*18 Decision will be entered for the respondent.
A corporation constructed a 15-unit condominium building in 1979, sold one unit in 1981, and rented other units until 1984. The corporation reported its income and expenses, including carrying charges of interest and taxes, under subch. C of the Code through its fiscal year ended Nov. 30, 1982, when a subch. S election was made. This election was in effect in 1984 when 13 of the remaining condominium units were sold. Held, the carrying charges included in the net operating losses incurred while the corporation was in subch. C status may not offset 1984 income of the S corporation passed through to petitioners,
*451 OPINION
Respondent determined a deficiency in petitioners' Federal income tax for 1984 in the amount of $ 151,238. The issue for decision is whether a net operating loss carryover generated*19 by a subchapter C corporation 1 in earlier years may offset income in a later year, at which time a subchapter S election is in effect for the same corporation.
*452 All the facts are stipulated.
Petitioners, husband and wife, were legal residents of the State of California when their petition was filed. They filed a joint income tax return and an amended joint income tax return for 1984, both with the Internal Revenue Service Center at Fresno, California.
Prince David, Inc. (hereinafter, the corporation), was incorporated in April 1979 and engaged in real estate development. The only business that the corporation conducted before the end of 1984 was the construction of a 15-unit condominium building, the sale of one of the units in 1981, the rental of some of the units, and the sale of all except one of the remaining*20 units in 1984.
The corporation reported its income as a subchapter C corporation, with a fiscal year ending November 30, until an election of subchapter S status became effective on December 1, 1982. Thereafter, at least through 1984, the corporation reported its income on a calendar year basis as an S corporation. At the time of the election, petitioners owned a total of 50 percent of the stock. During 1984, petitioners were the sole shareholders of the corporation.
As of November 30, 1982, the corporation had a net operating loss carryover of $ 353,773, accumulated over 4 taxable years:
FYE | Amount |
Nov. 30, 1979 | $ 6,738 |
Nov. 30, 1980 | 66,938 |
Nov. 30, 1981 | 110,696 |
Nov. 30, 1982 | 169,401 |
The parties stipulated that "construction carrying charges" amounted to $ 303,513 of the total $ 353,773 carryover. Under subchapter S, the corporation had a loss of $ 5,645 for the remainder of 1982, a loss of $ 46,974 in 1983, and reported income of $ 46,268 in 1984.
In May 1981 the corporation sold one condominium unit. It rented other units until 1984, when it sold 13 units and distributed $ 340,619 2 to petitioners.
*21 *453 On its 1984 U.S. Income Tax Return for an S Corporation (Form 1120S), the corporation excluded $ 303,513 from gross sales, as follows:
Gross sales: | |
Rental | $ 22,782 |
Sale of condominiums | 1,268,923 |
Subtotal | 1,291,705 |
Excluded from income per Statement 2 | 303,513 |
988,192 |
Statement 2 attached to the return explains:
Costs of $ 303,513 for interest, taxes and certain other costs for construction and carrying the condominium units sold in 1984 that were incurred and deducted in periods ending prior to December 1, 1982, but provided no tax benefit to the Corporation, have been excluded from the sales revenues under the tax benefit rule of
Petitioners have stated their position in their brief succinctly as follows:
The corporation incurred the $ 303,513 of expenses in excess of income as construction carry costs to carry a 15 unit condominium project it constructed until the condominium units could be sold for the amounts owed by the Corporation. These expenses were incurred when the Corporation reported under Subchapter C from its formation in 1979 to November 30, 1982. The Corporation made an S election effective December*22 1, 1982. The condominium units were sold in 1984, when the S election was in effect.
Petitioners contend that $ 303,513 of the sale proceeds should be excluded from the corporation's income under the Tax Benefit Rule.
Respondent contends that the statutory scheme for the taxation of the income of subchapter S corporations forbids the exclusion petitioners seek and that the tax benefit rule does not apply to the facts here presented.
