Respondent determined deficiencies in petitioner’s Federal income tax for the years and in the amounts as follows:
Years Amount
1972. $27,425
1973. 18,905
1974. 13,191
1975. 2,740
1976. 1,586
1977. 185
1978. 1,416
By amendment to the answer, respondent asserts that the deficiencies constitute substantial underpayments attributable to tax-motivated transactions within the meaning of section 6621(c),1 formerly section 6621(d). The issues for decision all arise out of petitioner’s investment in a cattle program operated and offered by Southern Star Land & Cattle Co., Inc. (Southern Star).2 Petitioner’s investments were made in June 1971 and January 1972. This same cattle shelter has been the subject of three memorandum opinions of this Court: Hunter v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1982-126; Siegel v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1985-441; and Jacobs v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1985-609. Thus, the essential question to be determined is whether this petitioner’s case is factually distinguishable from Hunter, Siegel, and Jacobs. Petitioner contends that it is distinguishable.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated and they are so found. Petitioner’s residence at the time of the filing of this petition was in Hialeah, Florida.
In and prior to 1971, petitioner’s principal business was the management of beauty shops. In 1971, petitioner separated from his wife and allocated to her for her support many of the income-producing properties which comprised his beauty shop business. He also anticipated retirement upon reaching the age of 65 in 1975. Petitioner was looking for an investment which would produce significant income for his retirement years, when his income from other sources was expected to be materially reduced. In due course, petitioner inquired of Nathan Newman, an accountant, financial advisor, and attorney, who had been assisting petitioner for approximately 20 years, as to possible investments. Newman was then aware of the Southern Star program, and apparently had an arrangement with Southern Star for payment of a finder’s fee for investors in the program produced by him, a fact which petitioner did not discover until long after his investments had been made. Newman recommended that petitioner invest in the Southern Star program, which was described by him to petitioner as one which would not require petitioner’s personal attention, and would produce a regular income after retirement. Newman showed to petitioner a projection showing receipt of regular income after 1975. The projection had been prepared by a Mr. Levine who was described as a friend.3 Petitioner thereafter made some projections, himself, but made no other investigation. Petitioner was relatively unsophisticated in making investments, and had become accustomed to relying upon Newman, whom petitioner regarded as capable and unbiased. Petitioner had no experience in either ownership or management of cattle and had no desire to become a cattle operator. Petitioner’s reliance upon Mr. Newman’s advice under the facts of this case was reasonable.
On June 1, 1971, petitioner and Southern Star entered into a sales agreement providing for the purchase4 of a herd of 25 purebred Aberdeen Angus cows and a one-third interest in a bull. Simultaneously with execution of the sales agreement, petitioner entered into a management agreement pursuant to which Southern Star undertook to manage the herd. Petitioner probably executed a number of related documents, as specified in these two agreements, including one or more promissory notes, a security agreement, and he may have received a separate bill of sale. On January 17, 1972, petitioner entered into a similar set of agreements for the purchase of a herd of five Aberdeen Angus cows and a two-thirds interest in an Aberdeen Angus bull. The principal reason for acquisition of the second herd was to obtain the contract right under the management agreement to have the herd include a bull calf out of Southern Star’s prize bull. Petitioner never inspected the cattle allocated to his herds.
The parties have primarily sought to focus on the distinctions from and similarities to the facts in Hunter, Siegel, and Jacobs. Therefore, a discussion of Southern Star and its cattle program is a necessary background. Southern Star was organized in 1970 by Neil Levine and Harry Epstein.5 It operated three cattle ranches — at Citra, Florida; Cassoday, Kansas; and Marshfield, Missouri. In general, the Southern Star program contemplated the purchase of one or more herds of cattle, varying in size, with herd management by Southern Star constituting an essential element of the program. The terms of the management agreements were indefinite, with termination to occur when the herds were liquidated. Liquidation was to occur upon notice under varying circumstances, the investor’s opportunity to give notice being more restrictive than Southern Star’s. While the management agreement remained in effect, the herds were to be managed solely in the discretion of Southern Star. Each management agreement provided specifically that, so long as the agreement was in effect, Southern Star had “full control of the location, maintenance, expansion, breeding, and culling” as well as the determination of the “most opportune time for sales.” The size of each investor’s herd was to be increased by about 50 percent through the retention of calves. Calves which were not so retained were to be sold by Southern Star and the proceeds divided between the parties, except that in all transactions except petitioner’s 1971 purchase, the proceeds were applied first on the unpaid purchase price. The herds of specific investors such as petitioner were, at least in theory, identified by tattoo and ear tag numbers, but were mixed with other similar herds and other cattle of Southern Star and placed on one or more of the ranches in Southern Star’s discretion.
