Strangi v. CIR ( 2005 )


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  •                                                              United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    F I L E D
    REVISED AUGUST 8, 2005
    July 15, 2005
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    Charles R. Fulbruge III
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT                       Clerk
    _____________________
    No. 03-60992
    _____________________
    ALBERT STRANGI, Deceased,
    Rosalie Gulig, Independent Executrix,
    Petitioner - Appellant,
    versus
    COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE,
    Respondent - Appellee.
    __________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from a Decision of the United States Tax Court
    _________________________________________________________________
    Before REAVLEY, JOLLY, and PRADO, Circuit Judges.
    E. GRADY JOLLY, Circuit Judge:
    This case, which comes before us now for a second time,
    involves an assessment by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue of
    an estate tax deficiency against the Estate of Albert Strangi.
    Initially, the Tax Court held for the Estate. However, we remanded
    to the Tax Court, which reversed its prior holding and decided the
    case under    I.R.C.   §    2036(a).     Section   2036(a)   provides    that
    transferred   assets   of     which    the   decedent   retained   de   facto
    possession or control prior to death are included in the taxable
    estate.   The Tax Court held that Strangi retained enjoyment of the
    assets in question, and thus, that the transferred assets were
    properly included in the estate.                The Estate now appeals that
    decision.   We find no reversible error, and accordingly AFFIRM.
    I
    As failing health began to telegraph that the inevitable would
    occur, Albert Strangi transferred approximately ten million dollars
    worth of personal assets into a family limited partnership.                 Upon
    his death, Strangi’s Estate filed an estate tax return based on the
    value of his interest in that partnership, as opposed to the actual
    value of the transferred assets.               The Internal Revenue Service
    issued a notice of a deficiency of $2,545,826 in estate taxes.
    Strangi’s Estate petitioned the Tax Court for a redetermination of
    the deficiency.
    After protracted litigation, the Tax Court found that Strangi
    had retained an interest in the transferred assets such that they
    were properly     included   in    the       taxable   estate   under   I.R.C. §
    2036(a), and entered an order sustaining the deficiency.                     Our
    review of the Tax Court’s decision requires an inquiry into the
    structure of the limited partnership established by Strangi and the
    extent to which he retained enjoyment of partnership assets.
    First, however, some account of antecedents is in order.
    A
    Albert Strangi died on October 14, 1994 in Waco, Texas.                  He
    was survived by four children from his first marriage:                   Jeanne,
    Rosalie,    Albert   Jr.,    and   John        (collectively,     the   “Strangi
    2
    children”).     Rosalie was married to Michael J. Gulig, a local
    attorney.
    In 1965, after divorcing his first wife, Strangi married
    Delores Seymour. Seymour had two daughters, Angela and Lynda, from
    a prior marriage (collectively, the “Seymour children”).         In 1987,
    Strangi and Seymour both executed wills, naming one another as
    primary beneficiaries and the Strangi and Seymour children as
    residual beneficiaries.     That same year, Seymour began to suffer
    from a series of medical problems.          As a result, Strangi and
    Seymour decided to move their residence from Florida to Waco,
    Texas.    To facilitate the relocation, Strangi executed a general
    power of attorney naming Gulig as his attorney-in-fact.
    In July 1990, Strangi executed a new will, naming the Strangi
    children as sole beneficiaries if Seymour predeceased him –- i.e.,
    cutting   out   the   Seymour   children.   The   new   will   designated
    Strangi’s daughter Rosalie and a bank, Ameritrust, as co-executors
    of the Estate.    Seymour died in December 1990.
    In 1993, Strangi began to experience health problems.         He had
    surgery to remove a cancerous mass from his back, was diagnosed
    with a neurological disorder called supranuclear palsy, and had
    prostate surgery.      At this point, Gulig took over management of
    Strangi’s daily affairs.
    Gulig testified that, on several occasions between 1990 and
    1993, he discussed his concerns regarding Strangi’s Estate with
    retired Texas probate Judge David Jackson, who was a personal
    3
    friend.     Gulig said that he felt “confident” that the Seymour
    children would either sue Strangi’s Estate or contest the will. He
    also claimed to have been concerned about “horrendous executor
    fees” that he believed Ameritrust would charge.                   Further, Gulig
    said he worried about the possibility of a tort claim by Strangi’s
    housekeeper for injuries she sustained in an accident while caring
    for Strangi.     He testified that Judge Jackson advised him that his
    fears were “very valid” and that he “had to do something” to
    protect the Strangi Estate.
    B
    On August 11, 1994, Gulig attended a seminar provided by
    Fortress Financial Group, Inc., explaining the so-called “Fortress
    Plan”.     The Fortress Plan was billed as a means of using limited
    partnerships as a tool for (1) asset preservation, (2) estate
    planning, (3) income tax planning, and (4) charitable giving.
