T.C. Memo. 2016-28
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
RAYMOND S. MCGAUGH, Petitioner v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket No. 13665-14. Filed February 24, 2016.
P had a self-directed IRA of which M was the custodian and
which held stock in corporation X. P requested that M purchase
additional stock in X for the IRA. Although the investment in X was
not a prohibited investment for the IRA, M refused to purchase the
stock directly. At P’s request M issued a wire transfer directly to X;
and more than 60 days thereafter, X in turn issued the stock in the
name of P’s IRA. M reported the transaction to the IRS because M
had determined that the wire transfer was a distribution to P not
followed by a rollover investment within the period permitted under
I.R.C. sec. 408(d)(3). R consequently determined that there was a
distribution from the IRA to P and a deficiency in P’s income tax for
the 2011 taxable year.
Held: There was no distribution from the IRA to P.
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[*2] Eric C. Onyango, for petitioner.
Michael C. Dancz and Kathryn E. Kelly, for respondent.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
GUSTAFSON, Judge: The Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) issued to
petitioner, Raymond S. McGaugh, a statutory notice of deficiency pursuant to
section 62121 on March 17, 2014, for Mr. McGaugh’s 2011 Federal income tax.
In the notice the IRS determined a deficiency in tax of $13,538 arising from a
distribution from Mr. McGaugh’s individual retirement account (“IRA”) and an
accuracy-related penalty of $2,708 under section 6662(a). The matter is currently
before the Court on Mr. McGaugh’s motion for summary judgment pursuant to
Rule 121, which the Commissioner has opposed.
The issue for decision is whether a transaction involving the removal of
$50,000 from Mr. McGaugh’s IRA to purchase stock for his IRA constituted a
distribution that was not rolled over within the 60-day period allowed in section
1
Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal
Revenue Code (26 U.S.C.; “the Code”), as amended, and all Rule references are to
the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. All amounts are rounded to the
nearest dollar.
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[*3] 408(d)(3) and is thus taxable income. For the reasons stated below, we will
grant summary judgment in Mr. McGaugh’s favor.
Background
The facts set forth below are based on the pleadings and other pertinent
materials in the record and are not in dispute. See Rule 121(b). Mr. McGaugh’s
petition alleges an address in Illinois.
Since 2002 Mr. McGaugh has maintained a self-directed IRA with
custodian Merrill Lynch, and the IRA held 10,000 shares of stock in First Personal
Financial Corp. (“FPFC”). The Commissioner asserts, and we assume, that
Mr. McGaugh is a member of the board of directors of FPFC, but the
Commissioner has not denied that FPFC stock is permitted to be an asset in the
IRA. In the summer of 2011, Mr. McGaugh requested that Merrill Lynch use
funds from his IRA to purchase an additional 7,500 shares of FPFC stock.
However, for reasons the record does not show, Merrill Lynch would not purchase
the shares directly on Mr. McGaugh’s behalf.
Consequently, Mr. McGaugh requested that Merrill Lynch initiate a wire
transfer of $50,000 directly to FPFC. On October 7, 2011, Merrill Lynch initiated
and FPFC received the wire transfer. (There is no evidence that Mr. McGaugh
requested an IRA distribution to himself.) On November 28, 2011, FPFC issued
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[*4] the stock certificate not in Mr. McGaugh’s name but instead in the name of
“Raymond McGaugh IRA FBO Raymond McGaugh”, as Mr. McGaugh had
requested. FPFC claims that the stock certificate was mailed to Merrill Lynch on
or about the same day as the November 28, 2011, issuance date on the certificate;
but because Merrill Lynch states that the stock certificate was not received until
“early 2012”, we treat the timing of the transmittal of the stock certificate to
Merrill Lynch as being in dispute and assume it was in 2012. Thereafter Merrill
Lynch attempted to mail the stock certificate to Mr. McGaugh, but it was returned
by the postal service at least twice. The record does not show where the original
stock certificate is currently located; but we assume (as the IRS asserts) that
Mr. McGaugh holds it (an assertion he denies).2
For purposes of Mr. McGaugh’s motion, we assume that Merrill Lynch
received the stock certificate from FPFC more than 60 days after the wire transfer,
which Merrill Lynch therefore reckoned to be outside the 60-day limitation period
2
The stock certificate evidently remains in limbo. Mr. McGaugh insists that
Merrill Lynch is obliged to hold the stock as an asset of the IRA, but Merrill
Lynch denies that it possesses the stock certificate. In early 2015 FPFC stated
that, before it could issue a replacement certificate, it would need “a lost certificate
affidavit with a hold harmless from Merrill Lynch * * * since that is the party that
we issued the original certificate to”. The year at issue is 2011, and we do not
address the tax effects, if any, of the later dealings among Mr. McGaugh, FPFC,
and Merrill Lynch.
