions for which
deductions are limited under section 170. DM also benefits from
the relationship because it received the profits from a
commercial printing business while minimizing the risks to its
tax-exempt status. Ordinarily, a common purpose between two
charitable or religious organizations will not result in a
finding that the two entities are closely related for tax
purposes, subjecting their transactions to close scrutiny by a
court with regard to the reasonableness of transactions between
them. Based on the facts and circumstances of this case, we find
that petitioner and DM are closely related parties and used that
relationship to claim excessive deductions that are not justified
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by business reality. In such circumstances, it is appropriate
for us to consider the relationship between a religious
organization and its members.
Maitland, petitioner's founder and chief executive officer,
had a longstanding, close relationship with the various Nyingma
organizations. Maitland studied at the Nyingma Institute, served
as its dean, taught classes there, and lived at the school.
Maitland was also a director of Nyingma Centers Corp. In
addition, Petranker, who negotiated the license for DM, had ties
to petitioner. He prepared its articles of incorporation and
acted as the sole incorporator. Petranker also lent startup
capital to petitioner so that its founders did not have to make
capital investments. In 1988, petitioner owed over $70,000 to
Petranker. Moreover, all of petitioner's nine directors were
members of the Nyingma community and subscribed to the teachings
of the Nyingma school of Tibetan Buddhism. Petitioner’s
directors also served as directors of the other Nyingma
organizations, lived in the Nyingma housing, were deans of the
Nyingma Institute, and had taught courses there. In addition,
Maitland recruited employees for petitioner from the classes he
taught at the Institute.
The manner in which petitioner and DM conducted the license
negotiations raises suspicion and leads to a finding that arm's-
length bargaining did not exist. Maitland did not prepare a
business plan and relied on plans and sales projections prepared
by SMP. Petitioner received valuable assets from DM, including
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trade names and trademarks, SMMT, the right to commercially
market SMMT, two computer software programs, DM’s customer list,
and a covenant not to compete. However, there is no evidence
that petitioner attempted to derive a monetary value for the
licensed assets before entering into negotiations and simply
wanted to pay the same amount of royalties that SMP paid.
Maitland admitted that he was careless in drafting and reviewing
the written agreement. He omitted the most important licensed
asset, SMMT, from the original license agreement and omitted the
customer list from both the original and amended agreements. DM
did not contact any interested third party to discuss possible
licensing of the intangible assets. In addition, petitioner and
DM were represented by the same attorney when they amended the
license agreement.
The financing that petitioner received from the various
Nyingma organizations also indicates that a close relationship
existed between petitioner and DM as two entities within a larger
network of Nyingma organizations. The Nyingma Institute lent
money to petitioner. DM along with other Nyingma organizations
financed petitioner's initial purchase of printing equipment and
the purchase of the four-color press in 1989.
Petitioner took SMP's place within the Nyingma network, and
SMP assisted petitioner in entering into the printing business.
SMP permitted Maitland to work there and also trained
petitioner's newly hired employees. Maitland relied on SMP's
business plans and profit projections rather than preparing his
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own. SMP provided this assistance before the merger with
petitioner was proposed and with the knowledge that petitioner
would be taking over its terminated license. SMP was run by
members of the Nyingma community and controlled by DM and the
other Nyingma organizations. The assistance that petitioner
received from SMP supports a finding of a close relationship
between DM and petitioner.
Petitioner wants to appear as an entity independent from DM
with its own desire to earn a profit. However, petitioner
constantly paid the majority of its after-tax profits to DM and
even sustained an after-tax loss during one of the years in
issue. Moreover, after petitioner paid its profits to DM, it had
to go to DM and another Nyingma organization for financing when
it needed a new printing press to stay competitive in the
industry. Petitioner dedicated its profits to benefit Buddhist
culture and traditions. It made no difference to petitioner
whether it paid large or small royalties to DM because the
profits given to DM would be used for these purposes. Because of
the close relationship between petitioner and DM, we find that
the license agreement was not the result of arm's-length
bargaining.
The determination of the amount of reasonable royalties in
this case requires two lines of inquiry: (1) What assets did
petitioner license from DM, and (2) what is the value of the
licensed assets? Both parties presented expert witnesses
regarding the value of the license agreement. We are not bound
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by the opinion of any expert witness when the opinion is contrary
to our judgment. Chiu v. Commissioner, 84 T.C. 722, 734 (1985).
We may accept or reject expert testimony as we find appropriate.
