Attorney-at-Law

Archive for September, 2014|Monthly archive page

CANCELED AND INCAPACITATED

In Uncategorized on 09/05/2014 at 17:28

No, not another Section 104 physical injury case. This time,  Judge Kerrigan figures out how to get rid of a California LLC that got rid of itself, and doesn’t oppose IRS’ motion to get rid of it and its case.

Forma Pro Gym, LLC, Docket No. 15356-13SL, filed 9/5/14, was organized under the laws of the former Bear Republic, n/k/a California, back in 2010. With its case set for trial this Monday, IRS notices that Forma Pro is former indeed, as it canceled itself the week before last, dropping a Certificate of Cancellation upon the California Secretary of State.

OK, so does Forma Pro have any existence in Tax Court?

The answer isn’t easy.

Judge Kerrigan: “Rule 60(c) is silent as to what law to apply to determine the capacity of an LLC. Rule 17(b) Federal Rules of Civil Procedure has a catch-all provision that states for all parties that are not corporations or non representative individuals, capacity is determined based on the law of the state where the court is located with the exception that a partnership or unincorporated association lacking the capacity to sue or to be sued in the state may sue or be sued in order to enforce a substantive right under the United States Constitution or laws. In district courts, LLCs are covered by this catch all provision.” Order, at p. 1 (Citation omitted).

OK, so can Forma Pro continue its battle with IRS, even though it’s perfectly happy to go away?

Like love, Judge Kerrigan finds a way: “Where there is no applicable rule of procedure, the Court may prescribe the procedure, giving particular weight to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Rule 1(b), Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. Under the law of the District of Columbia, where the Tax Court is located, petitioner is a foreign LLC because is it an unincorporated association formed under the laws of a jurisdiction other than the District of Columbia that would be an LLC if it were organized under the laws of the District of Columbia. The courts of the District of Columbia have applied the law of the state of formation to determine the capacity of a foreign LLC to maintain a suit in D.C. courts.” Order, at pp. 1-2. (Citations omitted).

So, since canceling in California cancels Forma Pro everywhere, they’re auf’d.

I love this stuff. 

GOLIGHTLY? GO VERY LIGHTLY

In Uncategorized on 09/04/2014 at 19:56

I got some sad news about a colleague who got her license suspended for nonpayment of two years’ worth of State income tax, while she had a six-figure income. The Court took pity, and only gigged her six months suspension, but her partner was devastated, as their firm had to tell all their clients the bad news.

Once again, the old story: there but for the grace of you-know-Whom goes any of us.

But at least she never hung up the phone on a judge. However desperate her circumstances, or whatever her delictions, she never crossed that brink.

Not so Chushanrishatham Jeconiah Golightly, Docket No. 11703-10L, filed 9/4/14. ChushJec, apparently impatient with what he conceives, and the Bard characterized, as “the law’s delay, The insolence of office, and the spurns That patient merit of th’ unworthy takes”, doesn’t bother with pretrial memoranda or status reports.

IRS does, however, and so Judge Nega decides to get ChushJec and IRS counsel on the horn and have a pleasant chat, with a view to talk about where the case is going.

Now we combat-hardened practitioners love a conference. We can invoke justice and mercy, walk humbly, ingratiate ourselves, and get a sense of how the judge will deal with us when the green light goes on.

ChushJec, however, is made of sterner stuff.

I’ll let Judge Nega take up the story. “During the telephone conference, Mr. Golightly stated that he did not want to speak with the undersigned judge, and further stated that the Court was part of the IRS. Petitioner abruptly ended the call by ‘hanging up’ the phone with the Court. The Court notes that petitioner appears to be confused about the role of the Tax Court and the Internal Revenue Service.” Order, at pp. 1-2.

That’s not the only thing ChushJec is confused about. Whence I come, it is considered highly unwise to diss someone who can hit you with a $25K penalty on top of whatever else you owe, and let IRS send the US marshals to seize everything but the clothes you stand in to pay the same.

But Judge Nega is forbearing. “We take this opportunity to inform petitioner that the IRS and Tax Court are two separate entities. The Tax Court is an independent Court that handles disputes between the IRS and taxpayers.

“The Court has concluded that the telephone conference was not the best circumstance for giving additional information and instructions that we often give during a telephone conference but that rather we should give that information in writing.” Order, at p. 2.

So Judge Nega tells ChushJec to show up ready to try his case, and exchange witness lists and documents with IRS forthwith.

It’s almost worth the trip to Lubbock, TX, on September 15 to watch this trial. Almost, but not quite.

NO DOUGH, NO GO

In Uncategorized on 09/04/2014 at 15:29

So ends the saga of Robert Jacobson, Docket No. 8447-13W, filed 9/4/14, as CSTJ Peter Panuthos shows Robert to the door, as IRS claims they collected no money from the various skullduggers Robert claims to have unearthed.

Robert avers he attached a list of skullduggers, their aiders and abettors to various documents he furnished the Ogden, UT gang, but they claim they never got them. Interestingly, the Ogden Sunseteers never mentioned that lacuna when CSTJ Pete denied them summary judgment back on 3/13/14, as to which see my blogpost “Summary Judgment – A Causerie”, 3/13/14.