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[*5] for a qualified rollover transaction under section 408(d)(3). Believing the
transaction to be subject to the rollover rules, and believing the transfer to be
outside the 60-day limit, Merrill Lynch reported the $50,000 transaction as a
taxable distribution on Form 1099-R, “Distributions From Pensions, Annuities,
Retirement or Profit-Sharing Plans, IRAs, Insurance Contracts, etc.” and refuses to
treat the FPFC stock as an asset of the IRA. Mr. McGaugh continues to object to
the refusal.
The IRS determined that the wire transfer issued by Merrill Lynch
constituted a “distribution” from Mr. McGaugh’s IRA and was includible in gross
income under sections 408(d) and 72 and that, because he had not yet reached
age 59-1/2, it was an “early distribution” subject to the 10% additional tax of
section 72(t). The IRS issued a notice of deficiency for the 2011 tax year
determining a $13,538 deficiency in tax as well as an accuracy-related penalty of
$2,708. Mr. McGaugh timely filed his petition on June 11, 2014, seeking
redetermination of the liability and filed a motion for summary judgment on May
26, 2015, to which the Commissioner responded.3
3
The Commissioner filed a response on June 24, 2015, and a supplemental
response on September 8, 2015. At the Commissioner’s request, this case was
called at the Court’s session in Chicago, Illinois, on October 19, 2015, so that a
subpoena that the Commissioner had issued to Merrill Lynch could be enforced.
(continued...)
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[*6] Discussion
I. Standard for summary judgment
Under Rule 121 (the Tax Court’s analog to Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure), the Court may grant summary judgment where there is no
genuine dispute as to any material fact and a decision may be rendered as a matter
of law. The moving party (here, Mr. McGaugh) bears the burden of showing that
no genuine dispute of material fact exists, and the Court will view any factual
material and inferences in the light most favorable to the non-moving party.
Dahlstrom v. Commissioner, 85 T.C. 812, 821 (1985); cf. Anderson v. Liberty
Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 255 (1986) (same standard under Fed. R. Civ. P. 56).
“The opposing party is to be afforded the benefit of all reasonable doubt, and any
inference to be drawn from the underlying facts contained in the record must be
viewed in a light most favorable to the party opposing the motion for summary
judgment.” Espinoza v. Commissioner, 78 T.C. 412, 416 (1982). Since we
consider Mr. McGaugh’s motion for summary judgment, we draw all inferences in
3
(...continued)
Attorneys for Merrill Lynch produced documents to the Commissioner and
appeared at the calendar call. The Commissioner’s counsel stated that she would
review the documents and discuss them with Merrill Lynch’s attorneys. In the
months that have elapsed since then, the Commissioner has not filed any motion to
compel nor filed any further response to Mr. McGaugh’s motion for summary
judgment.
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[*7] favor of the Commissioner. That is, we assume the facts as shown by the
Commissioner, the non-moving party, or as shown by Mr. McGaugh and not
disputed by the Commissioner.
II. General IRA principles
As we previously explained in Peek v. Commissioner, 140 T.C. 216, 222-
223 (2013):
A taxpayer who invests his money in the hope of making a gain
over a period of years--whether to fund his retirement or for any other
purpose--normally must pay tax on that gain as he realizes it. Sec.