Helvering v. National Grocery Co., 304 U.S. 282, 294-295 (1938);
Seagate Tech., Inc. & Consol. Subs. v. Commissioner, 102 T.C.
149, 186 (1994).
Petitioner's expert report was prepared by Peterson
Consulting L.L.C. (Peterson Consulting). Mr. Philip Rowley
(Rowley), a vice president of Peterson Consulting, testified at
trial regarding his company's valuation of the license. Peterson
Consulting applied an incremental profit method to value the
license. For the valuation, Peterson Consulting included the
following assets as being part of the license agreement: Trade
names, trademarks and logos, SMMT, the right to market SMMT,
computer software, and certification as a Dharma/Nyingma
organization. Peterson Consulting also considered DM's covenant
not to compete in its evaluation of the license.
Under the incremental profits method, Peterson Consulting
estimated petitioner's profits with and without the licensed
assets. It attributed the difference between the two, or
incremental profits, to the value of the licensed assets. It
adjusted the value for applicable taxes and discounted it to
present value. Peterson Consulting valued petitioner's business,
as of the 1990 amendment, with the license at $5,611,392 and
without the license at $439,970 for incremental profits from the
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license of $5,171,422. It determined that the pretax, present
value of the license was $1,411,480 per year.
Peterson Consulting considered SMMT to be the majority of
the license's value and identified below-market labor costs and
employee productivity as two benefits of SMMT. To measure the
value of SMMT, Peterson Consulting compared petitioner's total
labor costs as a percentage of its gross sales with the industry
average labor costs-to-gross sales for sheet-fed printers with
similar gross sales from the Printing Industries of America, Inc.
(PIA) annual reports. In 1989 and 1990, petitioner's labor
costs-to-gross sales ratio was 21.36 percent, while the PIA
industry ratio was 38.38 percent. According to Peterson
Consulting, the 17.02-percent difference produced labor cost
savings for petitioner in 1989 and 1990 of $1,548,714. Peterson
Consulting did not include payroll taxes, worker compensation
insurance costs, and vacation wages as part of petitioner's labor
costs and overstated petitioner's labor costs savings.
Peterson Consulting also assessed the value of SMMT by
comparing petitioner's sales-to-assets ratio with the PIA
industry average. According to Peterson Consulting, the sales-
to-assets ratio measured petitioner's productivity. It
determined that petitioner's gross sales-to-net fixed assets in
1989 and 1990 was 9.44 percent, and the PIA industry average was
7.11 percent. It concluded that the higher sales-to-assets ratio
meant that petitioner had an additional $2.33 in sales for each
dollar that it spent on fixed assets compared to its average
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competitor. Peterson Consulting attributed $603,855 of
petitioner's incremental profits to petitioner's improved
productivity from using SMMT. However, Peterson Consulting
excluded over 50 percent of the cost of the four-color press
acquired in 1989 in petitioner's sales-to-assets ratio. This
omission overstates petitioner's productivity and is a
significant error in the valuation. Moreover, there is evidence
in the record that petitioner was inefficient and disorganized as
compared with other printing companies.
Peterson Consulting also applied this inaccurate sales-to-
assets ratio to project petitioner's sales without the license,
further distorting the license's value. It reasoned that
petitioner would not have obtained financing for the press
without the license agreement. There is no factual basis to
support this conclusion. When petitioner applied for a bank loan
for the four-color press, it was told that it had to reduce the
amount of the royalties to qualify for a loan. In that regard,
without the payment of the royalties to DM, petitioner would have
had above-average profitability, which makes it reasonable to
conclude that it would have been able to obtain independent
financing. The financing from DM is attributable to their close
relationship and is not an asset transferred pursuant to the
license agreement.
In general, the methodology of petitioner's expert report
makes it unreliable for valuation in this case. Peterson
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Consulting improperly attributed the entire amount of
petitioner's labor costs savings to the assets licensed from DM.
Petitioner had lower labor costs than its competitor because
Nyingma employees' work ethic and dedication to the teachings and
preservation of Buddhism made them willing to work for long hours
at below-market wages. Petitioner contends that it was able to
attract low-paid Nyingma employees only because it licensed SMMT
and the Dharma name from DM. Nyingma employees valued work as a
spiritual practice before working for petitioner. Petitioner's
Nyingma employees had experience with the various Nyingma
organizations, had studied Buddhist teachings, and read Tulku's
"Skillful Means". They had practiced skillful means in prior
jobs and had taken, and even taught, classes on that subject at
the Nyingma Institute.