The purchase price of petitioner’s first herd was $62,5006; $10,000 of that sum was allocated to the one-third interest in a bull, reflecting a purported value for the bull of $30,000. The balance of $52,500 was allocated to the 25 cows, reflecting a purchase price per cow of $2,100. The sales agreement required a downpayment of $900 and installment payments of $300 per month, plus interest, starting July 1, 1971, for 30 months. Starting January 1, 1974, the monthly payments increased to $500 for the succeeding 90 months. Thus, within 10 years, $54,900 was specified in the contract to be paid on principal. The deferred payments were reflected by a nonrecourse promissory note.7 Petitioner originally intended to make each of these payments as they came due.
Petitioner’s second herd of five cows and a two-thirds interest in a bull (which actually turned out to be 2 one-third interests in two bulls) had a purchase price of $32,500. The downpayment was $1,000, and the balance was to be paid from 30 percent of the proceeds from the sales of cattle. The cows cost $2,500 each, and the bull was again valued at $30,000. Interest was required to be paid monthly from January 1, 1973, through December 1, 1974. Thereafter, interest was also payable from sales of cattle from the second herd. Petitioner was obligated under each management agreement to make substantial cash payments for Southern Star’s services in increasing amounts in each of the first 3 years.
During 1971, petitioner paid in cash, interest, as well as principal and maintenance. Principal payments on the first herd were made through 1974, aggregating $15,900. No payments were made after 1975, and the payments in that year of interest and for management were less than $200. Petitioner continued to make the specified payments of principal through 1974, although he was aware of continuing deficiencies in Southern Star’s management of the herds. He complained repeatedly about the inadequate calf crops, the failure to observe the 80-percent live birth guarantee,8 and the failure to increase the size of his herd, but his complaints were unheeded. All of the animals in the two herds remained registered with the American Angus Association in the name of Southern Star. In 1979, petitioner filed suit against Southern Star in the Circuit Court of Dade County, Florida, but ultimately abandoned the suit.9
The animals allocated to petitioner’s herds were of inferior quality, many having been purchased by Southern Star from the Black Watch Farm, a somewhat similar program which went into bankruptcy. The cows in petitioner’s herds were worth no more than the average auction sale prices of Aberdeen Angus cattle during this period, $468 in 1971, and $526 in 1972. The bulls allocated to the herds were worth approximately $647 in 1971, and $740 in 1972.10
In 1981, Southern Star ceased business. It purported to recognize a dollar liability to petitioner, but no payments were made to him. No collection efforts were made by petitioner since he believed that Southern Star was without assets. Petitioner’s herds were purportedly liquidated but petitioner never received any proceeds of sale. To the extent not sold to third parties, whatever was left of petitioner’s herds was transferred to another cattle operation in Mississippi without petitioner’s consent.
When petitioner made each of these investments in 1971 and 1972, he contemplated that his payments on the purchase price of the first herd, together with sales of culls and calves, would pay in full the purchase price of that herd by 1976 or 1977, and that the sales revenue generated from both herds would pay the purchase price of the second herd by 1979.
