*87 Decisions will be entered for respondent.
P was a plastic surgeon and the sole shareholder-employee of P.A., a professional association. P was covered by P.A.'s qualified profit-sharing and pension plans. P liquidated P.A. during October 1984. Immediately after the liquidation, P resumed his surgical practice in the form of a sole proprietorship. P.A. and the sole proprietorship were located at the same address. In December 1985 and January 1986 P received distributions from P.A.'s qualified plans. Held, P's change of status from that of a sole shareholder-employee of P.A. to that of a sole proprietor does not constitute a "separation from the service" within the meaning of
*622 *88 Hamblen, Chief Judge:
Respondent determined deficiencies in petitioners' 1985 and 1986 Federal income tax in the respective amounts of $ 74,904.30 and $ 40,585.81. Unless otherwise indicated, section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the taxable years at issue, and *623 Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
The sole issue for decision is whether petitioners properly reported distributions from qualified profit-sharing and pension plans under the 10-year forward averaging method provided by
*89 FINDINGS OF FACT
These cases were submitted fully stipulated pursuant to Rule 122. The stipulation and attached exhibits are incorporated by this reference.
Petitioners resided in San Antonio, Texas, at the time they filed their petitions in these cases. Petitioners are married residents of the State of Texas. Petitioners timely filed, with extensions, their 1985 and 1986 joint Federal income tax returns.
Medical PracticeDuring the years at issue, Dr. Burton was a practicing physician specializing in plastic surgery. On October 1, 1977, Dr. Burton incorporated his surgical practice, Francis Christian Burton, Jr., M.D., P.A. (P.A.), under the Texas Professional Association Act. Dr. Burton was the sole shareholder of the P.A.
Dr. Burton liquidated the P.A. on or about October 30, 1984. All assets remaining in the P.A. on the date of liquidation were distributed to Dr. Burton in accordance with section 337. Immediately after the liquidation, Dr. Burton resumed his surgical practice in the form of a sole proprietorship. At least one employee of the P.A., K. Riojas, remained in Dr. Burton's employment after the P.A. was liquidated.
*624 From July 1982 through December*90 1986, the P.A. and Dr. Burton's sole proprietorship were located at 8601 Village Drive, Suite 224, San Antonio, Texas.
Pension and Profit-Sharing PlansOn July 1, 1978, the P.A. established the Francis Christian Burton, Jr., M.D., P.A. Pension Plan and Trust (pension plan) and the Francis Christian Burton, Jr., M.D., P.A. Profit-Sharing Plan and Trust (profit-sharing plan). The pension plan and profit-sharing plan were qualified employee retirement plans under section 401(a).
During the time in which Dr. Burton operated the P.A., deductible contributions allowable under section 404(a) were made to the plans and disclosed on the P.A.'s corporate tax returns. The plans had a fiscal year ending June 30. The last contribution to the pension plan was made on June 30, 1984. The last contribution to the profit-sharing plan was made on June 30, 1982.
The number of employees participating in the pension plan and the profit-sharing plan during the relevant time period fluctuated from four employees participating in the plans on July 1, 1983, to three employees participating in the plans on July 1, 1984. As of July 1, 1985, there were two employees, Dr. Burton and K. Riojas, who *91 were eligible to receive distributions from the plans.
The pension plan and the profit-sharing plan were terminated on July 1, 1984. Soon after, petitioners filed a Form 5310, an application for a determination regarding a plan termination, with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). In two letters dated June 17, 1985, and June 26, 1985, the IRS determined that the termination of the pension plan and the profit-sharing plan would not adversely affect their qualification for Federal income tax purposes.
The pension plan's assets were distributed to plan participants during 1985. The profit-sharing plan's assets were distributed to plan participants during 1986. Dr. Burton had neither attained the age of 59 1/2 nor was he disabled on the dates of distributions.
In December 1985, Dr. Burton received a $ 177,525.73 distribution from the pension plan. Petitioners reported the distribution on their 1985 Federal income tax return on Form *625 4972 using the 10-year forward averaging method. Petitioners could have rolled the distribution from the pension plan over into another qualified plan, but chose not to.
In January 1986, Dr. Burton received a $ 129,470.93 distribution from the*92 profit-sharing plan. Petitioners reported the distribution on their 1986 Federal income tax return on Form 4972 using the 10-year forward averaging method. Petitioners could have rolled the distribution from the profit-sharing plan over into another qualified plan, but chose not to.
OPINION
Petitioners contend that in determining whether Dr. Burton separated from the service of the P.A. the issue before this Court is whether there was a beneficial change in the ownership of Dr. Burton's surgical practice as a result of the liquidation. Petitioners contend that, under the Texas Professional Association Act, the P.A. was Dr. Burton's separate property before the liquidation and that after the liquidation the liquidating distributions became the property of both petitioners. Petitioners further argue that, as a result of the liquidation and commingling, a beneficial change in the ownership occurred and, therefore, a separation from the service occurred qualifying petitioners for lump-sum distribution treatment.
Respondent contends that Dr. Burton's change of status from that of sole shareholder-employee to sole proprietor was merely a change in form and therefore does not constitute*93 separation from the service within the meaning of
In general, distributions from qualified retirement plans are taxable as ordinary income in the year of distribution. Secs. 72, 402(a)(1). Since 1942, lump-sum distributions have been accorded preferential tax treatment. Revenue Act of 1942, ch. 619, tit. I, sec. 162(a), 56 Stat. 798, 862 (long-term capital gain treatment if the distribution was made on account of the employee's separation from the service). For the years at issue, recipients of lump-sum distributions are permitted to use the 10-year forward averaging method for reporting the ordinary income portion of the distribution.