Most likely, Nyingma employees would not have worked for
petitioner if it was not a Nyingma organization and associated
with Buddhism. However, we are not convinced that petitioner
would be a Dharma organization only if it paid royalties to DM.
Petitioner's stated purpose was to support Buddhism. The active
lineage referred to in the license amendment was through Tulku,
not DM, and Tulku was the leader of the Nyingma community. Tulku
publicly endorsed petitioner as a Dharma organization and served
as honorary board chairman. Tulku personally approved
petitioner's use of the Dharma name. Petitioner was viewed as an
authorized Nyingma organization by members of the Nyingma
community, in part, because of its association with Tulku. Tulku
- 24 -
was paid over $25,000 a year, independent of the royalties to DM,
for his public support of petitioner. These facts reduce the
purported value of the licensed Dharma name.
Petitioner argues that without the claimed royalty
deductions, its profitability would be substantially higher than
the industry average. However, profitability is not an accurate
measure of fair market royalties in this case because
petitioner's above-average profits were not attributable to the
license. Petitioner's expert did not specifically value the
individual assets licensed under the agreement or provide a
method to allocate the proposed value among the various assets.
Also, Peterson Consulting determined the profits generated by the
licensed assets and did not determine a fair market royalty for
the license. Thus, its expert report is only of limited utility
in our decision.
We find the method of valuation provided in respondent's
expert report to be more reliable than petitioner's methodology.
Consequently, we focus our attention on respondent's report.
Respondent's expert report was prepared by American Valuation
Group, Inc. (AVG). Dr. Herbert Spiro (Spiro), AVG's president,
testified regarding the valuation. In general, AVG valued the
same assets considered by Peterson Consulting. AVG's expert
report included the following assets and fair market royalties
for the licensed assets:
Licensed Assets 1991 1992 1993
SMMT $20,400 $21,012 $21,642
Computer software 4,000 4,000 4,000
Marketing of SMMT 1,000 1,030 1,061
- 25 -
Trademarks and trade names 52,396 57,636 62,823
Customer list 106,433 86,098 69,117
Right to financing -0- -0- -0-
Covenant noncompete -0- -0- -0-
1
Total 184,229 169,776 158,643
1
The expert report contained a mathematical error of $1
that we have corrected.
AVG used three methods of valuation to determine reasonable
royalty payments pursuant to the license agreement: (1) A
replacement cost method, (2) a market comparison method, and (3)
an income method. The method that AVG used depended on the
particular asset being valued.
First, AVG used the replacement cost method to value
petitioner's right to use and commercially market SMMT and the
computer software. AVG valued SMMT based on the $1,500 cost of a
4-week class at the Nyingma Institute for petitioner's eight
Nyingma managers for a total cost of $10,050 in 1990. AVG added
$10,400 for consultations provided by DM, mostly with Tulku,
regarding the application of SMMT. It assumed a 1-hour
consultation each week and a consulting fee of $200 per hour.
AVG discounted the value of SMMT licensed by petitioner as
compared with the courses now offered by the Nyingma Institute
because SMMT was being developed and revised during the years in
issue.
Respondent argues that the license agreement, as amended,
did not give petitioner the right to offer SMMT instruction to
nonmanagerial employees. The license agreement did not expressly
mention SMMT and conveyed the right to DM's expertise and
- 26 -
management techniques to improve worker productivity and
efficiency. We interpret the license agreement to include the
right to offer SMMT to both managerial and nonmanagerial
employees. Calling SMMT a management technique does not mean
that it is only available to managerial employees. The purpose
of SMMT is to increase productivity and efficiency in the work
force. Such improvements would not be possible without providing
instruction on SMMT to nonmanagerial employees. Petitioner held
weekly SMMT classes for all Nyingma employees. The fact that
petitioner only distributed the SMMT manuals to management does
not require the conclusion that SMMT was not available to
nonmanagerial employees. We find that petitioner licensed SMMT
for use by its managerial and nonmanagerial employees. Thus,
respondent's expert report understated the value of SMMT.
The wide availability of teachings of skillful means reduces
the value of SMMT. Petitioner attempts to distinguish between
skillful means, which Tulku described in his book with the same
name, and the licensed asset, which petitioner refers to as SMMT.
