Kenneth Heiting v. United States ( 2021 )


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  •                                In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________________
    No. 20-1324
    KENNETH HEITING and ARDYCE HEITING,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    ____________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the
    Western District of Wisconsin.
    No. 19-cv-224 — James D. Peterson, Chief Judge.
    ____________________
    ARGUED JANUARY 14, 2021 — DECIDED OCTOBER 18, 2021
    ____________________
    Before RIPPLE, KANNE, and ROVNER, Circuit Judges.
    ROVNER, Circuit Judge. Plaintiffs Kenneth and Ardyce
    Heiting brought this action seeking an income tax refund of
    the taxes they had paid on an unauthorized sale of stock by a
    trust. The IRS denied the relief, and the Heitings filed their
    complaint seeking the refund. The district court granted the
    government’s motion to dismiss that complaint, and the
    Heitings appeal that decision.
    2                                                    No. 20-1324
    In January 2004, the Heitings created the Kenneth E. and
    Ardyce A. Heiting Joint Revocable Trust. The trust was ad-
    ministered at all relevant times by the trustee BMO Harris
    Bank. Because the Heitings could revoke the trust agreement
    at any time during their lifetime, the trust is considered a
    “grantor trust” for purposes of federal taxation. As a grantor
    trust, the trust itself filed no tax returns, and the Heitings re-
    ported the trust’s gains and losses on their own returns. See
    Schulz v. Comm’r of Internal Revenue, 
    686 F.2d 490
    , 495 (7th Cir.
    1982) (noting that “[t]he main thrust of the grantor trust pro-
    visions is that the trust will be ignored and the grantor treated
    as the appropriate taxpayer whenever the grantor has sub-
    stantially unfettered powers of disposition.”)
    Under the terms of the trust, the trustee had broad author-
    ity as to the trust assets in general, but that power was explic-
    itly limited with respect to two particular categories. With re-
    spect to Bank of Montreal Quebec Common Stock (“BMO”)
    and Fidelity National Information Services, Inc. Common
    Stock (“FIS”) (collectively, the “restricted stock”), the trustee
    had “no discretionary power, control or authority to take any
    action(s) with regard to any shares … including, but not lim-
    ited to, actions to purchase, sell, exchange, retain or option the
    Stock.” Amendment and Restatement of the Joint Trust
    Agreement, Articles IX and X, App. at A-21. In contrast to the
    nearly limitless power as to other stocks, with respect to the
    restricted stock the trustee thus lacked the authority to take
    any actions, including any sale or purchase of that stock, ab-
    sent the Heitings’ express authorization.
    Despite that restriction, the trustee in October 2015 sold
    the restricted stock held in the trust and incurred a taxable
    gain on the sale which totaled $5,643,067.50. The Heitings
    No. 20-1324                                                    3
    accordingly included that gain in their gross income on their
    2015 personal tax return, and paid taxes on it. The trustee sub-
    sequently realized that the sale of the stock was prohibited by
    the trust agreement, and in January 2016 the trustee pur-
    chased the same number of shares of that restricted stock with
    the sale proceeds from the earlier transaction.
    Following the purchase of the restricted stock in 2016, the
    Heitings sought to invoke the claim of right doctrine as
    codified in 26 U.S.C. § 1341 to claim a deduction on their 2016
    return. Under the claim of right doctrine, a taxpayer must
    report income in the year in which it was received, even if the
    taxpayer could be required to return the income at a later time
    but would then be entitled to a deduction in the year of that
    repayment. United States v. Skelly Oil Co., 
    394 U.S. 678
    , 680
    (1969). To alleviate inequities in the application of that
    doctrine, Congress subsequently enacted 26 U.S.C. § 1341,
    which added, as an alternative to the deduction in the
    repayment year, the option of the taxpayers recomputing
    their taxes for the year of receipt of the income. Id. at 681–82.
    In order to qualify for relief under § 1341(a), taxpayers
    must plead that: “(1) an item was included in gross income
    for a prior taxable year (or years) because it appeared that the
    taxpayer had an unrestricted right to such item; (2) a deduc-
    tion is allowable for the taxable year because it was estab-
    lished after the close of such prior taxable year (or years) that
    the taxpayer did not have an unrestricted right to such item
    or to a portion of such item; and (3) the amount of such de-
    duction exceeds $3,000.” 26 U.S.C. § 1341(a)(1)–(3). If those are
    established, then the tax imposed for the taxable year is the
    lesser of “the tax for the taxable year computed with such de-
    duction,” or “the tax for the taxable year computed without
    4                                                     No. 20-1324
    such deduction, minus … the decrease in tax … for the prior
    taxable year (or years) which would result solely from the ex-
    clusion of such item (or portion thereof) from gross income
    for such prior taxable year (or years).” 26 U.S.C. §1341(a)(4)–
    (5).