    Fortress marketed the plan as a means of, among other things,
    “lower[ing] the taxable value of your estate” by means of “well
    established court doctrines which recognize that the value of a
    limited partnership interest is worth less than the value of the
    assets owned by the limited partnership”. In brief, the plan
    instructed parties to “sell” their assets in exchange for an
    interest    in   a   newly-created   limited        partnership.      Because     a
    partnership      interest   is   worth       less   for   tax   purposes   than   a
    proportional share of the partnership’s assets –- due to lack of
    4
    direct control and non-liquidity -- this “exchange” would reduce
    the taxable value of the estate.
    The next day, Gulig, acting under power of attorney on behalf
    of Strangi: (1) prepared the Agreement of Limited Partnership of
    the Strangi Family Limited Partnership (“SFLP”); (2) prepared and
    filed the Articles of Incorporation of Stranco, Inc. (“Stranco”);
    (3) transferred 98% of Strangi’s assets1 –- valued at $9,932,967 –-
    to SFLP in exchange for a 99% limited partner interest; (4)
    transferred $49,350 of Strangi’s assets to Stranco in exchange for
    47% of Stranco’s common stock; (5) facilitated the purchase of the
    remaining        53%   of    Stranco’s    common       stock     by   the   four   Strangi
    children for $55,650; (6) issued a check from Stranco for a 1%
    general partner interest in SFLP.
    The result of Gulig’s efforts was a three-tiered entity, with
    SFLP       –-   and    the   roughly     $10   million      in    assets    Strangi   had
    transferred into it –- at the top.                 The SFLP partnership agreement
    provided        that    Stranco,   which       owned    a   1%    general    partnership
    interest in SFLP, had sole authority to conduct SFLP’s business
    affairs.        Strangi owned a 99% interest in SFLP, but was a limited
    partner, and thus had no formal control.
    1
    The assets that Strangi transferred to SFLP included, inter
    alia, (1) brokerage accounts at Smith Barney and Merrill-Lynch
    valued at $7.4 million; (2) an annuity valued at $276,000; (3) two
    life insurance policies valued at a total of $70,000; (4) two
    houses in Waco; (5) a condominium in Dallas; (6) a commercial
    warehouse in Dallas; and (7) several limited partnership interests,
    valued at approximately $400,000.
    5
    Stranco itself was a Texas corporation.      Strangi owned 47% of
    Stranco’s common stock; each of his four children owned a 13%
    share.   Stranco’s articles of incorporation named Strangi and the
    four Strangi children as the initial board of directors.     On August
    17, the five met to execute the corporate bylaws, a shareholder
    agreement, and an authorization to employ Gulig as manager of
    Stranco.
    On August 18, Stranco made a corporate gift of 100 shares –-
    a 1/4 of one percent stake –- to the McLennan Community College
    Foundation. Gulig later testified that he understood that the gift
    would improve the asset protection features of the Stranco/SFLP
    structure.   The implementation of the “Fortress Plan” was thus
    completed.
    Following Strangi’s death in October 1994, Gulig asked Texas
    Commerce Bank (“TCB”, a successor in interest to Ameritrust) to
    decline to serve as executor of the Estate.        To that end, Gulig
    claims to have issued a “threat that no distributions would be made
    from SFLP to pay executor fees”.       After receiving indemnification
    from the Strangi children, TCB agreed. Strangi’s will was admitted
    to probate in April 1995 with Rosalie Gulig as the sole executor.
    C
    Both prior to and after Strangi’s death, SFLP made various
    outlays, both monetary and in-kind, to meet his needs and expenses.
    In September and October of 1994, SFLP distributed $8,000 and
    $6,000, respectively, to Strangi.        On both occasions, SFLP made
    6
    proportional distributions –- $80.81 and $60.61, to be precise –-
    to its general partner, Stranco.              The Commissioner suggests that
    these   payments   to    Strangi      were    necessary    because,     after    the
    transfer to SFLP, Strangi retained possession of only minimal
    liquid assets –- i.e., two bank accounts with funds totaling $762.
    The Estate responds by noting that Strangi received a monthly
    pension of $1,438 and Social Security payments of $1,559, and that
    he retained over $187,000 in “liquefiable” assets, which consisted
    largely of various brokerage accounts.
    SFLP also distributed approximately $40,000 in 1994 to pay for
    funeral expenses,       estate       administration      expenses,     and    various
    personal debts that Strangi had incurred.                In 1995 and 1996, SFLP
    distributed approximately $65,000 to pay for Estate expenses and a
    specific   bequest      made   by     Strangi.     Moreover,      in    1995,    SFLP
    distributed $3,187,800 to the Estate to pay federal and state
    inheritance   taxes.           The    Estate     notes    that    all    of     these
    disbursements were recorded on SFLP’s books and accompanied by pro
    rata distributions to Stranco.            The Estate further notes that it
    repaid SFLP for the $65,000 “advance” in January 1997.