We have compared the sales and management agreements pertaining to petitioner’s two herds with those involved in the Siegel and Hunter cases, and find that the differences in petitioner’s documents are not material. Such differences as do exist are largely between petitioner’s 1971 sales agreement and the Siegel and Hunter sales agreements.11
The cows in petitioner’s 1971 herd cost $2,100 each, while in the Siegel herds of 10 cows, each cow cost $2,500. The one-third interest in the bull in each case cost $10,000. For the five cows in petitioner’s second herd, the cost of the females had increased to $2,500 in line with the Siegel prices. Of considerably more significance, petitioner’s 1971 agreement provided, as we have found, for payments on principal in amounts so that within 10 years, $54,000 out of the $62,500 purchase price would have been paid. In Siegel, as well as in Hunter and Jacobs, most of the purchase price was reflected by nonrecourse promissory notes payable during the term of the management agreements only out of that portion of the sales of cattle allocated to the investor. The more important factor is the extent of control over petitioner’s cattle which remained vested in Southern Star pursuant to the management agreements.
OPINION
General
In Hunter, Siegel, and Jacobs, we held that the purported sales of cattle were so lacking in economic substance as to preclude being treated as sales for Federal income tax purposes and that the benefits and burdens of ownership did not pass to the investor. As we have indicated, our focus in this case is on whether petitioner’s facts are sufficiently different from those in these three earlier cases to warrant a different result.
Petitioner argues that his motives in this case are not suspect, that he was not simply buying tax benefits but he believed that he was buying a herd of cattle which would increase in size and value, eventually including one bull from Southern Star’s prize bull Emulous Bob of K Pride. Hence, petitioner argues, at the end of 10 years his herds would have been substantially more valuable than when he acquired them and would have been fully paid for.12 Petitioner recognizes that his expectations assumed that Southern Star would carry out its obligations under the two management agreements and that because they did not do so, his expectations could not be fulfilled.
While petitioner’s testimony as to his nontax motives is entitled to some credibility, we place greater weight on objective facts. Dreicer v. Commissioner, 78 T.C. 642, 645 (1982), affd. without opinion 702 F.2d 1205 (D.C. Cir. 1983). In this case, petitioner’s testimony and the objective facts are not so strongly conclusive with respect to the existence of a predominant non-tax motive as to mandate a finding to that effect. Moreover, the making of such a finding, were we to do so, would not resolve the case in petitioner’s favor. For that reason we have made no finding as to profit motive. The existence of a profit motive simply does not preclude a determination either that a transaction lacks economic substance or that the benefits and burdens of ownership did not pass to petitioner.13
A transaction which is devoid of economic substance is not recognized for tax purposes. Frank Lyon Co. v. United States, 435 U.S. 561, 573 (1978); Knetsch v. United States, 364 U.S. 361, 366 (1960). Moreover, it is the substance of a transaction which determines its tax consequences. It must in fact, not in expectation, be “imbued with tax-independent considerations.” Frank Lyon Co. v. United States, 435 U.S. at 583-584; James v. Commissioner, 87 T.C. 905, 918 (1986). For a transaction to be recognized for tax purposes under Frank Lyon Co., petitioner must show that his investment “was not motivated or shaped solely by tax avoidance features that have meaningless labels attached, but also that there is economic substance to the transaction independent of the apparent tax shelter potential.” Hilton v. Commissioner, 74 T.C. 305, 349-350 (1980), affd. per curiam 671 F.2d 316 (9th Cir. 1982).
