Leigh C. Fairbank & Barbara J. Fairbank ( 2023 )


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  •                      United States Tax Court
    
    T.C. Memo. 2023-19
    LEIGH C. FAIRBANK AND BARBARA J. FAIRBANK,
    Petitioners
    v.
    COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE,
    Respondent
    —————
    Docket No. 13400-18.                                       Filed February 23, 2023.
    —————
    Robert S. Williams and Samuel T. Houston, for petitioners.
    Sean P. Deneault, Edward A. Waters, Mark J. Tober, David D. Duncan,
    and A. Gary Begun, for respondent.
    MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
    WEILER, Judge: This case arises from a notice of deficiency dated
    April 12, 2018, in which the Internal Revenue Service (IRS or
    respondent) determined income tax deficiencies for taxable years 2003,
    2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, and 2011 (years at issue) of $20,088,
    $5,078, $6,136, $23,011, $10,785, $15,910, $28,130, and $95,994,
    respectively, and accuracy-related penalties under section 6662 1 of
    $4,018, $1,016, $1,227, $4,602, $2,157, $3,182, $5,626, and $19,199,
    respectively. After concessions, 2 the issues for decision are whether
    1 Unless otherwise indicated, all statutory references are to the Internal
    Revenue Code (Code), Title 26 U.S.C., in effect at all relevant times, all regulation
    references are to the Code of Federal Regulations, Title 26 (Treas. Reg.), in effect at all
    relevant times, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and
    Procedure. All dollar amounts are rounded to the nearest dollar.
    2 As part of a Stipulation of Settled Issues dated November 19, 2021,
    respondent conceded that there is no deficiency in income tax due for tax year 2011.
    Therefore, the taxable years at issue include only 2003 through 2009.
    Served 02/23/23
    2
    [*2] (1) respondent’s notice of deficiency was issued timely under section
    6501, (2) respondent’s adjustments to petitioners’ federal income tax for
    the years at issue should be sustained on account of Mrs. Fairbank’s
    beneficial ownership of a foreign account held at Union Bank of
    Switzerland (UBS), and (3) petitioners are liable for accuracy-related
    penalties under section 6662(a) and (b)(1) for the tax years at issue.
    Petitioners maintain that respondent’s assessment in this case is
    time barred by the three-year period of limitations in section 6501(a).
    Respondent, however, argues the period of limitations for assessment
    remains open under section 6501(c)(8) since petitioners failed to file the
    requisite information returns related to Mrs. Fairbank’s foreign bank
    accounts with their joint Forms 1040, U.S. Individual Income Tax
    Return. We agree with respondent’s position and hold petitioners have
    failed to properly report Mrs. Fairbank’s beneficial ownership in her
    foreign UBS account; accordingly, the period of limitations under section
    6501 remained open at the time respondent’s notice of deficiency was
    issued. Therefore, we sustain respondent’s determination of tax
    deficiencies and penalties against petitioners as set forth herein.
    FINDINGS OF FACT
    This case was tried during the Court’s Jacksonville, Florida,
    remote trial session. At trial the parties stipulated to most of the facts,
    which are so found. Petitioners resided in Florida when they timely filed
    their Petition on July 9, 2018. This case concerns Mrs. Fairbank’s
    transfers with foreign banking institutions in Switzerland during tax
    years 2003 through 2009.
    I.    Petitioners’ Background
    Petitioners have been married since 2003 and were U.S. citizens
    during all relevant years at issue. While petitioners resided in
    Sopchoppy, Florida, when the Petition was filed, Mrs. Fairbank
    previously resided in Fullerton, California.
    A.     Mr. and Mrs. Fairbank
    Leigh Fairbank earned a bachelor’s degree from West Point and
    holds a master’s degree in business from Georgia State University.
    Mrs. Fairbank’s legal name is Barbara Jean Fairbank. Mrs.
    Fairbank was formerly known as Barbara Hagaman, and she held a U.S.
    passport during all relevant years at issue. Mrs. Fairbank holds an
    3
    [*3] associate’s degree from Stephens College in Columbia, Missouri.
    During much of her adult life Mrs. Fairbank was mostly a homemaker
    and has seldom worked outside the home. Before her marriage to Mr.
    Fairbank, Mrs. Fairbank was married to Earl Hagaman, whom she had
    met in 1960. On November 24, 1961, Mrs. Fairbank married Mr.
    Hagaman in California, and together they had four children. Their
    marriage was coming to an end in early 1981 when Mrs. Fairbank (then
    Mrs. Hagaman) separated from Mr. Hagaman.
    B.     Mr. Hagaman
    Mr. Hagaman was a certified public accountant (CPA) and
    generally worked for large corporations throughout his marriage to Mrs.