We hold for respondent. Although petitioners cast their argument in terms of an exclusion from income, they are in fact seeking to carry forward to the S corporation's 1984 year a deduction of the net operating losses, to the extent of $ 303,513, incurred while the corporation was in subchapter C status.
*454
(1) In general. -- Except as otherwise provided in this title, and except to the extent inconsistent with this subchapter [S], subchapter C shall apply to an S corporation and its shareholders.
* * * *
(b) No Carryover Between C Year and S Year. --
(1) From c year to s year. -- No carryforward, *23 and no carryback, arising for a taxable year for which a corporation is a C corporation may be carried to a taxable year for which such corporation is an S corporation.
(2) No carryover from s year. -- No carryforward, and no carryback, shall arise at the corporate level for a taxable year for which a corporation is an S corporation.
(3) Treatment of s year as elapsed year. -- Nothing in paragraphs (1) and (2) shall prevent treating a taxable year for which a corporation is an S corporation as a taxable year for purposes of determining the number of taxable years to which an item may be carried back or carried forward.
The language of
Petitioners, however, invoke the longstanding equitable doctrine known as the tax benefit rule. Under that rule, partially codified in
The tax benefit rule is not available to petitioners. They are in fact seeking to deduct losses incurred by the corporation when it was a C corporation. As we have discussed,
Even so, petitioners' corporation does not qualify for a coveted exclusion under the tax benefit rule for other reasons. First, petitioners have not shown that the taxes and interest portion of the net operating losses incurred *456 when the corporation was a C corporation did not produce a tax benefit. The net operating loss carryovers would have been available as deductions in future years if petitioners had decided to rent the condominium units indefinitely through*27 the C corporation. Moreover, the carryovers, suspended while the corporation is in subchapter S status, will presumably be available when and if the corporation builds and either sells or rents other property during the 15-year carryover period prescribed by section 172(b)(1)(B).
Recognizing that net operating loss carryovers have valuable attributes,
In other words, a net operating loss addition is to be treated as a tax benefit. Because the corporation here received such a benefit from each increase in its net operating losses for its fiscal years ending in 1979 through 1982, the foundation for the application of the tax benefit rule does not exist.
Second, the sale of the condominium units in 1984 did not effectuate, within the meaning of
The basic purpose of the tax benefit rule is to achieve rough transactional parity in tax * * * and to protect the Government and the taxpayer from the adverse effects of reporting a transaction on the basis of assumptions that an event in a subsequent year proves to have been erroneous. Such an event, unforeseen at the time of an earlier deduction, may in many cases require the application of the tax benefit rule. * * * the tax benefit rule will "cancel out" an earlier deduction only when a careful examination shows that the later event is indeed fundamentally *457 inconsistent with the premise on which the deduction was initially*29 based. * * * [Fn. refs. omitted.]
Petitioners seek to distance themselves from this "fundamentally inconsistent" standard, formulated by the Supreme Court in the context of the inclusionary part of the tax benefit rule, by arguing that the standard does not apply to the exclusionary part. However, the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, to which this case is appealable, recently stated that the exclusionary part of the tax benefit rule is "limited to cases in which a later event turns out to be fundamentally inconsistent with the premise on which the deduction was initially based."
In this case, there is nothing "fundamentally inconsistent" about the corporation's deductions of taxes and interest followed by the inclusion of the proceeds of the condominium sales in its gross sales for the years in which the sales are made. Indeed, the record clearly establishes that those sales were contemplated, and strived for, from the beginning of the corporate existence.
Finally, petitioners argue that
*458 Petitioners point out that the stipulation in the instant case contains a statement that the corporation's "sole business was the construction of a 15-unit condominium building and sale of the condominium units in a single integrated transaction." Because the Court of Appeals in
Regardless of the precise meaning of the stipulation, we do not think it aids petitioners' cause. The estate in
Decision will be entered for the respondent.
Footnotes
1. The references to subchapters herein are to subchapters of ch. 1 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954. Unless otherwise indicated, section references are also to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954.↩
2. The stipulation of facts uses the figure $ 358,526, but the parties have agreed on brief that $ 340,619 is the correct figure.↩