Petitioner's witnesses repeatedly referred to the book "Skillful
Means" as a general introduction to the practice of Dharma and
SMMT as an advanced version. However, petitioner has failed to
specifically identify the differences between skillful means and
SMMT that would enable us to assess the credibility of its
witnesses' testimony. Based on the record before us, we believe
that petitioner created an artificial distinction between
- 27 -
skillful means and SMMT to justify substantial transfers of its
profits to DM, a closely related entity.
Moreover, we do not agree with petitioner's contention that
SMMT is a proprietary trade secret that justifies the exorbitant
royalties that petitioner paid to DM. "Mastering Successful
Work", which DM published in 1994, relates to SMMT and sells for
$14.95. The preface of the book states that it is based on
materials that petitioner received pursuant to the license
agreement. Petitioner denies that "Mastering Successful Work"
reveals any of the allegedly proprietary SMMT materials.
However, the testimony of petitioner's witness with regard to
this issue is not credible. Moreover, the Nyingma Institute
offers skillful means classes, and DM published a book relating
to skillful means in 1978. Nevertheless, we find that
petitioner's license of SMMT does support the payment of some
royalties to DM.
We accept the general methodology of respondent's expert in
valuing SMMT. Respondent's expert, Dr. Spiro, valued SMMT based
on the tuition for classes at the Nyingma Institute. Respondent
argues that SMMT had little value because Nyingma workers valued
work as a spiritual practice before working for petitioner. SMMT
has value to petitioner and to its Nyingma employees apart from
the spiritual value that Nyingma employees place on work. SMMT
enabled the Nyingma employees to develop and expand their
practice of Dharma. SMMT provided a benefit to the Nyingma
employees similar to an employer's offering to pay for college
- 28 -
courses taken by its employees. Petitioner offered the
opportunity to practice SMMT in a structured environment, rather
than just learning about SMMT or skillful means in a classroom
setting. Petitioner argues that respondent undervalued SMMT
because the materials provided under the license are more
extensive than a 4-week class. We agree and adjust AVG's
valuation accordingly.
AVG valued petitioner's right to market commercially SMMT as
supporting royalty payments of $1,000 per year. Based on the
evidence in the record, petitioner did not earn any revenues from
marketing SMMT during the years in issue. AVG determined that
petitioner could have reasonably expected to earn annual revenues
of about $20,000 when it entered the 1990 license amendment. It
based this determination on a 5-day seminar that petitioner held
in 1995 that generated revenues of $7,500. AVG determined that
royalty rates for the right to conduct seminars are generally 5
percent and applied this rate to the projected $20,000 annual
revenues for royalty payments of $1,000 in each of the years in
issue.
Maitland believed that he could earn approximately $2,000 in
gross revenues from a 1-day seminar on SMMT. There is no
evidence in the record that petitioner intended to market SMMT.
The fact that petitioner did not conduct any SMMT seminars during
the years in issue shows that this right lacked value. In
addition, we find only a nominal distinction between SMMT and
skillful means. Accordingly, the skillful means classes offered
- 29 -
by the Nyingma Institute diminish the value of petitioner's right
to market SMMT. Petitioner's expert did not specifically value
petitioner's right to market SMMT. As we have no other
appropriate basis to evaluate this licensed asset, we accept
Spiro's valuation of the SMMT marketing right.
AVG also valued the computer software using the replacement
cost method and determined that the value of customized software
was $20,000, based on the cost of similar software, for an annual
value over a 5-year useful life of $4,000. Maitland believed
that comparable off-the-shelf software would have cost between
$60,000 and $70,000. However, petitioner did not consider
purchasing software from another company. DM did not provide
technical support for the software. This decreases the value of
the software because petitioner had to update the software
itself. We believe that AVG's valuation of the software is more
reliable than Maitland's uncorroborated testimony and accept
AVG's valuation.
Second, AVG relied on a market comparison to determine fair
market royalty payments for the licensed trade names and
trademarks. For the comparison, AVG considered royalties paid
for instant-print or quick-print franchises. It identified the
various assets received under these franchise agreements and
compared the quick-print franchises with the license agreement
only to the extent of the licensed trade names and trademarks.
Royalty rates associated with trade names and trademarks
represent the costs incurred by the franchisors to maintain the
- 30 -
value of the trade names and trademarks through advertising and
other promotional activities. AVG determined that royalty rates
attributable to advertising range from 1 to 2.5 percent of the
franchisee's gross sales with an industry average of 2 percent.