    Fairbank, until late 1977, when he became an oil broker and began
    working for his own companies. Before starting his own business
    ventures, Mr. Hagaman had a successful career in industry working for
    companies such as Hughes Aircraft, United Convalescent Hospital,
    Litton Industries, and Urich Oil Co. Being well versed in financial
    matters, Mr. Hagaman took care of the family finances during his
    marriage to Mrs. Fairbank. Mr. Hagaman held financial accounts or
    foreign entities in Liechtenstein, New Zealand, and Switzerland. In
    1985 Mr. Hagaman became a permanent resident of New Zealand.
    Despite Mr. Hagaman’s personal financial success, he failed to
    file federal income tax returns for tax years 1980 through 1982, a period
    during which he moved in excess of $16 million from banks in the United
    States to banks in Switzerland and New Zealand. On April 7, 1983, the
    IRS served summonses on Mr. Hagaman concerning his failure to pay
    income tax from 1980 through 1982 on profits earned in an oil brokerage
    business. On July 25, 1985, the IRS sent Mr. Hagaman and Mrs.
    Fairbank (then Mrs. Hagaman) a Notice of Jeopardy Assessment and
    Right of Appeal (jeopardy assessment notice) regarding tax years 1980
    through 1982. In the jeopardy assessment notice the IRS stated that Mr.
    Hagaman had “engaged in sham operations, involving the purchase and
    sale of crude oil, and [had] derived large profits from these activities.”
    According to the jeopardy assessment notice, these foreign
    operations earned Mr. Hagaman substantial income within the United
    States which he failed to report on his federal income tax returns. The
    total amount of tax, additions to tax, and interest due in the jeopardy
    assessment notice was $14,766,694 for tax years 1980 through 1982. On
    March 3, 1987, the IRS issued Mr. Hagaman and Mrs. Fairbank a Notice
    of Levy concerning their joint federal income tax liabilities of
    4
    [*4] $18,145,524 for tax years 1980 through 1982. The Notice of Levy
    was served upon Bank of America in Marina del Rey, California, with a
    summons requesting additional information about accounts held jointly
    and individually by Mr. Hagaman and Mrs. Fairbank.
    On May 9, 1990, Mrs. Fairbank received innocent spouse relief
    from her joint and several federal income tax liabilities under section
    6013(e) for tax years 1980 and 1981 pursuant to a stipulated decision of
    this Court. Mr. Hagaman agreed to settle his federal income tax
    deficiencies (with the IRS) for tax years 1980 through 1982 and a
    stipulated decision reflecting such was entered by this Court on May 9,
    1990.
    C.     Mr. Hagaman and Mrs. Fairbank’s Divorce and Child
    Support Agreements
    In early 1981 Mr. Hagaman and Mrs. Fairbank separated, and a
    Final Judgment of Dissolution of Marriage was granted on May 21,
    1982, by the Los Angeles County Superior Court (Superior Court). As
    part of the divorce proceedings, Mr. Hagaman and Mrs. Fairbank signed
    an Agreement of Interim and Partial Distribution of Community
    Property (interim agreement). At the time the interim agreement was
    signed in 1983, Mr. Hagaman and Mrs. Fairbank had yet to resolve all
    issues regarding the allocation of their community property and
    liabilities from their marriage. The interim agreement’s validity and
    enforceability was not dependent upon the approval of the Superior
    Court, and it was subject to nondisclosure provisions since it was
    intended to remain a private matter as between the parties. During the
    divorce proceedings, Mrs. Fairbank was represented by her attorney,
    Robert Brock.
    According to the interim agreement, Section V, Temporary Child
    Support, Mr. Hagaman agreed to pay Mrs. Fairbank child support of
    $500 per month per child for a total of $1,000 per month commencing on
    April 1, 1983, and continuing until the child turned 18, died, became
    self-supporting, married, was emancipated, or was not residing with
    Mrs. Fairbank, or until further order of court, whichever event came
    first. Despite the terms of the interim agreement, Mr. Hagaman
    subsequently orally agreed to pay Mrs. Fairbank child support of
    $40,000 per year for 20 years and then to divide the remaining
    community assets between them. Mr. Hagaman kept his word pursuant
    to the oral amendment to the interim agreement and made the child
    5
    [*5] support payments to Mrs. Fairbank, who noted receiving $40,000
    in child support for years 1984 through 1988.
