Attorney-at-Law

Archive for May, 2021|Monthly archive page

BE DOERS, AND NOT HEARERS ONLY

In Uncategorized on 05/06/2021 at 17:02

That’s STJ Diana L. (“Sidewalks of New York”) Leyden’s direction to Tikar, Inc., 2021 T. C. Memo. 53, filed 5/6/21, as she declares their 501(c)(3) status revoked ab initio.

Tikar, Inc., claimed it was promoting the art of the Cameroons by exhibiting the artifacts of the Tikar people of that country, as well as other African peoples.

Except.

They have serious problems, and STJ Di will tell you all about them.

Tikar neither bought any African artifacts nor exhibited them. They spent money authenticating artifacts owned by a Belgian cardiologist who collected them, but Tikar couldn’t prove he sold or donated them, directly or indirectly, to Tikar. And the artifacts were only exhibited while the Belgian cardiologist still owned them.

“On the basis of administrative record the Court concludes that Tikar was not operated for an exempt purpose because it has not proven (1) that it owned the African artifacts or the [Belgian] Collection and (2) that all of its activities with respect to those artifacts primarily benefit the private interest of Dr. [Belgian] or the [Belgian] Foundation or both. Alternatively, if the Court were to assume that Tikar owned all or any part of the [Belgian] Collection or the African artifacts, Tikar failed to prove that its activities were in furtherance of an exempt purpose, namely charitable or educational.” 2021 T. C. Memo. 52, at p. 33.

A list of exempt purposes is found in Section 501(c)(3).

All the money spent to authenticate the artifacts benefited the owner thereof, and that wasn’t Tikar. So substantial benefit to private parties.

Tikar claims they tried to interest museums in exhibiting the artifacts, but proof is lacking, and they didn’t do anything else.

A charity can do charitable work outside its stated purposes, but it must do them.

Be doers, and not hearers only. That’s STJ Di’s motto.

MORE TACTICS

In Uncategorized on 05/05/2021 at 19:34

Daniel S. Jacobs, 2021 T. C. Memo. 51, filed 5/5/21, doesn’t get legals from Judge Emin (“Eminent”) Toro, but he does get a Taishoff “Good try, first class.” However, this accolade does not come in the Section 7430 context. There’s enough tangles in Dan’s (that’s “Prof. Dan”, “Attorney/Professor/Author” as he styles himself in one year’s return) story so that, despite Exam’s miscues, there was enough ambiguity for a reasonable person to disallow Prof. Dan’s deductions when IRS answered. I want you to hold that thought; it matters.

IRS ultimately folds on all.

Prof. Dan first wanted a representative of TAS (Taxpayer Advocate Service) to attend the Appeals face-to-face with him. That didn’t happen, although TAS asked Appeals to change their policy such that a TAS representative could be present at Appeals hearings. After all, IRS Counsel and Exam people can attend. See 2021 T. C. Memo. 51, at p. 17.

Might be a move to consider if you have to advise someone with a case too small to afford counsel. Consult TAS and ask for a TAS rep. After all, they were willing at least to consider showing up for an Attorney/Professor/Author.

Even better is the move Prof. Dan used when confronted by a Form 872 SOL extender. He offered IRS 35 days, when they asked for eight (count ‘em, eight) months. He rejected the deal, told IRS to hit him with a SNOD, petitioned same, and stiped with IRS to a remand to Appeals. See 2021 T. C. Memo. 51, at pp. 18-19.

The case settled at Appeals.

This tactic may not work if IRS thinks your client is a wit, wag or wiseacre. But it might work with a reasonable client with a reasonable case. And even if IRS won’t stip, you can always ask for a remand.

Prof. Dan, a tip of the battered Stetson.

Edited to add, 5/6/21: “When IRS answered” is the cutoff for justification in a Section 7430. So if IRS shot back an answer as soon as Prof Dan petitioned the SNOD, there had been no remand to Appeals. So all IRS counsel had to go on was the Exam material and the limited Appeals approval thereof, which was enough to scupper Prof. Dan’s Section 7430 legals.

RACING AND REAL ESTATE

In Uncategorized on 05/05/2021 at 18:15

It’s an odd coupling, but I’ve blogged it more than once. See, for example, my blogposts “Easy Rider,” 11/21/14, and “Rev Up Yer Engines!” 4/7/21. There must be something that attracts builders to racing vehicles.

Andrew Mitchell Berry and Sara Alexine Berry, 2021 T. C. Memo. 52, filed 5/5/21, starred in the second of the aforementioned blogposts. They have what they called on their Facebook page a “family drag racing team.” 2021 T. C. Memo. 52, at p. 6.