    In initially rejecting the Heitings’ claim for a tax refund,
    the IRS relied on an exception in the statute, maintaining that
    under § 1341(b)(2) such relief was inapplicable to “the sale or
    other disposition of the Stock in trade of the taxpayer.” Before
    the district court, however, the government did not argue that
    the denial of relief was supportable on that reasoning,
    abandoning any reliance on the stock-in-trade provision to
    support the denial. Nor does it argue such a basis for denial
    here. Accordingly, that rationale is not before us.
    In granting the government’s motion to dismiss, the dis-
    trict court held that the Heitings were entitled to a credit on
    the taxes under § 1341 only if they were legally obligated to
    return the proceeds of the restricted stock sale, and that the
    complaint alleged no such obligation. We consider de novo a
    district court’s grant of a motion to dismiss, accepting all well-
    pleaded facts as true and taking all reasonable inferences in
    the plaintiff’s favor. White v. United Airlines, Inc., 
    987 F.3d 616
    ,
    620 (7th Cir. 2021). We can affirm on any ground adequately
    raised in the district court that is supported by the record. 
    Id.
    On appeal, the government concedes that the Heitings can
    establish the first requirement under § 1341(a), in that they
    alleged the receipt of an item of income in 2015—the $5.6
    million gain received on the sale of the restricted shares—
    which was taxable directly to the Heitings as taxpayers
    because the revocable trust is disregarded for tax purposes.
    The government asserts that the second element of § 1341(a)
    No. 20-1324                                                      5
    was not met, however, and that the district court properly
    granted the motion to dismiss on that basis. First, as it did in
    the district court, the government argues that the Heitings
    failed to adequately allege that, after the close of tax year 2015,
    they did not have an unrestricted right to the income from the
    sale of the restricted stock held in their trust, and were under
    a legal obligation to restore that income to its actual owner, as
    is required under § 1341(a)(2). The government asserts that
    the trustee simply bought some stock in 2016 in an attempt to
    reverse the effect of the earlier, 2015, transaction, but the
    taxpayers’ right to the income from the earlier transaction was
    never in question. Finally, the government argues that the
    Heitings did not, and could not, plead that their “restoration”
    of income was a deductible expense to them, as required
    under § 1341.
    The Heitings contend that because the issue is the tax
    obligations of the trust, not of themselves as individuals, the
    proper focus must be on whether the trust had an unrestricted
    right to the income in the initial and subsequent tax years.
    Accordingly, they challenge the argument of the government
    that there was no legal obligation to restore the item of income
    because the Heitings, the taxpayers here, had the ability to
    approve of the sale of the restricted stock and therefore
    authorize the sale and the retention of the proceeds after-the-
    fact. See Wis. Stat. § 701.0808(1) (stating that “[w]hile a trust
    is revocable, the trustee may follow a direction of the settlor
    that is contrary to the terms of the trust.”) They argue that the
    district court, in determining that the requirements of §
    1341(a)(2) were not met, improperly relied on the nature of
    the trust under which the Heitings themselves could approve
    of the sale of the restricted stock after the fact thus eliminating
    6                                                   No. 20-1324
    any restriction on the income or any legal obligation to restore
    the income.
    As the sole beneficiaries, the Heitings had an unrestricted
    right to the funds, because they had the absolute authority to
    choose to accept the funds and authorize the trust’s actions.
    But the Heitings maintain that the proper focus is on the
    trust’s actions, and whether the trust retained an unrestricted
    right to the funds, arguing that they merely stepped into the
    shoes of the trust in including the trust income on their taxes.
    We need not address that issue, however, because even con-
    sidering only whether the trust itself had an unrestricted right
    to the funds, the Heitings cannot succeed. With that focus on
    the obligations of the trust rather than the Heitings, we turn
    to the Heitings’ challenge to the dismissal.