    In addition, prior to his death, Strangi continued to dwell in
    one of the two houses he had transferred to SFLP.                The Estate notes
    that SFLP charged rent for the two months that Strangi remained in
    the house. Although the accrued rent was recorded in SFLP’s books,
    it was not actually paid until January 1997, more than two years
    after Strangi’s death.
    7
    D
    In December 1998, the Internal Revenue Service issued a notice
    of deficiency to the Estate, asserting that it owed $2,545,826 in
    federal estate tax or, in the alternative, $1,629,947 in federal
    gift       tax.     The   deficiency    was    attributable      to    the   IRS’s
    determination that Strangi’s interest in SFLP was $10,947,343 –-
    i.e., the actual value of the assets transferred –- rather than the
    $6,560,730 that the Estate reported.2
    The Estate petitioned the Tax Court for a redetermination of
    the deficiencies.         In the Tax Court, the Commissioner of Internal
    Revenue contended, inter alia, that (1) SFLP should be disregarded
    because it lacked economic substance and business purpose; (2) the
    partnership agreement was a restriction on the sale or use of the
    underlying        property   that   should    be   disregarded   for    valuation
    purposes; (3) the fair market value of Strangi’s partnership
    interest was understated; and (4) if a discount was appropriate,
    Strangi had made a taxable gift on formation of SFLP to the extent
    the value of the property transferred exceeded the value of his
    partnership interest.
    2
    The basis for the discrepancy in this case –- and the
    primary rationale for the use of family limited partnerships
    generally –- is the IRS’s practice of permitting discounts in the
    taxable value of an estate based on a lack of marketability or
    control of estate property. See 26 C.F.R. § 20.2031-1(b) (“The
    value of every item of property includible in a decedent's gross
    estate ... is its fair market value at the time of the decedent's
    death ...”).
    8
    Prior to trial, the Commissioner filed a motion for leave to
    amend his answer to include the alternative theory that, under
    I.R.C. § 2036(a), Strangi’s taxable estate should include the full
    value of the assets he transferred to SFLP and Stranco.            The Tax
    Court denied the motion.      After a two-day trial, the court held for
    the Estate, rejecting all of the Commissioner’s proffered reasons
    for   inclusion    of   the   assets.      See   Estate   of   Strangi    v.
    Commissioner, 
    115 T.C. 478
    (2000) (“Strangi I”).
    The Commissioner appealed, inter alia, the denial of the
    motion to amend his answer.          This court affirmed in part and
    reversed in part, and remanded the case to the Tax Court with
    instructions that it either “set forth its reasons for ... denial
    of the Commissioner’s motion for leave to amend” or “reverse its
    denial of the Commissioner’s motion, permit the amendment, and
    consider the Commissioner’s claim under § 2036". Estate of Strangi
    v. Commissioner, 
    293 F.3d 279
    , 282 (5th Cir. 2002).
    On remand, the Tax Court opted to permit the amendment.            The
    parties submitted additional briefs on the § 2036(a) issue and the
    Tax Court entered its opinion in May 2003, finding in favor of the
    Commissioner,     and   upholding   the   initially-assessed   estate    tax
    deficiency. See Estate of Strangi v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo 2003-
    145 (2003) (“Strangi II”).      The Estate now appeals the decision of
    the Tax Court.
    II
    9
    The Strangi Estate advances two primary arguments. Both hinge
    on the application of I.R.C. § 2036(a) to the facts at hand.
    Section 2036(a) provides:
    The value of the gross estate shall include
    the value of all property to the extent of any
    interest therein which the decedent has at any
    time made a transfer (except in the case of a
    bona fide sale for an adequate and full
    consideration in money or money’s worth), by
    trust or otherwise, under which he has
    retained for his life or for any period not
    ascertainable without reference to his death
    or for any period which does not in fact end
    before his death
    (1)   the possession or enjoyment of,
    or the right to the income
    from, the property, or
    (2)   the right, either alone or in
    conjunction with any person, to
    designate the persons who shall
    possess or enjoy the property
    or the income therefrom.
    First, the Estate contends that the Tax Court erred in holding
    that Strangi retained “possession or enjoyment” of the property he
    transferred to SFLP or the right to designate who would possess or
    enjoy it.    If Strangi did not retain such an interest, § 2036(a)
    does not apply.    Second, the Estate contends that, even if Strangi
    retained possession or enjoyment of the assets, the Tax Court erred
    in holding that the transfer did not fall within the “bona fide
    sale” exception to § 2036(a).