The term "lump-sum distribution", as defined in
The phrase "separation from the service" is not defined in the Code or regulations. Consequently, courts have looked to the language of the statute and its legislative history in construing the phrase.
On its face, the liquidation of Dr. Burton's P.A. and the continuation of his medical practice*95 in the sole proprietorship form satisfies the formality of separation from the service expressed in
Generally, there are two lines of cases which address whether a taxpayer-employee is separated from the service of his employer within the meaning of
A second line of cases involves the issue of whether a person has separated from the service when the employer-corporation undergoes a change of ownership, reorganizes, merges, or liquidates and the taxpayer-employee continues to perform services for the surviving entity. See
In
*628 after 1954 a separation from service would occur only on the employee's death, retirement, resignation, or discharge; not when he continues on the same job for a different employer as a result of a liquidation, merger or consolidation of his former employer. * * * [
Subsequently, in
Similar reasoning has also been applied by the IRS where there is a liquidation followed by a change in business form with no true change in ownership.
The rationale of
Although revenue rulings are not binding on this Court, they may be helpful in interpreting a statute based on their own intrinsic value. See
We conclude that the distributions which petitioners received in 1985 and 1986 do not qualify as lump-sum distributions because they were not made on account of Dr. Burton's separation from the service of the P.A.: only a technical change in the employment relationship occurred, and no meaningful change in the beneficial ownership of the business occurred. There was no severance or termination as contemplated by
Dr. Burton's liquidation of the P.A. resulted in only a technical change in the employment relationship.
Our conclusion that there was only a technical change in the employment relationship is supported by the fact that Dr. Burton continued performing the same services as a sole *630 proprietor as he had performed in the corporate form. See
In addition, the liquidation did not result in a meaningful change in the beneficial ownership of the surgical practice. Petitioners contend that, under the Texas Professional Association Act, the P.A. was Dr. Burton's separate property before the liquidation and after the liquidation the liquidating distributions were commingled with the community estate and became the property of both petitioners. As a result of the liquidation and commingling, petitioners contend that there was a beneficial change in ownership. Petitioners rely on the community property law of Texas to support their assertion. However,
In determining whether there is a separation from the service, the question of whether there was a beneficial change in the ownership of a business is especially relevant in the context of professional associations and closely held corporations. It is unlikely that the shareholders of these types of entities would transfer beneficial ownership of the company's business solely to take advantage of lump-sum treatment. In these cases, the alteration of ownership from a professional association to a sole proprietorship does not constitute a change in beneficial ownership since there was no change in the beneficial ownership of the business assets. *631 There was a continuity of ownership before and after the liquidation; petitioners owned 100 percent of Dr. Burton's surgical practice before and after the liquidation.
Petitioners bear the burden of establishing that there was a substantial*105 change in the makeup of employees insofar as this is relevant to whether a separation from the service occurred. Rule 142(a); see
Petitioners rely on Judge Tannenwald's concurrence in Gittens to support their contention that there was a separation from the service.
Finally, to find there was a separation from the service in these cases would contravene the legislative policy behind
*632 Congress was not trying just to alleviate the effects of bunching of income whenever an employee*107 receives a lump-sum distribution from a qualified plan for any reason. The congressional policy was more narrowly aimed at discouraging early distributions before retirement age and yet preserving portability of pension funds when an employee actually separates from the service of his employer before retirement age. Hence, the favorable tax treatment does not apply when qualified pension and profit-sharing plans are terminated because that could encourage abuses of early distributions unrelated to retirement purposes; the favorable tax treatment applies to distributions narrowly restricted to situations where the employee, before retirement age, completely severs his connection with his employer as a result of death, disability, attaining age 59 1/2 (usually for the self-employed), or separation from the service. * * * [Citations and fn. ref. omitted].
See
Underpinning the interpretation of the phrase "separation from the service" is the congressional concern with changes in employment involving no structural change in the employer, such as the liquidation of a subsidiary into its parent corporation, *108 and a continuation of the business and employment relationship qualifying for preferential tax treatment. A merely formal or technical change in employment status, as where an employer's business is transferred in a liquidation or reorganization and the employee continues to work in a similar capacity for the transferee, is not a separation from the service for purposes of
Petitioners failed to establish that the distributions qualify as lump-sum distributions for a second reason.
*633 Dr. Burton terminated the pension and profit-sharing plans on July 1, 1984. The P.A. was liquidated on or about October 30, 1984. Petitioners received distributions from the plans in December 1985 and January 1986. Even if we were to accept petitioners' argument that Dr. Burton was separated from the service of the corporation as of the time of its liquidation, petitioners did not present any evidence to establish that the distributions were on account of any separation of service rather than on account of the plans' terminations. Instead, in endeavoring to rebut respondent's argument petitioners merely attempted to distinguish the line of cases which respondent presented to support her contentions. Looking at the record as a whole, we conclude that petitioners failed to establish the requisite causal relationship between any separation of service and the distributions. Consequently, for this additional reason, petitioners are not entitled to lump-sum treatment for the years at issue.
To reflect the foregoing,
Decisions will be entered for respondent.
Footnotes
1. Respondent contended in her opening brief that petitioners were liable for the 10-percent penalty under sec. 72(m)(5)(A). In her reply brief, respondent conceded that sec. 72(m)(5)(A) did not apply to the distributions at issue in these cases.↩