1001(a), (c). His payment of the tax from time to time diminishes the
size of his investment and thereby, to some extent, diminishes his
future gains. However, a taxpayer may create an “individual
retirement account”, which is exempt from tax under section
408(e)(1) and in which his investment can therefore increase until his
retirement without being diminished by income tax liability. As long
as the account qualifies as an IRA, the taxpayer-investor is not liable
for income tax on the gains, so that the undiminished investment
account can earn maximum returns until the time comes for payout,
when the taxpayer will finally owe income tax on those greater gains.
Under section 408, the benefit of the traditional IRA is thus deferral
of income tax liability on retirement investment gains. * * *
Generally, under section 72, amounts distributed to the taxpayer from an IRA are
includible in the taxpayer’s gross income, see sec. 408(d)(1), and those amounts
are subject to a “10-Percent Additional Tax” if the taxpayer has not yet “attain[ed]
age 59-1/2”, see sec. 72(t).
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[*8] The IRA must be a trust or a custodial account, administered by a trustee or
custodian (here, Merrill Lynch) who acts as a fiduciary for that IRA. Sec. 408(a),
(h); 26 C.F.R. sec. 1.408-2(a), (d), Income Tax Regs. The fiduciary is responsible
for the investment and disposition of the property held in the IRA. 26 C.F.R. sec.
1.408-2(e).
An amount will not be treated as a taxable distribution from an IRA if it is a
qualified rollover. Sec. 408(d)(3). A distribution is considered a qualified
rollover contribution if the entire amount an individual receives is paid into a
qualifying IRA or other eligible retirement plan within 60 days of the distribution.
Id.; see also Schoof v. Commissioner, 110 T.C. 1, 7 (1998).
Because the IRA paid out $50,000 (to FPFC) at Mr. McGaugh’s request and
for his ultimate benefit, and because (as we assume for purposes of the pending
motion) that amount was not repaid to the IRA (in the form of the FPFC stock)
until after the 60-day rollover period, Merrill Lynch and the IRS treated the
transaction as a taxable distribution.
III. The occurrence of a distribution
A. There was no literal distribution of IRA funds to Mr. McGaugh.
Section 408(d)(1) provides that “any amount paid or distributed out of an
individual retirement plan shall be included in gross income by the payee or
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[*9] distributee”.4 Construing the facts in the Commissioner’s favor, the evidence
shows that Merrill Lynch wired money to FPFC for which FPFC issued shares to
the IRA. No cash, check, or wire transfer ever passed through Mr. McGaugh’s
hands, and he was therefore not a literal “payee or distributee” of any amount.
B. Mr. McGaugh was, at most, a conduit of the IRA funds.
The Commissioner evidently reckons that the foregoing account is an over-
simplified description of the transaction, since Merrill Lynch declined to make a
direct purchase and instead simply wired funds at Mr. McGaugh’s instruction, thus
arguably putting the funds at Mr. McGaugh’s discretion. But if we adopt this
perspective on the transaction and acknowledge Mr. McGaugh as the director of
the transaction, the outcome does not change. The owner of an IRA is entitled to
direct the investment of the funds without forfeiting the tax benefits of an IRA.
Even acknowledging that Mr. McGaugh pulled all the strings, it remains true that
the funds the IRA released went straight to the investment and resulted in the
stock shares’ being issued straight to the IRA.
4
The regulations elaborate slightly by providing that “any amount actually
paid or distributed or deemed paid or distributed * * * shall be included in the
gross income of the payee or distributee”, 26 C.F.R. sec. 1.408-4(a)(1), Income
Tax Regs. (emphasis added); but it appears that a “deemed distribution” occurs
when an IRA ceases to qualify because of a prohibited transaction or where the
taxpayer uses the IRA’s assets as collateral for a loan, id. para. (d). Thus, the
regulations shed no light on the issue in this case.
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[*10] If we analyze the situation for possible “constructive receipt” of the funds
from Merrill Lynch by Mr. McGaugh (and constructive transfer of the funds by
him to FPFC), the outcome still does not change. “It is well established that the
mere receipt and possession of money does not by itself constitute gross income.”