AVG assigned a value to the licensed trade names and trademarks
of 1 percent of petitioner's gross sales, which produced royalty
payments in the amounts of $52,396, $57,636, and $62,823, during
the years in issue, respectively. AVG established that DM did
not advertise the trade names or trademarks or engage in other
promotional activities. DM has not registered the trade names or
trademarks with any governmental unit. AVG believed that these
facts support a value for the licensed trade names and trademarks
that is substantially less than the average advertising fee rates
for quick-print franchises. Petitioner contends that DM owns a
nonregistered, common-law trademark in the licensed trade names.
Petitioner asserts that the quick-print industry, used by AVG in
its valuation, is not comparable to petitioner's business.
Quick-print businesses rely on advertising to attract walk-in
customers, but lithographic printers, such as petitioner,
generally do not have walk-in customers. Petitioner did not
advertise and relied on its quality and low prices to obtain
customers.
Although DM has not engaged in commercial printing since
1985, petitioner agues that DM has developed name recognition for
the word "Dharma" in the printing industry through its religious
printing activity. Petitioner's customers who testified at trial
- 31 -
did not attribute the name Dharma to DM's religious printing
business or state that they became petitioner's customers because
they associated the word Dharma with DM. Petitioner attracted
customers by the quality of its printing and low prices. There
is no evidence that petitioner's customers associated its quality
and prices with DM's business. At most, its customers associated
its name with Buddhism in general and not to DM's printing
business. DM has never used the names "Dharma Enterprises" or
"Skillful Means Press" in the printing business. DM did use the
name "Amber Lotus" beginning in 1986. Although there is no
evidence as to whether DM made Amber Lotus into a profitable
business before licensing it to petitioner, the name had some
value to petitioners. During the years in issue, petitioner's
Amber Lotus division accounted for approximately 7 percent of
gross sales. We hold that an unrelated third party would have
paid royalties for the trade names and trademarks in the amount
determined by AVG.
In addition to being a recognized trade name in the printing
business, petitioner maintains that the Dharma name identifies it
as a Dharma-authorized organization and enables it to hire low-
wage employees. The license agreement, as amended, purports to
grant to petitioner the right to present itself as an
organization sanctioned by an active Dharma lineage. Petitioner
maintains that AVG's comparison of the Dharma name with quick-
print trade names does not account for this value. We determine
that this alleged asset does not justify the royalty payments
- 32 -
disallowed by respondent. Petitioner's other connections to
Buddhism and the Nyingma community also attracted low-wage
employees.
Third, to calculate fair market royalty payments for DM's
customer list, AVG used an income approach to estimate the
revenues generated from the customer list during the years in
issue. AVG estimated the number of customers from the list that
were active customers during the years in issue. According to
AVG, revenues from a customer list decrease over time as customer
preferences and financial conditions change. AVG determined a 9-
year useful life for DM's customer list beginning in 1985. AVG
observed that over the 9-year life, a larger percentage of gross
sales from list customers was attributable to petitioner's own
efforts to maintain the customers. Accordingly, it adjusted the
list's value for petitioner's costs to maintain the list. AVG
also assumed that petitioner received the additions and changes
to DM's customer list after 1985 from petitioner's merger with
SMP and attributed new customers and increases in sales to a
particular customer after 1985 to either petitioner's or SMP's
efforts. AVG valued the customer list, based on projected net
profits generated from the list, at $106,433, $86,098, and
$69,117, during the years in issue, respectively.
Although its expert provided a value for the customer list,
respondent asserts that petitioner did not obtain a customer list
from DM under the license agreement. The license agreement and
amendments did not mention the customer list. Nevertheless, DM
- 33 -
transferred a customer list to petitioner, and the parties
intended the royalties to compensate DM for the list. Respondent
further argues that petitioner received the customer list in its
merger with SMP. Upon termination of SMP's license with DM, SMP
did not own the customer list; thus, it could not transfer it to
petitioner, as respondent argues. Petitioner argues that DM also
received any new customers that SMP developed when the license
terminated. We do not believe the uncorroborated testimony of
petitioner's witnesses that the customers developed by SMP also
reverted to DM.
Petitioner's business records show that it retained a larger
number of customers than AVG predicted. Over 50 percent of
petitioner's gross sales during the years in issue were
attributable to customers from DM's customer list. Petitioner
argues that AVG did not consider the actual sales generated by
DM's customers when determining the value of the customer list.