    The Heitings argue that the trustee’s sale and subsequent
    repurchase of the restricted stock falls within the language of
    § 1341(a) as a taxable transaction that was “reversed” in the
    year after the sale by a trustee that was legally obligated to do
    so. As an initial matter, the characterization of the purchase
    as a “reversal” of the original sale implies that the second
    transaction was a retraction of the first, undoing it cleanly and
    putting the parties to the transaction in the same place as be-
    fore it, but as the government points out the different timing
    of the two transactions renders that characterization inaccu-
    rate. The government asks us to take judicial notice of the
    publicly reported stock prices on the New York Stock Ex-
    change, which would indicate that BMO shares that the trust
    sold for $59.27 in 2015, were repurchased for a lower price,
    between $50.18 and $52.46, on January 13, 2016, and the FIS
    shares that the trust sold for $72.24 per share in 2015, were
    repurchased at a lower price of between $58.93 and $60.70 on
    No. 20-1324                                                    7
    January 13, 2016. We need not take judicial notice of the actual
    numbers to conclude that a sale of stock in one time period
    cannot be simply “reversed” by purchasing the stock back at
    a different time, because the fluctuation in prices will often
    result in a greater loss or gain over that time. But regardless
    of the characterization of the transactions, the insurmountable
    problem for the Heitings is not that the transactions were un-
    equal in nature, but that the complaint does not adequately
    allege that the trust had a legal obligation to restore the items
    of income—the restricted stock—as is required under
    § 1341(a)(2).
    Under § 1341(a)(2), the Heitings had to show that the
    repayment in the later year occurred because “it was
    established after the close of such prior taxable year (or years)
    that the taxpayer did not have an unrestricted right to such
    item or to a portion of such item.” See Alcoa, Inc. v. United
    States, 
    509 F.3d 173
    , 177 (3d Cir. 2007) (“The taxpayer bears
    the burden of proving his eligibility for section 1341
    treatment.”). The language requiring that “it was established”
    that the taxpayer did not have an unrestricted right to the item
    has been interpreted as requiring a legal obligation to restore
    the item of income; a voluntary choice to repay is not enough.
    Batchelor-Robjohns v. United States, 
    788 F.3d 1280
    , 1293–94
    (11th Cir. 2015) (“[t]he taxpayer's return of the income must
    not be the result of the taxpayer's purely voluntary choice;
    rather, it must be ‘established,’ for example, by a court, that
    the taxpayer did not have an unrestricted right to the income.
    … [P]ayments made to settle a lawsuit may satisfy this
    requirement.”); Cal-Farm Ins. Co. v. United States, 
    647 F. Supp. 1083
    , 1092 (E.D. Cal. 1986), aff’d 
    820 F.2d 1227
     (9th Cir. 1987)
    (noting that the statute requires a legal obligation to restore
    the funds and that “voluntary repayments are outside the
    8                                                   No. 20-1324
    scope of section 1341”). To meet that requirement, taxpayers
    must demonstrate that they “involuntarily gave away the
    relevant income because of some obligation, and the
    obligation had a substantive nexus to the original receipt of
    the income.” Mihelick v. United States, 
    927 F.3d 1138
    , 1146 (11th
    Cir. 2019). That involuntary legal obligation to restore the
    item of income can be shown by a court judgment requiring
    the repayment, but a good-faith settlement of a claim can also
    suffice. Id.; Cal-Farm Ins. Co., 
    647 F. Supp. at 1092
    .
    We have no allegation here that “it was established” that
    the trust did not have an unrestricted right to the item of
    income in this case. The Heitings have alleged only that the
    trustee’s sale of the restricted stock was contrary to the trust
    agreement. At most, that alleges a potential restriction, which
    originated at the time of the transaction in 2015. But the
    Heitings make no allegations that they, as the sole
    beneficiaries of the trust, demanded the restoration of the
    stock or otherwise communicated an intent to pursue any of
    their rights for the breach of the trust agreement. The
    existence of a potential claim against the income is not enough
    to “establish” that the trust lacked an unrestricted right to the
    income.
    In fact, the case relied upon by the Heitings in this case,
    First Nat. Bank of Chicago v. United States, 
    551 F. Supp. 157
    (N.D. Ill. 1982), makes clear that distinction, and weighs
    against the Heitings’ position. In First National, an action was
    brought by the trustees of two trusts for a refund of taxes paid
    in 1972 and 1973. The taxes were paid on the proceeds of the
    sale of certain stock in 1972 and 1973, and the propriety of the
    sale by the trusts was challenged by a trust beneficiary. 
    Id. at 158
    . The trust beneficiary filed a lawsuit as to that challenge
    No. 20-1324                                                     9
    in 1974, and a court ultimately ordered the sale rescinded. 
    Id.
    The question before the First National court was whether the
    taxpayer’s right to the items of income was not actually “un-
    restricted” in 1972 and 1973 given that the sale was limited by
    the trust agreement and the challenge raised to the sale by one
    of the trust’s beneficiaries.
    The First National court held that “[t]he fact that a trust
    beneficiary disputed the sale only represented a ‘potential re-
    striction’ which is not a ‘restriction on use’” within the mean-
    ing of the claim of right doctrine. 