    A
    10
    The core of the Estate’s argument on appeal is that the Tax
    Court erred in concluding that Strangi retained possession or
    enjoyment of the assets he transferred to SFLP.            It follows, the
    Estate contends, that the Tax Court erred in holding that the
    assets were includible in the taxable estate under § 2036(a).
    Section 2036(a) is one of several provisions of the Internal
    Revenue Code intended to prevent parties from avoiding the estate
    tax by means of testamentary substitutes that permit a transferor
    to retain lifetime enjoyment of purportedly transferred property.
    See Estate of Lumpkin v. Commissioner, 
    474 F.2d 1092
    , 1097 (5th
    Cir.   1973).    Specifically,   §    2036(a)   provides    that   property
    transferred by a decedent will be included in the taxable estate
    if, after the transfer, the decedent retains either (1) “possession
    or enjoyment” of the transferred property; or (2) “the right ... to
    designate the persons who shall possess or enjoy the property or
    the income therefrom”.
    A transferor retains “possession or enjoyment” of property,
    within the meaning of § 2036(a)(1), if he retains a “substantial
    present economic benefit” from the property, as opposed to “a
    speculative contingent benefit which may or may not be realized”.
    United States v. Byrum, 
    408 U.S. 125
    , 145, 150 (1972).                  IRS
    regulations further require that there be an “express or implied”
    agreement “at the time of the transfer” that the transferor will
    11
    retain possession or enjoyment of the property.                        26 C.F.R. §
    20.2036-1(a).
    In the case at bar, the benefits retained by Strangi –-
    including, for example, periodic payments made prior to Strangi’s
    death, the continued use of the transferred house, and the post-
    death payment     of    various    debts      and   expenses    –-   were   clearly
    “substantial”    and    “present”,       as    opposed   to    “speculative”     or
    “contingent”.3        As such, our inquiry under § 2036(a)(1) turns
    solely on whether there was an express or implied agreement that
    Strangi would retain de facto control and/or enjoyment of the
    transferred assets.
    The Commissioner does not suggest that any express agreement
    existed.     Thus, the precise question before us is whether the
    record supports the Tax Court’s conclusion that Strangi and the
    other shareholders of Stranco –- that is, the Strangi children –-
    had an     implicit    agreement    by   which      Strangi    would    retain   the
    enjoyment of his property after the transfer to SFLP.4
    3
    See 
    Byrum, 408 U.S. at 146-47
    (A substantial present
    interest exists in “situations in which the owner of property
    divested himself of title but retained an income interest or, in
    the case of real property, the lifetime use of the property”.).
    4
    As the Tax Court explained, § 2036(a) includes within the
    taxable estate any asset that is not transferred “absolutely,
    unequivocally, irrevocably, and without possible reservations”.
    Strangi II, T.C. Memo 2003-145 (quoting Commissioner v. Estate of
    Church, 
    335 U.S. 632
    , 645 (1945)). The controlling question for
    present purposes, then, is not whether Strangi actually kept any
    particular asset in his possession, but whether he received a
    general assurance that his assets would be available to meet his
    personal needs.
    12
    The    Tax   Court’s   determination   that   an   implied   agreement
    existed is a finding of fact and is reviewed only for clear error.
    See Maxwell v. Commissioner, 
    3 F.3d 591
    , 594 (5th Cir. 1993).              A
    factual finding is not clearly erroneous if it is plausible in
    light of the record read as a whole.        See, e.g., United States v.
    Villanueva, 
    408 F.3d 193
    , 203 (5th Cir. 2005).            As such, we will
    disturb the Tax Court’s findings of fact only if we are “left with
    the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made”.
    Otto Candies, L.L.C. v. Nippon Kaiji Kyokai Corp., 
    346 F.3d 530
    ,
    533 (5th Cir. 2003) (quoting Allison v. Roberts (In re Allison),
    
    960 F.2d 481
    , 483 (5th Cir. 1992)).
    The Tax Court, in its memorandum opinion, presented a litany
    of circumstantial evidence to support its conclusion.             The Estate
    responds that each of the factors cited by the court is either
    factually   erroneous   or   irrelevant.     We    consider   each   of   the
    evidentiary factors in turn.
    First, the Commissioner cites SFLP’s various disbursements of
    funds to Strangi or his Estate.      The Estate responds that only two
    of the payments –- those made in September and October 1994,
    totaling $14,000 –- should be considered, because the remaining
    payments were made after Strangi’s death, and thus “were not as a
    consequence of anything Mr. Strangi did”.