We have never held that the mere presence of an individual’s profit objective will require us to recognize for tax purposes a transaction which lacks economic substance.14 The economic substance of a business transaction and the intent, purpose, or motive of an individual investor, while sometimes equated, are not identical. A business transaction by its very nature must have economic substance, that is, a realistic potential for profit (James v. Commissioner, 87 T.C. at 924). The phrase “realistic potential for profit” does not mean that the transaction must make a profit or even that similar transactions generally are profitable. As we found in Abramson v. Commissioner, 86 T.C. 360 (1986), only an average of 1 film in 10 is successful; in wildcat oil drilling, the success rate based upon the number of wells drilled may be low. Realistic potential for profit is found, however, when the transaction is carefully conceived and planned in accordance with standards applicable to the particular industry, so that judged by those standards the hypothetical reasonable businessman would make the investment. The intent or purpose, which motivates an individual to enter into a business transaction refers to the subjective state of mind of the particular taxpayer before the Court.15
Subjective intent cannot supply economic substance to a business transaction. Where, as in the case at bar, we examine the transaction and conclude as we do in this case that Southern Star’s herd investment packages lack any realistic potential for profit, we need not examine the investor’s state of mind. This analysis, where it can be used, avoids the difficult task of weighing dual motives, such as we were forced to undertake in Fox v. Commissioner, 82 T.C. 1001 (1984). Because the Southern Star transactions in this case lack economic substance, as did those in three other investor cases we have decided, we hold, consistent with those opinions, that they are economic shams.
Economic Substance
The material facts with respect to the economic substance of this transaction do not differ significantly from those in Hunter, Siegel, and Jacobs. The initial factor considered by us in Hunter, Siegel, and Jacobs in our determinations that the Southern Star transactions lacked economic substance was “whether the stated price for the cattle is within the reasonable range of their value.” The values determined by us for petitioner’s cattle are the same values we determined for the Southern Star cattle involved in the Siegel case. Thus, as in Siegel, petitioner paid approximately AVz times what the cows were worth in 1971 and in 1972. In the case of the bull, the purchase price was simply exorbitant, representing over 40 times the actual value. Respondent’s expert expressed the opinion that if petitioner had in fact been sold top quality cows from an established cattle herd in a highly promoted program, a price of $1,250 to $1,500 would not appear to be unreasonable. This price is still substantially less than the price petitioner paid and substantially more than the cows were worth. Thus, this testimony is of little significance. Our concern is to compare the actual values of the cattle allocated to petitioner’s herds with their purchase prices. Contrary to petitioner’s expectations, the cattle allocated to him were not high quality; Southern Star’s operation in 1971 and 1972 was not well established; and its management was seriously deficient. Moreover, the 1971 sales agreement shows no registration numbers for several of the cattle, which would tend to indicate that they may not in fact have been registered purebred Aberdeen Angus. The inferior quality of the cows prevented achievement of the guaranteed calf crop or the even better production rate to be found in a well-managed herd of quality cattle. We conclude that the stated prices for petitioner’s cattle were not within the reasonable range of their actual values.
The second factor we considered in Hunter, Siegel, and Jacobs is whether there was any intent that the purchase price would ever be paid. We find in this case that at the time petitioner entered into the contracts, he did fully expect the purchase price on both contracts to be paid. In point of fact, however, the purchase price never would have been paid in this case. Petitioner’s interest in the financial results of his investments, and his willingness to follow up with Southern Star, made it predictable that he would stop making principal payments as in fact he did. The poor quality of cattle allocated to petitioner’s contracts, the poor quality of the management provided by Southern Star, and its consistent failure to perform in accordance with its agreement, including its failure to make good on its calf crop warrantee, precluded the sales of culls and calves from contributing to the payments of principal, and petitioner was relying on such sales to augment the principal payments he intended to make. Sales of calves could not contribute materially to liquidation of the purchase price, since the calving rate of the herds was substantially lower than guaranteed.16 Petitioner did not intend or contemplate paying the entire purchase price of both herds himself. Petitioner was sold cattle at a grossly inflated price. The notes being nonrecourse, he was not obligated to make any of the payments specified in the sales agreements, and as soon as he became convinced that he had been misled, he took appropriate action. His original intent to pay vanished. As we have said, this was predictable, and without substantial cash contributions, the purchase prices for the herds could not have been paid. While petitioner’s original subjective intention was different from that of the investors in Hunter, Siegel, and Jacobs, his initial willingness to make cash payments cannot add sufficient substance to petitioner’s transactions to warrant their recognition for tax purposes.