Remember what I said back then: “But, as usual, the motion cuts multiple ways. Uncle Bob has told IRS what his case consists of. CSTJ Panuthos has told IRS what they need to do to meet, and maybe beat, Uncle Bob’s case. And Uncle Bob now knows something of what CSTJ Panuthos thinks of the case, if CSTJ Panuthos gets to try it, of course; he was only assigned the case to deal with the IRS’ motion.”

And deal with it he does: IRS claims they never got the list of alternate or additional skullduggery (apparently forgetting to mention that fact when they moved for summary judgment back in the Spring), never got any money, so Section 7623 says, paraphrasing that Goddess of the Runway, “you’re auf’d”.

Summary judgment for IRS.

A SOUR NOTE

In Uncategorized on 09/03/2014 at 20:43

Torgeir Mantor and his business partner Alan Smith needed a cash transfusion into their start-up LLC, as the venture capitalists were threatening to pull the plug on Visionmonitor Software, LLC, Torgeir Mantor, Tax Matters Partner, the subject of 2014 T. C. Memo. 182, filed 9/3/14.

Unable themselves to pump the cash, Tor and Al signed various sloppy, unnotarized, internally-contradictory and otherwise potentially defective promissory notes in favor of the foundering LLC, claiming thereby to have guaranteed payment and performance of the obligations of same to the vendors and other creditors thereof.

The VC types (venture capital, not Viet Cong, although in these times, who knows?), satisfied that Tor and Al have placed their anatomies on the table, fund the LLC, so that it actually makes money, eventually.

But Tor and Al want to take losses personally for the lean years. For that, as the LLC is box-checked as a partnership, they need basis in their membership interests, and claim the promissory notes give them that.

IRS claims they had zero basis in the notes, because the notes weren’t guarantees of the LLC’s debts, such as would have given Tor and Al basis.

This is a FPAA, so these are partnership-level issues post-Woods, as are the 20% chops for understated tax.

And who better to explicate the truth that promissory notes to the partnership butter no basis, than The Great Dissenter, a/k/a The Judge Who Writes Like A Human Being, s/a/k/a The Relentless, Implacable Foe of the Partitive Genitive, Judge Mark V. Holmes?

Setting the stage: “The value of what a partner contributes to his partnership can be tricky when he contributes something other than cash–like the notes at issue here. VisionMonitor argues that the contribution of the promissory notes increased Mantor’s and Smith’s outside bases in amounts equivalent to their face value. But a partnership’s basis in property contributed by a partner is the adjusted basis of that property in the hands of the contributing partner at the time of the contribution. Sec. 723. The Commissioner argues that the company’s basis in the notes is zero because Mantor’s and Smith’s bases in them were each zero.” 2014 T. C. Memo. 182, at p. 10.

And the Commissioner wins. There’s much caselaw to back up the Commish, and Tor and Al’s one case has to do with a direct guarantee by the partner. The partner has to step up to the creditors directly, placing the aforementioned anatomy on the creditor’s table, not the partnership’s.

And the “at-risk” rules aren’t relevant here. Judge Holmes blows them off in a footnote.

“VisionMonitor argues that the notes should be included in outside basis because Mantor and Smith were ‘at risk’ under section 465. It argues that the substance of the transaction made Mantor and Smith ultimately responsible for a fixed and definite obligation, that nothing in the Code or caselaw makes any explicit preclusion of partnership debts made to the partners themselves, and that the promissory notes constituted ‘genuine indebtedness.’ The Commissioner retorts that the ‘at risk’ limitation isn’t a partnership-level determination, and isn’t something we can determine here. It’s also an issue that we don’t have to decide because the relevant question isn’t whether the notes were a debt owed by the partners to VisionMonitor but whether the partners had basis in the notes.” 2014 T. C. Memo.182, at p. 13, footnote 6.

But while the applicability of the Section 6662 accuracy penalties can be decided at partnership-level (with a tip of the hat to Judge Marvel, and although the partners may individually have a shot at fighting them in a CDP, which is another story), Tor and Al dodge the bullet, relying on their trusty tax lawyer, who, although he did a dodgy job here, still impresses with his credentials and the guys’ transparent good faith. They let it all hang out, and their expert had credentials.

Good stuff here, guys. Read and heed.

DON’T SUPPOSE YOU CAN DEPOSE – PART DEUX

In Uncategorized on 09/02/2014 at 18:43

Now comes the defender of the taxpayers’ wallet at the sixty-buck-palace-of-justice, The Great Dissenter, a/k/a The Judge Who Writes Like a Human Being, s/a/k/a The Implacable Unrelenting Foe of the Partitive Genitive, Judge Mark V. Holmes, who strides into the breach and stifles IRS’ deposition demand in Caylor Land & Development, Inc., et al., Docket No.17204-13, filed 9/2/14.