    The Estate’s response misses the point.            Certainly, part of
    the “possession or enjoyment” of one’s assets is the assurance that
    they will be available to pay various debts and expenses upon one’s
    13
    death.5   And that assurance is precisely what Strangi retained in
    this case.   SFLP distributed over $100,000 from 1994 to 1996 to pay
    for funeral expenses, estate administration expenses, specific
    bequests and various personal debts that Strangi had incurred.
    These repeated distributions provide strong circumstantial evidence
    of   an   understanding   between   Strangi   and   his   children   that
    “partnership” assets would be used to meet Strangi’s expenses.6
    Second, the Tax Court found “highly probative” Strangi’s
    “continued physical possession of his residence after its transfer
    to SFLP”.    The Estate responds by noting that SFLP charged Strangi
    rent on the home.     As the Tax Court observed, although the rent
    charge was recorded in SFLP’s books in 1994, the Estate made no
    actual payment until 1997.      Even assuming that the belated rent
    payment was not a post hoc attempt to recast Strangi’s use of the
    5
    See 26 C.F.R. § 20.2036-1 (“The ‘use, possession ... or
    other enjoyment of the transferred property’ is considered as
    having been retained by ... the decedent to the extent that the
    use, possession ... or other enjoyment is to be applied toward the
    discharge of a legal obligation of the decedent ... .”); see also
    Ray   v.  United   States,   
    762 F.2d 1361
    ,   1363  (9th   Cir.
    1985)(considering use of transferred assets to pay transferor’s
    funeral expenses as supportive of finding that transferor retained
    possession or enjoyment under § 2036).
    6
    The Estate further contends that all of the above payments
    were “pro rata partnership distributions”, meaning that Stranco
    received cash disbursements in proportion to its 1% general partner
    interest in SFLP. The Tax Court characterized these payments as
    “de minimis”, insofar as they did not “in any substantial way
    operate to curb decedent’s ability to benefit from SFLP property”.
    Strangi II, T.C. Memo 2003-145. In short, although the importance
    of the pro rata distributions to the “implied agreement” inquiry is
    perhaps debatable, there is nothing clearly erroneous about the
    decision to assign them minimal weight.
    14
    house, such a deferral, in itself, provides a substantial economic
    benefit.     As such, the Tax Court did not err in considering
    Strangi’s continued occupancy of his home as evidence of an implied
    agreement.
    Third, both the Commissioner and the Tax Court point to
    Strangi’s lack of liquid assets after the transfer to SFLP as
    evidence that some arrangement to meet his expenses must have been
    made.   As 
    noted supra
    , Strangi transferred over 98% of his wealth
    to SFLP and afterward retained only $762 in truly liquid assets.
    The Estate counters that Strangi had over $187,000 in “liquefiable”
    securities, which could have been sold to meet expenses for the
    remainder of Strangi’s life –- that is, for the twelve to twenty-
    four months he was expected to live after August 1994.        Even this
    limited assertion seems dubious, however, when, as the Tax Court
    noted, Strangi averaged nearly $17,000 in monthly expenses over the
    two months between the creation of SFLP and his death.      See Strangi
    II, T.C. Memo 2003-145.
    In sum, upon creation of SFLP, Strangi retained assets barely
    sufficient to meet his own living expenses for the low end of his
    life expectancy –- that is, for about one year –- assuming he was
    never   required   to    pay   rent,    estate   administration   costs,
    outstanding personal debts, funeral expenses, or taxes.           At the
    same time, Strangi began receiving substantial monthly payments out
    of SFLP’s coffers.      Given these circumstances, we cannot say that
    the Tax Court clearly erred in holding that Strangi and his
    15
    children had some implicit understanding by which Strangi would
    continue    to   use   his   assets    as    needed,     and    therefore    retain
    “possession or enjoyment” within the meaning of § 2036(a)(1).7
    B
    The Estate next contends that, even if the assets transferred
    to SFLP do fall within the ambit of § 2036(a)(1), they should
    nonetheless be excluded from the taxable estate, based on the “bona
    fide sale” exception contained in § 2036(a).               For the reasons set
    forth below, we disagree.
    Section 2036(a) provides an exception for any transfer of
    property that is a “bona fide sale for an adequate and full
    consideration in money or money’s worth”.                The exception contains
    two   discrete    requirements:       (1)    a   “bona   fide    sale”,     and   (2)
    “adequate   and    full   consideration”.          See    Estate   of   Harper     v.
    Commissioner, T.C. Memo 2002-121.            Both must be satisfied for the
    exception to apply.
    1
    We turn briefly to the “adequate and full consideration”
    requirement.      This requirement is met only where any reduction in
    the estate’s value is “joined with a transfer that augments the
    estate by a commensurate ... amount”.              
    Kimbell, 371 F.3d at 262
    .