The third factor, petitioner’s control over the cattle purportedly purchased, must be answered in the same fashion as we answered that issue in Hunter, Siegel, and Jacobs. Under the contracts, petitioner in fact had no control over the cattle until the purchase price was paid in full. Further, he had no ability to manage the cattle and no interest in so doing. He never intended at any time to take possession of his cattle. At the end of the term, it was his intent to sell the cattle either directly or through Southern Star.
The final factor, whether petitioner would receive any benefit from disposition of the cattle, must in this case receive the same answer as in other Southern Star cases. Until the purchase price with interest had been paid, petitioner had no right to take possession of the herds or retain any proceeds from their disposition. We have determined that this event would never occur.
Benefits and Burdens of Ownership
In addition, for the reasons which follow, the benefits and burdens of ownership were not in fact transferred to petitioner. Transactions similar to petitioner’s investment in the Southern Star cattle program have been frequently analyzed by this Court on the basis of the following factors:
(1) Whether legal title passes;
(2) how the parties treat the transaction;
(3) whether the purported purchaser acquires any equity in the property;
(4) whether the contract creates a present obligation on the purchaser to make payments;
(5) whether the right of possession is vested in the purchaser;
(6) which party bears the risk of loss or damage to the property; and
(7) which party receives the profits from the sale of the property.
Houchins v. Commissioner, 79 T.C. 570, 591 (1982); Grodt & McKay Realty, Inc. v. Commissioner, 77 T.C. 1221, 1237-1238 (1981); Estate of Franklin v. Commissioner, 64 T.C. 752, 763-770 (1975), affd. on other grounds 544 F.2d 1045 (9th Cir. 1976); Harmston v. Commissioner, 61 T.C. 216, 228-231 (1973), affd. 528 F.2d 55 (9th Cir. 1976).
The first sales agreement entered into by petitioner with Southern Star, in paragraph VII, refers to a separate bill of sale. For some reason, in the corresponding paragraph in the sales agreement dated January 17, 1972, the reference to a bill of sale is omitted. No copies of bills of sale are in this record. In Siegel, the corresponding paragraphs refer to a bill of sale although no bills of sale . were placed in evidence in that case. However, for the purposes of our analysis, we will assume that bills of sale were actually given to petitioner by Southern Star and its subsidiary. Thus, bare legal title may have been transferred,17 but courts have repeatedly “refused to permit the transfer of formal legal title to shift the incidence of taxation attributable to ownership of property where the transferor continues to retain significant control over the property transferred.” Frank Lyon Co. v. United States, supra at 572-573. As we explicitly found in Siegel, “Southern Star [in Mr. Cherin’s case] retained full control over the cattle allegedly sold to petitioners which control extended to determining when and the price at which the cattle would be sold, and retaining all proceeds of said sales.”18 The significance of passage of bare legal title, if such occurred, is further eroded by the continued registration of the cattle purportedly purchased by petitioner in Southern Star’s name. As in Grodt & McKay Realty, Inc. v. Commissioner, supra, such registration facilitated, and petitioner apparently acquiesced in, Southern Star’s continued representation to the world at large that it was the owner of the subject cattle.
The parties did not treat the transactions as present sales. Petitioner acquired no rights or obligations and the purported sales had no effect on Southern Star’s unilateral authority over the property purportedly sold. Petitioner had no voice in whether any particular cow was allocated to his herds, retained in his herds, sold, or transferred to another herd. There was, in fact, no segregation of the cattle into separate herds. From Southern Star’s management perspective, all cows were in a single herd. Giving petitioner the benefit of every favorablel tendency of the evidence, the most that we can conclude ¿is that if the purchase price had been paid in full, petitioner might then have demanded possession of his herds. That never occurred and economically could not occur. Legally, practically, and realistically, petitioner provided Southern Star with funds to develop its own herd which in fact it failed to do. In exchange, he received tax benefits. This may not have been what petitioner intended, but it is what did happen and all that could happen with the poor quality cows which comprised the Southern Star herds and with the poor management practices. We believe that the control exercised in this case by Southern Star is one of the most important factors in determining what, if anything, petitioner acquired.