Although maybe it’s Andy and his dad, who own the Sub S construction company, who own the racing operation. Andy does win some money drag racing, but assigns the money to the Sub S, which also pays the (unsubstantiated) racing expenses.

Judge Kathleen Kerrigan finds this unavailing. It’s Andy’s money and his expenses.

“A taxpayer may not determine the nature of his or her income merely by using a particular form, or by labeling it as he or she wishes, but must report his or her income according to the economic realities of the situation.

“Petitioners contend that petitioner husband’s race car winnings should be included in Phoenix’s gross receipts. In support of this contention Mr. Berry testified that Phoenix paid the entry fees for petitioner husband’s car races. Petitioner husband testified that he raced under the name ‘Berry Racing’, which he described on his Facebook account as a family drag racing team. During the years in issue petitioner husband’s racing crew wore shirts emblazoned with ‘Berry Racing’.
The evidence does not show that car racing was part of Phoenix’s business.

“Because income earned by petitioner husband as a race car driver is not income derived from [Sub S]’s business of remodeling and construction, it should not be included in Phoenix’s gross receipts. “ 2021 T. C. Memo. 52, at pp. 6-7. (Citations omitted).

And while “comin’ off the line when the light turns green/ ya know he blows ‘em out of the water like ya never seen,” Andy is weak on paper.

IRS does give him some COGs for building permits, but not what he claims. Judge Kerrigan finds he double-counted some items.

Failure to keep records gives Andy a negligence chop.

And for any reader who asks why I give this much space to a more-or-less ordinary indocumentado, when I only picked up Judge Holmes’ off-the-cuff dismissal of tax-affected valuation analysis in the Michael Jackson case, I reply that I am writing for the in-the-trenches practitioner. The fine points of valuing at date of death the much-besmirched image of a popular music icon is not one that my readers, much less myself, are likely to encounter. You’ll notice my blogposts over the eight (count ‘em, eight) years I covered the case in Tax Court dealt with general procedural points the ordinary practitioner might encounter. I left the “rarefied heights of pure mathematics” and matters unique to the upper reaches of the music business to the blogoshere and trade press. Maybe some of those dudes will find themselves at those Olympian heights.

RECALL

In Uncategorized on 05/04/2021 at 16:51

I invite my readers, having by now recovered from Judge Mark V Holmes’ Tolstoyan tale of the appraisal of the estate of the late Michael J. Jackson, and the erudite commentary thereon in the blogosphere and trade press, to observe again the interface between bankruptcy and taxes. Marc S. Barnes and Anne M. Barnes, 2021 T. C. 49, filed 5/4/21, have returned to reprise the missing year; see my blogpost “The Call,” 7/21/20.

Y’all will recall that Marc and Anne filed Ch 11 after post-trial briefing in their Tax Court trial eleven (count ‘em, eleven) years ago. And their Plan was fully paid. Except the missing year’s taxes, add-ons, and chops, were never adjudicated in Bankruptcy Court, because they were never assessed, decision having been stayed during the pendency of the proceeding, including but not limited to the duration of the Ch 11 plan. IRS moved to lift the automatic stay so that Judge Lauber could render decision.

Judge Lauber did, Marc and Anne appealed, and DC Cir affirmed.

IRS then filed NFTL. Marc and Anne, having had a chance to contest, were out on liability. But they did claim discharge in bankruptcy at their CDP.

Judge Lauber: “The SO consulted on this point with an IRS insolvency specialist. The specialist advised that the 2003 liability was a nondischargeable priority debt that was neither addressed in nor discharged by the Plan. See 11 U.S.C. sec. 507(a)(8)(A)(iii) (2006) (defining a ‘priority debt’ to include a tax liability that was ‘not assessed before, but assessable,’ when the bankruptcy case commenced); 11 U.S.C. sec. 523(a)(1)(A) (2006) (excepting certain priority debts from discharge).” 2021 T. C. Memo. 49, at pp. 4-5.

So the SO bounced Marc’s and Anne’s OIC, and suggested a full-pay IA. Marc and Anne rejected that, and went back to Bankruptcy Court to fight about discharge of the missing year. And at that point my blog told the story.

Well, Marc and Anne lost in Bankruptcy Court on tax and interest, but won on add-ons and chops, 11 U.S.C. sec. 507(a)(8)(G) accords priority only to actual out-of-pocket (actual pecuniary loss).