Liddy v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1985-107, aff’d, 808 F.2d 312 (4th Cir.
1986). “We accept as sound law the rule that a taxpayer need not treat as income
moneys which he did not receive under a claim of right, which were not his to
keep, and which he was required to transmit to someone else as a mere conduit.”
Diamond v. Commissioner, 56 T.C. 530, 541 (1971), aff’d, 492 F.2d 286 (7th Cir.
1974).
Thus, money received as a mere agent or conduit is not includible in gross
income. Liddy v. Commissioner, 808 F.2d at 314; Diamond v. Commissioner,
56 T.C. at 541. We have held that this principle may apply in the case of a
taxpayer and an IRA, see Ancira v. Commissioner, 119 T.C. 135, 138 (2002); and
the IRS so acknowledges.5 The question at issue here is whether, in the wire
5
As the Commissioner states in his supplemental opposition (at 7-8) to the
motion for summary judgment, “if Merrill Lynch, as custodian of petitioner’s IRA,
purchased the shares with funds from petitioner’s IRA, either through petitioner as
an agent/conduit or otherwise, then there may not have been a distribution. See
Ancira v. Commissioner, 119 T.C. 135, 137-40 (2002) (the withdrawal of funds
from an IRA did not give rise to a distribution, where the withdrawal was in the
(continued...)
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[*11] transfer and subsequent stock purchase, Mr. McGaugh acted as a conduit to
or an agent of the IRA fiduciary and custodian, Merrill Lynch.
Neither the Code nor the applicable regulations provide specific guidance
on whether or when an amount is considered to have been “paid or distributed out
of an individual retirement plan” through the use of the beneficiary as a conduit
from the custodian to the investment. This Court has, however, addressed a case
involving facts similar to Mr. McGaugh’s: In Ancira v. Commissioner, 119 T.C.
at 136, the taxpayer maintained a self-directed IRA, and during the year at issue he
requested that his IRA custodian purchase a particular company’s stock for his
IRA. While the issuing company’s stock was a permissible asset that could be
held by the IRA, company policy of the custodian of the account did not permit it
to directly purchase stock that was not publicly traded. Id. The taxpayer therefore
requested a check made payable to the non-public issuing company, and the
custodian sent the taxpayer the requested check. Id. The taxpayer forwarded the
check to the issuing company, and the issuing company issued the stock
certificate. Id. at 136-137. The certificate stated that the taxpayer’s IRA was the
owner of the shares of the stock, and the taxpayer presumed that the issuing
5
(...continued)
form of a check that could not be negotiated by the account owner, and the funds
were used by the IRA custodian to acquire stock).”
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[*12] company had sent the stock certificate to the IRA custodian as instructed.
Id. at 137. However, for unspecified reasons the certificate was not delivered to
the custodian, and the taxpayer did not discover the mistake until after receiving a
notice of deficiency from the IRS. Id. After learning of the error, the taxpayer
directed the issuing company to send the stock certificate to him, and he then
delivered it directly to the custodian. Id.
In Ancira we held that no distribution from the IRA to the taxpayer occurred
when the custodian delivered the check to him. Id. at 139. We observed that no
distribution would have occurred if the custodian had either purchased stock
directly from the issuing company or sent a check to a broker who then purchased
the stock for the IRA. Id. at 137-138. We held that the taxpayer acted as an agent
or conduit for the custodian because the taxpayer arranged the purchase but was
not in constructive receipt of the check and the ownership of the stock was directly
assumed by the IRA. Id. at 138. Moreover, we determined that the delay of the
delivery of the stock certificate to the custodian was a bookkeeping error, which
“did not alter the ownership of the stock by the IRA and certainly did not transfer
the ownership to * * * [the taxpayer].” Id. at 140.