In Siegel, we held that given the substantial disparity between the stated purchase price and the fair market value of the cattle, petitioners acquired no equity in the cattle they purported to purchase. Here, petitioner may have acquired some equity in the females he purported to purchase in the first herd through his payments on principal. That would depend, in part, on the manner in which the payments were allocated between the purchase price of the interest in the bull, and the purchase price of the interest in the cows. As we have pointed out, the discrepancy between the value of the bull and the stated purchase price was grossly excessive, and allocation of principal to the bull purchase price would have gained little equity. However, petitioner stopped making payments and, in effect, abandoned whatever equity he may have had. He ultimately sought to recover his funds through a civil action in the State court. The promissory notes, if any, were actually signed, were nonrecourse, and petitioner had no actual obligation to make payments. Whatever payments he made were voluntary. He thus could, and did, voluntarily cease making payments.
Our findings that the benefits and burdens of ownership were not transferred to petitioner is further evidenced by the fact that, until the full purchase price and accrued interest and maintenance fees on each herd were paid, here as in Siegel, an extremely improbable event, petitioner did not have the right to possession of the cattle. Petitioner also did not bear the risk of loés or damage to the cattle, a risk Southern Star continued to' bear. Finally, petitioner was not entitled to any profits from the sales of cattle under his second contract. It is unclear whether he had such a right under the first contract, although, in point of fact, he received no payments even though on paper some were purportedly credited to him. It is quite evident that Southern Star never had any intention of making any cash payments to petitioner or to its other investors.
Viewed in its entirety, the arrangement between petitioner and Southern Star does not support a finding that any benefits or burdens of ownership were transferred to petitioner. The failure to transfer the benefits and burdens of ownership supports our conclusion that no sale occurred for tax purposes. At least from Southern Star’s standpoint, petitioner received tax benefits for his money, as Southern Star officials told him repeatedly. That this was not what petitioner intended or expected is unfortunate, but that does not change our analysis.
Based on our decisions in Hunter, Siegel, and Jacobs, we hold for respondent with respect to the deficiencies in this case. See, e.g., Beck v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1987-359.
Section 6621(c)
By amendment to the answer, respondent asserted the applicability of section 6621(d), now section 6621(c), dealing with interest on a substantial underpayment attributable to a tax-motivated transaction. Because respondent has raised this issue for the first time in the answer, he bears the burden of proof. Rule 142(a); Rose v. Commissioner, 88 T.C. 386 (1987); Zirker v. Commissioner, 87 T.C. 970 (1986). Section 6621(c) provides for an interest rate of 120 percent of the adjusted rate established under section 6621(b) where there is a “substantial underpayment” (an underpayment of at least $1,000) in any taxable year “attributable to 1 or more tax-motivated transactions.” This section applies only with respect to interest accruing after December 31, 1984, even though the transaction was entered into prior to the date of enactment of section 6621(c). Solowiejczyk v. Commissioner, 85 T.C. 552 (1985), affd. per curiam without published opinion 795 F.2d 1005 (2d Cir. 1986).
Section 6621(c)(3)(A)(v) was added by Congress specifically to include a sham or fraudulent transaction within the scope of this additional interest section.19 It is obvious that Congress intended to include as tax-motivated transactions, fake or fictitious transactions, such as we found in DeMartino v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1986-263, and Forseth v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1985-279. In addition, we have recently interpreted the language “any sham or fraudulent transaction” to include transactions where the taxpayer lacked profit motive and which were without economic substance. Patin v. Commissioner, 88 T.C. 1086, 1128-1129 (1987). As we have already noted, the presence of a profit motive does not preclude a determination that a transaction lacks economic substance and thus is a sham. The transactions between Cherin and Southern Star are “shams” for purposes of section 6621(c)(3)(A)(v), both because they lacked economic substance and because the benefits and burdens of ownership did not pass to him.