    Id. at 159
    . For that holding,
    the First National court cited Healy v. Commissioner of Internal
    Revenue, 
    345 U.S. 278
    , 284 (1953), which held that under the
    claim of right analysis, “a potential or dormant restriction …
    which depends upon the future application of rules of law to
    present facts, is not a ‘restriction on use.’” Accordingly, the
    First National court held that the plaintiff possessed an unre-
    stricted right to the income for the years 1972 and 1973, even
    though the trustee challenged the sale and the trustees were
    bound by the fiduciary obligation to the beneficiary. The trus-
    tee was entitled to a deduction in the year of repayment once
    it was established that the taxpayer did not have an unre-
    stricted right by the beneficiaries’ pursuit of a lawsuit and
    judgment.
    The First National court made clear, therefore, that an
    initial objection by a beneficiary to the sale, or the limitations
    of the trust agreement itself, were not in themselves sufficient
    to demonstrate that the taxpayer did not have an unrestricted
    right to the item of income. That is essentially what we have
    here. Unlike First National, there is no such order requiring the
    re-purchase of the stock, and no requirement that the funds
    be returned to another. In fact, the Heitings do not even allege
    10                                                    No. 20-1324
    a challenge by the beneficiaries to the sale—and as the
    beneficiaries, they would be in a position to identify any
    challenge. Instead, they merely argue that the sale of the
    restricted stock was in violation of the terms of the trust
    agreement. That is precisely the type of potential or dormant
    restriction, dependent on the future application of law to fact,
    that is insufficient to indicate that a right to the item of income
    was not an unrestricted one. See also Inductotherm Indus., Inc.
    v. United States, 
    351 F.3d 120
    , 124 (3d Cir. 2003) (holding that
    even though the government could prosecute a corporation
    for the failure to comply with an Executive Order placing
    restrictions on certain funds, the government had the
    discretion not to pursue that violation, and the Executive
    Order was therefore merely a potential or dormant restriction
    which depended on the future application of law to facts and
    not a disposition restriction under the second prong of §
    1341).
    Finally, the only authority relied upon by the Heitings as
    establishing a legal obligation to reverse the sale does not
    support that interpretation. The Heitings point to Wisconsin
    statutory law allowing lawsuits against trustees and setting
    forth the remedies for a breach of trust. See Wis. Stat. §§
    701.0201, 701.1001. That authority does not help the Heitings.
    First, the statute does not even mandate as a remedy the
    action taken by the trustee in this case—the repurchase of the
    stock. The Wisconsin statute cited by the Heitings provides a
    list of potential remedies for a breach of trust including,
    among others: compelling a trustee to redress a breach of trust
    by paying money, restoring property, or other means;
    ordering a trustee to account; suspending or removing the
    trustee; reducing the compensation or denying the
    compensation to the trustee; and voiding an act of a trustee,
    No. 20-1324                                                    11
    or tracing trust property and ordering recovery of the
    property or its proceeds (although this option is unavailable
    in the case of a good faith purchaser). See Wis. Stat. §
    701.1001(2)(a)–(j). Given the range of potential remedies,
    including merely seeking damages from the trustee or
    suspending or removing the trustee, the statutory authority
    certainly does not establish an obligation for the trustee to
    repurchase the stock. In contrast, the terms of the trust
    agreement specifically prohibited the purchase of the restricted
    stock in 2016, just as it had prohibited the sale of that stock in
    2015. Therefore, the legal authority relied upon by the
    Heitings fails to establish that the trustees had a legal
    obligation to purchase the restricted stock in 2016 but does
    establish—by the terms of the trust agreement—a prohibition
    on that action.
    Moreover, the statutory authority is unhelpful for an even
    more fundamental reason, which is that the beneficiaries
    never sought any relief at all from the trustee, nor did they
    allege an intent or even a threat to do so. As we discussed
    earlier, although the Heitings were the beneficiaries of the
    trust with the authority to approve or disapprove of the
    actions of the trustee, the complaint contains no allegation
    that they ever challenged the purchase of the restricted stock
    or made any demand of the trustee with respect to that sale of
    the restricted stock. At most, then, the reference to the
    Wisconsin statutory rights alleges that the Heitings could
    have pursued a legal remedy if they in fact were displeased
    with the trustee’s actions in breach of the trust. That mere
    possibility is, as we have shown, insufficient to “establish”
    that the trust lacked an unrestricted right to the proceeds of
    the sale of the restricted stock. Accordingly, the district court
    properly determined that the requirements of § 1341(a)(2)
    12                                                No. 20-1324
    were not met and we need not consider the government’s
    alternative argument that the Heitings did not, and could not,
    plead that their “restoration” of income was a deductible
    expense to them, as required under § 1341.
    The decision of the district court is AFFIRMED.