We recognize this as a flaw in respondent's valuation of the
customer list, but there is no evidence in the record of the
revenues generated by the customers in 1985. As AVG established,
it is necessary to adjust the value of the customer list for
petitioner's own efforts to maintain and increase the sales to
the customers. SMP's 1987 gross sales of $2.8 million provide
some insight into the portion of sales revenues that is due to
petitioner's efforts. Without specific information about the
revenues generated from the customers in 1985, our ability to
value the customer list is limited. However, we find that
- 34 -
respondent undervalued the customer list, and we adjust our
decision accordingly.
AVG determined that petitioner's ability to obtain financing
from DM had no value as part of the license agreement. DM,
acting with other Nyingma organizations, provided financing to
petitioner at about 16-percent interest for the purchase of its
initial printing equipment and the four-color press in 1989. AVG
determined that the prevailing interest rate in 1989 was about 10
percent. AVG concluded that the license did not give petitioner
the right to below-market financing. Therefore, AVG did not
assign any value to petitioner's purported right to financing.
Petitioner argues that it would not have been able to start
its business without financing from DM and the Nyingma network
and community because petitioner's members did not make capital
investments in the business. Petitioner paid interest on the
money borrowed from DM, and there is no evidence that the
interest rate was below the market interest rate. We doubt that
DM provided financing as an independent third party or because of
the license agreement. Rather, DM provided financing because of
its close relationship with petitioner and because DM intended to
receive the majority of petitioner's profits disguised as royalty
payments. We hold that the financing from DM has no effect on
the royalty value.
AVG also did not assign a value to DM's 5-year covenant not
to compete in commercial printing and DM's agreement to refer
customers to petitioner. AVG reasoned that DM ceased commercial
- 35 -
printing in 1985 in order to maintain its tax-exempt status and
that DM did not intend to return to the commercial printing
business. Without an intent to compete, AVG believed that the
covenant lacked economic meaning. In addition, petitioner
indicated to AVG that customer referrals by DM were rare.
Taxpayers may amortize the amount paid for a covenant not to
compete over its useful life. Sec. 167(a); Warsaw Photographic
Associates, Inc. v. Commissioner, 84 T.C. 21, 48 (1985). A
covenant not to compete must have "economic reality"; i.e., some
independent basis in fact or some arguable relationship with
business reality so that a reasonable person would bargain for
the agreement. Patterson v. Commissioner, 810 F.2d 562, 571 (6th
Cir. 1987), affg. T.C. Memo. 1985-53; Beaver Bolt, Inc. v.
Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1995-549. The parties did not allocate
a portion of the royalties to the covenant.
Courts apply numerous factors in evaluating a covenant not
to compete. These include: (a) The grantor's (i.e.,
covenanter's) business expertise in the industry; (b) the
grantor's intent to compete; (c) the grantor's economic
resources; (d) the potential damage to the grantee posed by the
grantor's competition; (e) the grantor's contacts and
relationships with customers, suppliers, and other business
contacts; (f) the grantee's interest in eliminating competition;
(g) the duration and geographic scope of the covenant; and (h)
the grantor's intention to remain in the same geographic area.
Warsaw Photographic Associates, Inc. v. Commissioner, supra.
- 36 -
After considering the above factors, we find that the
covenant had economic reality and assign an appropriate value to
it. DM had the ability and expertise to enter into the
commercial printing business. DM stopped printing for commercial
customers in 1985 and sold printing equipment to petitioner.
However, DM continued to print and publish Tibetan Buddhist texts
and art. DM's reputation as a Buddhist printer could easily
translate into a commercial printing business. In addition, DM
had the necessary expertise, equipment, skilled personnel, and
contacts with suppliers to become a commercial printer.
Moreover, DM could adversely affect petitioner's business if DM
competed with petitioner. On the other hand, performing
commercial printing would jeopardize DM's tax-exempt status and
distract from its Buddhist traditions. We believe that DM may
have reentered the commercial printing business in the absence of
the payments from petitioner.
We hold that royalty payments in the amounts of $265,000,
$250,000, and $240,000 for the years in issue, respectively, are
reasonable compensation for the licensed assets and DM's covenant
not to compete.
Petitioner contends that the disallowed portion of the
royalty payments is deductible under section 162 as payments made
to a charitable organization in expectation of commensurate
financial benefit. Sec. 1.170A-1(c)(5), Income Tax Regs.