There are Seven Little Caylors, but I’ll just deal with this one. First day back from a three-day weekend is tiring.

IRS wants to depose both Robert II and Paula. They both say “no.”

Judge Holmes: “The change to our Rules to allow depositions of parties is fairly recent, and we still treat them as ‘an extraordinary method of discovery.’ Rule 74(c)(1)(B). What this division of the Court looks for is the general state of informal discovery, the stakes involved, and whether the depositions would materially aid the trial and possible settlement of the cases.” Order, at p. 1.

While the course of discovery hasn’t been of the smoothest, the Caylors haven’t scorched the earth (yet).

And though the issue (captive insurer of private business meets estate planning) is an IRS hotpot, the money on the table in this case isn’t huge.

“But even though the issue may be large, the Court continues to be reluctant to have the major costs of extensive discovery and pretrial-motion practice borne by the petitioners in relatively small cases. See Rule 70(c)(1)(C). And because this type of case has not yet been settling, it seems likely that the Caylors’ depositions would only be a rehearsal for very similar trial testimony.” Order, at pp. 1-2.

No-go, IRS. Ya should’a read my blogpost “Don’t Suppose You Can Depose”, 12/2/13

MAKE WAVES OR MAKE WAIVER

In Uncategorized on 09/02/2014 at 18:06

This is the story of Charles T. Bruce and Mary A. Bruce, 2014 T. C. Memo. 178, filed 9/2/14, by Judge Wherry. Cap’n Charlie is a seafarer, fisherman and tugboat captain. But like his counterpart tugmeister Jac Baker (see my blogpost “Home Is Where The Heart Is”, 7/21/11), he runs aground in Tax Court.

Cap’n Charlie wants to quit the sea and provide for his two daughters, by selling off his tugging operation and the pride of the fleet, the Sarah Jane, namesake of one of his little princesses and worth a cool $5 million as-is, where-is.

But his basis is zero and the gain astronomical. Cap’n Charlie only finished high school before attending that ultimate academy, The Sea, where he earned his degree with high distinction.To help him out he turns to friend and loyal employee, Wade A. Rousse, who got his M.B.A. while working for Cap’n Charlie, and walked ashore to a M.A. and Ph.D. and a job with the Fed, encouraged by Cap’n Charlie.

Seeking to do his old boss a favor, Wade puts Cap’n Charlie into the hands of as slick a crew of crooks as one might find in a crimp’s establishment on the waterfront. See 2014 T. C. Memo. 178, at p. 9, footnote 3, for the relevant rap sheets.

The crimps shanghai Cap’n Charlie for six figures, while putting him into the usual roundy-round of phony basis builders, promissory notes for which no money is advanced or repaid, and trusts whose sole purpose is to disguise the foregoing.

In signing aboard the pirate ship, Cap’n Charlie consults his trusty lawyer, who has an LL.M. in tax from NYU and has represented Cap’n Charlie for years. Trusty lawyer meets with the pirates and is taken in.

Honest Cap’n Charlie sells the Sarah Jane to his old pal Wiley Falgout, who believed Cap’n Charlie was still the owner, notwithstanding the phony transactions aforesaid.

IRS rains deficiency and 40% chop upon Cap’n Charlie. Because of his trusty lawyer, plain-sailing honesty and lack of advanced landlubber education, Cap’n Charlie is spared the chop.

Let’s heave-to for a moment, and consider the title hereof. Cap’n Charlie’s trial counsel don’t raise the 3SOL until opening brief time, and admit this is “problematic”.

IRS claims Cap’n Charlie signed some extensions of the 3SOL, but doesn’t produce them for trial, because Cap’n Charlie’s trial counsel didn’t raise the issue in their petition.

Aye-aye, says Judge Wherry: “Petitioners recognize that judicial jurisprudence holds that the applicability of the limitations period is not properly before the Court where the taxpayer failed to plead that matter in the petition.” 2014 T. C. Memo. 178, at pp. 33.

SOL is an affirmative defense, me hearties, not a jurisdictional defect. As such, it can be waived.

“Our Rules require that a taxpayer specifically allege as an affirmative defense in the petition that the limitations period has run in order to properly raise the applicability of the limitations period as an issue. Petitioners acknowledge that they did not make such an allegation in the petition. We accordingly conclude that petitioners have waived any dispute that they now have as to the applicability of the three-year limitations period by not timely raising the issue.” 2014 T. C. Memo. 178, at pp. 34-35. (Citations and footnote omitted).

And Judge Wherry gives today’s takeaway better than I could, so I’ll step off the quarterdeck and hand him the loudhailer.

“Further, we do not agree with petitioners’ argument that section 7491(a)(1) requires that we decide the issue even though it was not raised in the pleadings. The pleadings serve a vital role in litigation in this Court. While many issues could theoretically be in dispute in a given case, the pleadings specify the issues which are actually in dispute, as well as the parties’ respective positions with respect thereto, and they allow the parties to efficiently and effectively litigate the case accordingly. See Rule 31(a).” 2104 T. C. Memo. 178, at p. 36.

Make waves or make waiver.