    7
    Because we hold that the transferred assets were properly
    included in the taxable estate under § 2036(a)(1), we do not reach
    the Commissioner’s alternative contention that Strangi retained the
    “right ... to designate the persons who shall possess or enjoy the
    property”, thus triggering inclusion under § 2036(a)(2).
    16
    Where assets are transferred into a partnership in exchange for a
    proportional     interest   therein,   the   “adequate     and   full
    consideration” requirement will generally be satisfied, so long as
    the formalities of the partnership entity are respected.8         The
    Commissioner concedes that such has been the case here.      As such,
    the adequate and full consideration prong of the exception is
    satisfied and the sole question before us is whether the transfer
    was a “bona fide sale”.
    2
    Thus, we turn our attention to the bona fide sale requirement.
    The term “bona fide”, taken literally, means “in good faith” or
    “without fraud or deceit”.    See BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY, 186 (8th ed.
    2004). As we have previously observed, use of a “bona fide”
    standard often requires the courts to assess both the subjective
    intent of a party and the objective results of his actions.      See,
    8
    As we observed in 
    Kimbell, 371 F.3d at 266
    :
    The proper focus therefore on whether a
    transfer to a partnership is for adequate and
    full consideration is: (1) whether the
    interest credited to each of the partners was
    proportionate to the fair market value of the
    assets each partner contributed to the
    partnership,    (2)    whether   the    assets
    contributed by each partner to the partnership
    were properly credited to the respective
    capital accounts of the partners, and (3)
    whether on termination or dissolution of the
    partnership the partners were entitled to
    distributions from the partnership in amounts
    equal to their respective capital accounts.
    17
    e.g., United States v. Adams, 
    174 F.3d 571
    , 576-77 (5th Cir.
    1999).
    As we noted in Wheeler v. United States, however, Congress in
    1976 removed a provision from the Internal Revenue Code that
    included within the taxable estate transfers “intended to take
    effect in possession or enjoyment” after the decedent’s death. 
    116 F.3d 749
    , 765 (5th Cir. 1997).                We observed that Congress’s
    apparent purpose was to “eliminate factbound determinations hinging
    on   subjective      motive”.      
    Id. (quoting Estate
       of   Elkins    v.
    Commissioner, 
    797 F.2d 481
    , 486 (7th Cir. 1986)).              As such, since
    Wheeler, we have held that whether a transfer of assets is a bona
    fide sale under § 2036(a) is a purely objective inquiry.                     See
    
    Kimbell, 371 F.3d at 263-64
    .
    We have yet to definitively state, however, precisely what
    this       “objective”   inquiry   entails.     Relying   on   language   from
    Wheeler, the Estate contends that the “objective” bona fide sale
    inquiry requires only that the transfer be for adequate and full
    consideration.9          The exception to § 2036(a), however, already
    9
    In support of its contention, the Estate cites Wheeler for
    the proposition that “[t]he only possible grounds for challenging
    the legitimacy of a transaction [under § 2036(a)] are whether the
    transferor actually parted with the [transferred property] and the
    transferee actually parted with the requisite adequate and full
    
    consideration”. 116 F.3d at 764
    . Our holding in Wheeler, however,
    was expressly limited to the narrow factual circumstances of an
    intra-family sale of a remainder interest in real property. See
    
    id. at 756.
    Although adequate consideration may suffice to show
    the absence of fraud or deceit where a real property interest is,
    in fact, transferred from one party to another, such is not the
    case where, as here, the purported transfer arguably deprives the
    18
    expressly   requires   that   transfers   be   for   “adequate   and   full
    consideration”.     As such, the Estate’s interpretation of the
    exception would render the term “bona fide” superfluous, and must
    therefore be rejected.10
    We think that the proper approach was set forth in Kimbell, in
    which we held that a sale is bona fide if, as an objective matter,
    it serves a “substantial business [or] other non-tax” purpose. 
    Id. at 267.
    As 
    noted supra
    , Congress has foreclosed the possibility of
    determining the purpose of a given transaction based on findings as
    to the subjective motive of the transferor.          Instead, the proper
    inquiry is whether the transfer in question was objectively likely
    to serve a substantial non-tax purpose.11      Thus, the finder of fact
    is charged with making an objective determination as to what, if
    any, non-tax business purposes the transfer was reasonably likely
    to serve at its inception.    We review such a determination only for
    clear error.      See Walker Intern. Holdings Ltd. v. Republic of
    Congo, 
    395 F.3d 229
    , 233 (5th Cir. 2004).
    transferor of literally nothing.
    10
    We recognize that the Estate’s proposed interpretation of
    § 2036(a) would yield a more uniform and predictable rule than the
    one set forth in Kimbell and here. Although we acknowledge the
    importance of predictability in the law governing estates and
    estate planning, it cannot be had at the expense of the plain
    language of the statute.