Like the taxpayer in Ancira, Mr. McGaugh wished to acquire for his IRA
stock that apparently could not be purchased directly by the custodian, Merrill
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[*13] Lynch. Mr. McGaugh therefore arranged the purchase of FPFC stock,
instructed Merrill Lynch to make the wire transfer to FPFC, and instructed FPFC
to deliver the certificate directly to Merrill Lynch. Moreover, unlike the taxpayer
in Ancira, who received a check from the IRA and delivered it to the issuing
company, Mr. McGaugh never personally handled any check by which the IRA
funds were transmitted to FPFC. Instead, he requested that Merrill Lynch transfer
the funds via wire transfer directly to the issuing company, and that transfer was
duly made without Mr. McGaugh’s interposition. And unlike the stock in Ancira,
the FPFC stock certificate was sent directly to the custodian.
The Commissioner emphasizes that “[i]t appears that petitioner is in
possession of the purported stock certificate.” Even if Mr. McGaugh had physical
possession of the stock certificate, he was not in constructive receipt of the asset.
The “essence [of constructive receipt] is that funds which are subject to a
taxpayer’s unfettered command and which he is free to enjoy at his option are
constructively received by him whether he sees fit to enjoy them or not.” Ancira
v. Commissioner, 119 T.C. at 138 (quoting Estate of Brooks v. Commissioner, 50
T.C. 585, 592 (1968)). Here, the stock was issued not in Mr. McGaugh’s name
but in the name “Raymond McGaugh IRA FBO Raymond McGaugh”. Even with
physical possession of the stock certificate, Mr. McGaugh could not have realized
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[*14] any practical utility or benefit from the certificate in the name of the IRA.
(And if Merrill Lynch’s attempts to mail the IRA’s stock certificates to
Mr. McGaugh in “early 2012” (contrary to his instructions and intention) gave him
ownership of the shares, then that was a distinct 2012 transaction that would not
affect his 2011 income tax liability.)
We are not persuaded by the Commissioner’s argument that Mr. McGaugh’s
circumstances are similar to that of the taxpayer in Dabney v. Commissioner, T.C.
Memo. 2014-108. In Dabney this Court found a taxable distribution from the
taxpayer’s IRA when the taxpayer explicitly requested an IRA distribution (to
himself) with the goal of purchasing land for his IRA but failed to return the
distribution (or any other property) to the account within the 60-day rollover
period of section 408(d)(3). Id. at *5. The policies of the custodian, Charles
Schwab, did not permit real property to be an asset of its IRAs, id. at *4, *11, so in
March 2009 Mr. Dabney requested a distribution of his IRA funds and a transfer
of those funds to the title company handling the property sale. Contrary to
Schwab’s policies, Mr. Dabney directed the company to issue title in the name of
the IRA, but it failed to do so and put the property in his name. He tried to sell the
property and finally succeeded in January 2011 and wired the proceeds to Schwab
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[*15] as a purported “rollover contribution”. We held that the transfer of the funds
from the IRA to Mr. Dabney constituted a taxable distribution.
Here, by contrast, Merrill Lynch previously permitted FPFC stock as an
asset to be held in Mr. McGaugh’s IRA, and its subsequent correspondence seems
to indicate that if the stock at issue had been received within the 60-day period, it
would have been accepted. And here the stock certificate bears the name of the
IRA as its owner; and it is therefore not like the real property in Dabney that, for
more than a year, was titled in the name of the individual taxpayer. Mr. Dabney
requested a distribution in order to conduct a real estate transaction not permitted
by the IRA, whereas Mr. McGaugh directed the IRA to make a permissible
investment. This case is not like Dabney.
Rather, this case resembles Ancira. We hold that Mr. McGaugh did not
receive a distribution when Merrill Lynch made the wire transfer to FPFC; and to
the extent that he had control over the wired funds, he at most acted as a conduit
for the IRA custodian. Consequently, the 60-day limitation on a rollover under
section 408(d)(3) does not really come into play in this case. The timing of the
mailing of the shares (i.e., more than 60 days after the wire transfer) does not alter
our conclusion that there was no distribution from the IRA to Mr. McGaugh. We
will therefore grant Mr. McGaugh’s motion for summary judgment.
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[*16] To reflect the foregoing,
An appropriate order and decision
will be entered.