Marc’s and Anne’s argument that the Ch 11 plan permanently barred collection of the missing year is wrong on the law. And their claim that IRS should have filed notice of claim for the missing year is also wrong. “…the fact that the IRS did not amend its proof of claim to include the 2003 liability is irrelevant: A priority tax claim, such as the IRS’ claim for the 2003 liability, is nondischargeable ‘whether or not a claim for such tax was filed or allowed.’ 11 U.S.C. sec. 523(a)(1)(A)…. Indeed, even if the Plan’s injunctive provisions could be read as broadly as petitioners wish, an order that purports to discharge a nondischargeable claim would not be binding on the IRS as the claim holder.” 2021 T. C. Memo. 49, at p. 10.

As we used to sing, “Ain’t no discharge on the ground.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

WELCOME TO DAWSON

In Uncategorized on 05/04/2021 at 07:29

All y’all will doubtless have seen Judge Mark V Holmes’ 271-page extravaganza Estate of Michael J Jackson, Deceased, John G. Branca, Co-Executor and John McClain, Co-Executor, 2021 T. C. Memo. 48, filed 5/3/21, which I blogged yesterday. 

That is to say, I’m sure you saw the opinion if you were on DAWSON yesterday, because it’s gone today. My colleague, Peter Reilly, CPA, the Forbes flash, tipped me off by dawn’s early light that the entire case is sealed on the new, improved (give me a break!), jim-handy DAWSON website.

Of course, the opinion is all over the internet. Except on DAWSON. 

Of course, I’ve blogged orders in that case for the last eight (count ’em, eight) years. With links yet, when the old Tax Court website (nameless but useful) permitted same. No seals, no protective orders. But now all of it is a secret.

I’ve just about had it with this clownish schemozzle.

I most respectfully submit that the public needs better access to US Tax Court orders, opinions, and decisions than what I, a “general practitioner of limited experience and mediocre qualifications,” can provide. The public deserves more than “If Taishoff doesn’t blog it, then forget about it.” 

THE OPINION YOU’VE ALL BEEN WAITING FOR

In Uncategorized on 05/03/2021 at 19:59

If my blogpost is late today, it’s because I’ve just emerged from 271 (count ’em, 271, and I have) pages of Judge Mark V. Holmes’ opinion in Estate of Michael J. Jackson, Deceased, John G. Branca, Co-Executor and John McClain, Co-Executor, 2021 T. C. Memo. 48, filed 5/3/21*.

The co-ex’rs and IRS stiped out most of the multi-multimillion dollar estate tax fight, leaving only three open items, for the ten attorneys for the co-ex’rs and the five IRS attorneys to fight over. Judge Holmes will tell you a lot more about popular music marketing than you wanted to know. I’ve blogged this story all the way for the last eight (count ’em, eight) years, from Mr. Woods’ rather flippant comment through the perjured expert, through Judge Holmes deciding to review the evidence his own self. I won’t list them all.

Both sides have Boss Hoss problems, with BProd on IRS, but BoP on the estate (not an individual). In the end, the estate’s experts, though not getting everything right, were at least as credible as IRS’ appraiser of the Century (2021 T. C. Memo. 48, at p. 60). No chops.

If the sad story of the King of Pop’s meteoric rise, unparalleled success (even an American President did not want to be seen basking in Jackson’s limelight; 2021 T. C. Memo. 48, at p. 11, footnote 4), and final collapse does not move you, I am truly sorry for you. Judge Holmes starts with a quote from Plutarch; I’d suggest Aeschylus.

There are numbers; oh, are there numbers! It’s clear the co-ex’rs managed a great salvage job after Michael died, but the test is our old friend the willing buyer.

Judge Holmes notes the evolution of business organizations; tax affected (or tax effected) analyses are on their way out. The C Corp double-taxation vis-a-vis S Corp passthrough and ownership limitations don’t matter as much now.

“There has also been a boom in different types of pass-through entities–such as limited liability companies–that give organizations the many benefits of C corporations in raising capital from large numbers of shareholders or members while avoiding double taxation. Many of our precedents arose from S corporations, which have sharp restrictions on who and what can own them. With the advent and popularity of other, less restrictive, forms of pass-through ownership we cannot but find that the gap between C corporations and other entities has narrowed over time. The Estate’s experts did not consider such distinctions and did not consider both the tax detriments and benefits of pass-through status.” 2021 T. C. Memo. 48, at pp. 81-82.

Finally, the “rarefied heights of higher mathematics” boil down to Michael Jackson’s image and likeness being worth $1.1 million more than estate claimed; Bankruptcy protection trust No. 1 worth zero, as the estate claimed (not the $200 million IRS claimed); but Bankruptcy protection trust No. 2 worth $105 million more than the estate claimed. So estate takes a $111 million hit.

Specialists in valuation will find this opinion interesting reading.

*MichaelJackson 2021 T. C. Memo. 48