    11
    Accord Merryman v. Commissioner, 
    873 F.2d 879
    , 881 (5th
    Cir. 1989) (“To determine whether economic substance is present,
    courts view the objective realities of the transaction or, in other
    words, whether what was actually done is what the parties to the
    transaction purported to do.”).
    19
    The Estate proffered five discrete non-tax rationales for
    Strangi’s transfer of assets to SFLP.                  They are: (1) deterring
    potential tort litigation by Strangi’s former housekeeper; (2)
    deterring a potential will contest by the Seymour children; (3)
    persuading a corporate executor to decline to serve; (4) creating
    a joint investment vehicle for the partners; and (5) permitting
    centralized,     active    management       of   working         interests     owned   by
    Strangi.      The    Tax   Court   rejected       each      of    the    rationales     as
    factually implausible.        In reviewing for clear error, we ask only
    whether the Tax Court’s findings are supported by evidence in the
    record as a whole, not whether we would necessarily reach the same
    conclusions.
    First, the Estate contends that Strangi transferred his assets
    to SFLP partly out of concern that his former housekeeper, Stone,
    might bring a tort claim against the Estate for injuries sustained
    on the job.         The Tax Court, however, heard admissions by Gulig
    that Strangi had paid all of the medical expenses stemming from
    Stone’s injury and had continued to pay her salary during her
    absence from work.
    Still, the Estate contends, had Stone sued, she might have
    recovered    a     substantial     amount    for      her    pain       and   suffering.
    Although    this    possibility     cannot       be   ruled      out     entirely,     the
    evidence before the Tax Court suggests otherwise. Gulig testified,
    for example, that Stone and Strangi were “very close” and admitted
    that he had never inquired as to whether there was any evidence
    20
    that Strangi actually caused Stone’s injury.              Further, there is no
    evidence that Stone ever threatened to take any action.                 As such,
    the Tax Court did not clearly err in finding that the transfer of
    assets into SFLP did not operate to deter Stone from bringing a
    tort claim against the Estate.
    Second, the Estate contends that SFLP served to deter a will
    contest by the Seymour children.            The Tax Court concluded that
    “[t]he Seymour claims were stale when the partnership was formed,
    and   they   never   materialized”.        Strangi   
    I, 115 T.C. at 485
    .
    Further, although the Seymour children did retain counsel, Gulig
    admitted that prior to the creation of SFLP neither they nor their
    attorney ever contacted him in regard to Strangi’s will, and that
    no claim was ever made against the Estate.                Although reasonable
    minds   might   differ   on   this    point,   the   Tax     Court’s    factual
    conclusion –- i.e., that the Seymour children either would not or
    could not have mounted a successful challenge to the will –- is not
    clearly erroneous.
    Third, the Estate argues that SFLP deterred TCB, the corporate
    co-executor of Strangi’s will, from serving, thus saving the Estate
    a substantial amount in executor’s fees.              The Estate presented
    Gulig’s testimony regarding a meeting with TCB and TCB’s subsequent
    declining to serve.      Nonetheless, the Tax Court was unpersuaded,
    noting that it was “skeptical of the estate's claims of business
    purposes related to executor and attorney's fees”.               See 
    id. 21 The
    Estate concedes that “the reason for which the corporate
    co-executor declined to serve[] is not reflected in the record”.
    Thus, although a finder of fact might infer a causal relationship
    between the existence of SFLP and TCB’s withdrawal, there is
    nothing clearly erroneous in the Tax Court’s refusal to do so.
    Fourth, the Estate contends that SFLP functioned as a joint
    investment vehicle for its partners.   The Tax Court rejected this
    contention, noting that the contribution of the Strangi children,
    which totaled $55,650, was de minimis and thus properly ignored for
    purposes of the bona fide sale requirement.   The Tax Court further
    concluded that, even if the contributions of the children were
    properly considered, SFLP never made any investments or conducted
    any active business following its formation.    See Strangi I, 
    115 T.C. 486
    .
    The Estate responds that ignoring a shareholder’s contribution
    as de minimis runs contrary to Kimbell, in which we noted that
    there exists “no principle of partnership law that would require
    the minority partner to own a minimum percentage interest in the
    partnership for ... transfers to be bona 
    fide”. 371 F.3d at 268
    .
    It is certainly true that the de minimis contribution of a minority
    partner is not, in itself, sufficient grounds for finding that a
    transfer of assets to a partnership is not bona fide.     However,
    where a partnership has made no actual investments, the existence
    of minimal minority contributions may well be insufficient to
    overcome an inference by the finder of fact that joint investment
    22
    was objectively unlikely. Such appears to have been the case here.