However, petitioner did not have a reasonable expectation of
financial return in the amount of the payments because it paid
- 37 -
the substantial majority of its after-tax profits to DM. There
is no evidence that petitioner received any economic benefits
from the payments to DM beyond the value of the licensed assets.
The excessive portion of the payments to DM is not deductible
under this argument.
In the notice of deficiency, respondent did not allow
petitioner to deduct any portion of the disallowed payments to DM
as charitable contributions under section 170. Petitioner did
not address on brief the deductibility of the excess payments to
DM as charitable contributions under section 170 and has not
proven that it is entitled to section 170 deductions.
Net Operating Loss Deduction
Respondent disallowed NOL deductions in taxable years 1991
and 1993. Petitioner generally has the burden of proof with
regard to NOL deductions. Hill v. Commissioner, 95 T.C. 437,
439-444 (1990). Petitioner contends, however, that respondent
has the burden to show that petitioner is not entitled to the NOL
carryforwards because respondent did not specify the disallowance
of the NOL’s in the statements or explanations attached to the
notice of deficiency.
Respondent is not required to provide a factual basis for
disallowed deductions. United States v. Zolla, 724 F.2d 808,
809-810 (9th Cir. 1984); Finkelman v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo.
1989-72, affd. 937 F.2d 612 (1991). The notice must (1) advise
the taxpayer that respondent in fact has determined a deficiency,
and (2) specify the year and amount of the deficiency. Campbell
- 38 -
v. Commissioner, 90 T.C. 110, 115 (1988). Petitioner argues that
respondent must specify the year in which the NOL’s that produced
the disallowed carryover deduction arose and the reasons
respondent disallowed the NOL’s in that year. We disagree. The
notice of deficiency in this case identifies the years in which
the NOL deductions were disallowed and the amount of the
disallowed NOL deductions. See sec. 7522. This is a sufficient
explanation to apprise petitioner with regard to the NOL
deductions, and the burden of proof has not shifted to respondent
on that issue.
Petitioner has failed to present sufficient evidence to
substantiate the claimed carryover losses that it deducted in
taxable years 1991 or 1993. In addition, petitioner's expert
report does not address the value of the license in taxable years
1989 and 1990. We sustain respondent's determination.
Adjustment to Gross Sales
Respondent determined that petitioner's gross sales as shown
on its books and records are greater than its gross sales as
reported on its 1991 income tax return. Petitioner reduced gross
sales reflected on its books for 1991 in the amount of $7,095 in
reporting gross sales to correct a customer overbilling. It
introduced business records reflecting the overbilling, including
the invoices, a credit memorandum, and business journals. In
addition, Maitland explained the nature of the discrepancy in the
amount of gross sales reported and shown on petitioner's books
- 39 -
and records. We find that petitioner accurately reported its
1991 gross sales.
Section 6662 Penalty
Section 6662(a) imposes a penalty of 20 percent of the
portion of an underpayment attributable to one or more of the
items set forth in section 6662(b), including negligence or
disregard of rules or regulations. See sec. 6662(b)(1).
Negligence is defined as the lack of due care or failure to do
what a reasonable and ordinarily prudent person would do under
the circumstances. Neely v. Commissioner, 85 T.C. 934, 947
(1985). A section 6662 accuracy-related penalty does not apply
with respect to any portion of an underpayment if reasonable
cause exists for the underpayment and the taxpayer acted in good
faith with respect to such portion. Sec. 6664(c)(1). The
determination of whether a taxpayer acted with reasonable cause
and in good faith depends upon the pertinent facts and
circumstances of the case. Sec. 1.6664-4(b)(1), Income Tax Regs.
Petitioner bears the burden of proving that the penalty does not
apply. Rule 142(a); Luman v. Commissioner, 79 T.C. 846, 860-861
(1982).
We find that petitioner paid royalties to DM significantly
in excess of the value of the licensed assets. These payments,
which were a substantial portion of petitioner's profits, were
made to a closely related company. The people in control of
petitioner and DM were similarly motivated to promote Buddhist
teachings. Petitioner paid its profits to DM as royalties rather
- 40 -
than making contributions to Buddhist organizations in line with
its stated purpose to financially support the preservation of
Buddhism. Petitioner has never made a charitable contribution to
support Buddhism. Petitioner acted negligently and in disregard
of rules or regulations with regard to its deductions of the
royalty payments to DM. Therefore, it is liable for a section
6662 penalty for each of the years in issue.
To reflect the foregoing,
Decision will be entered
under Rule 155.