We conclude that the sanction of section 6621(c) is otherwise appropriate in each of petitioner’s years 1972 through 1978, except for the year 1977, where the underpayment is less than the sum of $1,000. The amounts of the underpayments which are attributable to tax-motivated transactions will be determined in the course of the Rule 155 determinations.
Decision will be entered under Rule 155.
Reviewed by the Court.
Nims, Parker, Korner, Shields, Hamblen, Cohen, Clapp, Jacobs, Gerber, Wright, Parr, Williams, and WELLS, JJ., agree with the majority opinion.A11 section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as amended and in effect during the years in issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
Petitioner’s second investment was actually made with G&L Management, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Southern Star. The parties do not contend that there is any special significance to be attributed to the fact that the second transaction was with this subsidiary. Therefore, for convenience, we will refer throughout to Southern Star.
The friend, Ned Levine, is one of the incorporators of Southern Star. The record contains a projection made by petitioner after the fact, presumably in anticipation of this case.
In describing petitioner’s arrangement with Southern Star and with its subsidiary G&L Management, Inc., we use words such as “purchase,” “sale,” “owned,” “owner,” and similar terms simply for convenience but without intending any inference, by the use of these words, as to the tax characterization or consequences of any aspect of the transactions.
The parties have so stipulated, and we made this finding of fact in Hunter v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1982-126, although in fact one Erwin Gars was also an incorporator.
It is unclear on this record whether all of the cows in this herd were registered Aberdeen Angus, since the description of the herd omits registration numbers for several animals.
None of these notes are in the record. We assume that nonrecouse notes were executed as specified in the sales agreement.
The 1971 agreements do not guarantee a stated percentage of live calf births, although such a guarantee was typically included in Southern Star’s management agreements.
The stipulation recites that the suit was filed in 1975, but the case number indicates that the suit was filed in 1979, and petitioner so testified.
These values are based upon the testimony of respondent’s expert, which we found thoroughly credible. Petitioner’s expert was not nearly as knowledgeable of the sales prices of cattle or of the particular cattle involved here. His testimony was largely theoretical and valueless.
While there are a number of differences between petitioner’s 1971 management agreements and those in Siegel and Hunter, none are material. In fact, most of the differences appear to be less favorable to the investor. The 1972 sales and management agreements signed by petitioner are substantially identical to those involved in Siegel and Hunter.
Petitioner apparently contemplated remaining in the program for 10 years, although the 1971 management agreement covering his principal herd provided that Southern Star could liquidate the herd after June 1, 1980.
This holding does not imply that evidence as to profit motive is immaterial.
In our decision in Rice's Toyota World, Inc. v. Commissioner, 81 T.C. 184, 196 (1983), affd. in part and revd. in part 752 F.2d 89 (4th Cir. 1985), we said:
“Where a taxpayer, cognizant of potential tax benefits, enters into a transaction of questionable economic worth, the tests developed under the sham transaction doctrine are applied to determine whether a threshold level of business purpose or economic substance is present.”
Also at page 209 we again stated:
“In summary, the sham transaction theory is used to separate those ‘business transactions’ entitled to deference from those which are not. It requires that business transactions meet a minimum threshold of a business purpose or economic objective. * * *”
We did not by this language, or by any of the language in footnote 17, on page 203, intend to imply that a mere profit objective requires recognition of the transaction for tax purposes.
As we said in Dreicer v. Commissioner, 78 T.C. 642, 645 (1982), “His [the taxpayer’s] motive is the ultimate question” in the application of sec. 183. We determine subjective intent largely by objective facts. Sec. 1.183-2(a), Income Tax Regs.
Although there is very little in the record as to purported purchases by Southern Star of cattle from Cherin, we assume that what purchases were made, were made at inflated prices as was true in Siegel, and that no cash payments were ever made to petitioner.
Under applicable State law the agreements of sale themselves may be sufficient to transfer legal title.
Siegel v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1985-441, 50 T.C.M. 888, 54 P-H Memo T.C. 85-1995.
Pub. L. 99-514, sec. 1535(a), 100 Stat. 2085, 2750.