    Thus, it was not clear error for the Tax Court to reject the
    Estate’s “joint investment” rationale.
    Finally,    the    Estate   contends   that   SFLP   permitted   active
    management of Strangi’s “working assets”. As a preliminary matter,
    it is undisputed that the overwhelming majority of the assets
    transferred to SFLP did not require active management.                   Some
    seventy percent of the transfer, for example, consisted of various
    brokerage accounts. As the Estate points out, however, this is not
    unlike the situation in Kimbell, where we reversed summary judgment
    for the Commissioner based in part on the transferor’s contribution
    of $438,000 in working oil and gas properties, which comprised
    approximately 11% of the overall transfer.             See 
    id. at 267.
    The Estate asserts that working assets –- including real
    property and interests in real estate partnerships –- comprise an
    approximately equal proportion of the transfer in this case, as in
    Kimbell.       Assuming this to be an accurate characterization of
    Strangi’s contribution, this analogy misses the point. In Kimbell,
    we reviewed cross motions for summary judgment on the “bona fide
    sale” issue.      In reversing the district court, we noted that the
    Commissioner “raised no issues of material fact in its motion for
    summary judgment and challenged none of the taxpayer's facts”. 
    Id. at 268-69.
        Among    the   unchallenged   facts    was   the   taxpayer’s
    assertion that there had been significant active management of the
    transferred oil and gas properties.          
    Id. at 267-68.
    23
    By contrast, this case comes to us after a full trial on the
    merits. The Tax Court heard uncontested evidence that “[n]o active
    business was conducted by SFLP following its formation”.              Strangi
    
    I, 115 T.C. at 486
    .   In   short,     although   Strangi     may   have
    transferred a substantial percentage of assets that might have been
    actively managed under SFLP, the Tax Court concluded, based on
    substantial evidence, that no such management ever took place.
    From this, the Tax Court fairly inferred that active management was
    objectively unlikely as of the date of SFLP’s creation.              As such,
    we cannot say that the Tax Court clearly erred in rejecting the
    Estate’s “active management” rationale.
    In sum, we hold that the Tax Court did not clearly err in
    finding    that   Strangi’s   transfer   of    assets    to   SFLP   lacked   a
    substantial non-tax purpose.        Accordingly, the “bona fide sale”
    exception to § 2036(a) is not triggered, and the transferred assets
    are properly included within the taxable estate.                We therefore
    affirm the estate tax deficiency assessed against the Estate.
    C
    The Estate raises one final matter for our consideration.               It
    contends that, even if the Tax Court did not err in holding the
    transferred assets includible under § 2036(a), it nonetheless
    abused its discretion in denying the Estate leave to amend its
    petition to include a computational offset, based on a time-barred
    income tax refund, under the doctrine of equitable recoupment.                As
    24
    such, the Estate requests that we remand the case to the Tax Court
    with instructions that it offset the assessed estate tax deficiency
    by $304,402 already paid in income taxes.
    The   doctrine   of   equitable    recoupment   applies    where   the
    Commissioner brings a timely suit for payment of taxes owed and the
    taxpayer seeks to offset that amount by seeking a refund of an
    erroneously imposed tax, but the taxpayer’s claim is time-barred.
    Equitable recoupment allows the taxpayer to raise the time barred
    refund claim “in order to reduce or eliminate the money owed on the
    [Commissioner’s] timely claim”. Estate of Branson v. Commissioner,
    
    264 F.3d 904
    , 909 (9th Cir. 2001).
    The problem in this case, as the Tax Court points out, is that
    the Estate has adopted two inconsistent positions with respect to
    its   equitable   recoupment   argument.      To   sustain   a   claim   for
    equitable recoupment, the taxpayer must show, inter alia, that the
    refund sought is, in fact, time-barred. See Estate of 
    Branson, 264 F.3d at 910
    (citing Stone v. White, 
    301 U.S. 532
    , 538 (1937)).           The
    Estate, however, currently has a separate action pending in the
    Western District of Texas, in which it contends that the disputed
    refund is not time-barred.
    Given this inconsistency, the Tax Court held that the Estate
    failed to show that the refund was time-barred, and denied its
    motion to amend.       On appeal, the Estate argues only that this
    result is inequitable.      Unfortunately, in so doing, it neglects to
    25
    address the controlling legal issue here –- i.e., whether the Tax
    Court erred in concluding that the refund was not time-barred, and
    thus not subject to equitable recoupment.    In sum, because the
    Estate has failed to brief us on the underlying merits of the Tax
    Court’s ruling, it has likewise failed to show that the Tax Court
    abused its discretion in denying the motion to amend.
    III
    For the foregoing reasons, the decision of the Tax Court is
    AFFIRMED.
    26