    Notwithstanding the terms of the interim agreement and the
    subsequent oral amendment thereto, Mr. Hagaman and Mrs. Fairbank
    again orally amended the interim agreement in December 1989 when
    Mrs. Fairbank traveled with their children to New Zealand for the
    holiday season. The second oral amendment to the interim agreement
    resulted in Mr. Hagaman’s agreeing to make three lump-sum cash
    payments. Under the terms of the second oral amendment, these three
    lump-sum payments were to be made in January 1990, October 1993,
    and October 1995, respectively, and in the amounts of $190,000,
    $190,000, and $160,000, respectively. The interim agreement was silent
    as to any foreign bank accounts. From December 2005 to October 2012,
    Mr. Hagaman and Mrs. Fairbank renewed litigation in the Superior
    Court over their divorce, principally involving the unresolved division of
    their community property.
    As part of this renewed litigation, on November 29, 2007, Mr.
    Hagaman filed with the Superior Court a Responsive Declaration to
    Order to Show Cause or Notice of Motion for Injunctive and Other
    Restraining Orders. In his declaration, Mr. Hagaman stated that the
    “payments to [Mrs. Fairbank] were made through an attorney in
    Switzerland, Dr. Walter Müllhaupt, to [Mrs. Fairbank’s] attorney, Dr.
    Xavier Lienert, in Switzerland.” Mr. Hagaman further stated that Mrs.
    Fairbank “wanted the payments to be made to her Swiss establishment,
    Xavana Establishment.”
    On October 23, 2012, the Superior Court entered a Judgment on
    Reserved Issues. The included stipulation notes Mrs. Fairbank’s
    assertion that Mr. Hagaman’s “payments for additional child support
    were made by deposit of funds into an account in the name of Xavana
    Establishment, an entity formed in Switzerland or Liechtenstein.”
    6
    [*6] II.       Foreign Bank Accounts/Entities and Child Support Payment
    Structure
    A.       Xavana Establishment 3
    Xavana Establishment’s foundation deed states that INTROMEX
    Treuunternehmen 4 Reg., Mauren (INTROMEX), founded Xavana
    Establishment on March 2, 1983, in Mauren, Liechtenstein, and is its
    appointed representative. According to the Contract of Mandate, Karin
    Bühler is to operate Xavana Establishment “on a trust basis according
    to the instructions of the [c]lient, whether these instructions be
    communicated to her directly by the [c]lient or through a representative
    designated by the [c]lient by registered letter.” The client referenced in
    the Contract of Mandate is Rolf Besser, one of the Swiss attorneys with
    whom Mrs. Fairbank corresponded regarding Xavana Establishment.
    Ms. Bühler worked for INTROMEX and in her capacity as trustee she
    received “a fixed annual fee of . . . 2,000 [Swiss francs]” along with
    reimbursement for cash expenses and special tasks.
    Xavana Establishment was funded with 30,000 Swiss francs for
    the “investment and management of assets.” The statutes of Xavana
    Establishment state, at Article 7, that Xavana Establishment’s “capital
    may not be divided into shares.” According to Article 9 of the statutes,
    the capital of Xavana Establishment “and its results as well as any clear
    profits of . . . [Xavana] Establishment shall be due to the beneficiaries,
    which shall be designated by the founder,” and that such a designation
    can be made in a “revocable or irrevocable way.”
    On November 19, 2001, a “Declaration of the contracting
    partners(s) regarding economic beneficiary” of Xavana Establishment
    was signed by Dr. Lienert wherein Mrs. Fairbank is listed as the
    beneficial owner of Xavana Establishment, with an address in
    Sopchoppy, Florida, and a previous address in Fullerton, California.
    Additionally, the “Profile of the business relationship” concerning
    Xavana Establishment, which was likewise signed by Dr. Lienert on
    November 19, 2001, describes the beneficial owner, Mrs. Fairbank, as a
    “[d]ivorced woman with [four], now grown-up, children” and notes the
    economic background of the assets as being from the “[d]ivision of
    property according to . . . [Mrs. Fairbank’s] divorce [in] 1983.” On the
    3 Xavana Establishment was organized as an Anstalt under the laws of
    Liechtenstein.
    4   Treuunternehmen is German for a trust company/enterprise.
    7
    [*7] “Profile of the business relationship” form, Dr. Lienert attests that
    he has “known [Mrs. Fairbank] since 1983.” Xavana Establishment 5
    appears to have held a single asset, namely a UBS account ending in
    0857 (UBS account 0857 or UBS account), which had a sole beneficiary.
    B.      UBS Account 0857 6
    The UBS account was opened in March 1983 in the name of
    Xavana Establishment. 7 On March 11, 1983, Dr. Lienert signed the UBS
    “[d]eclaration on the opening of an account . . . by a Swiss National
    bound by professional secrecy” and confirmed that the beneficial owner
    of the assets to be deposited with the bank is “known to him personally.”
    UBS records reflect that Mrs. Fairbank is the beneficial owner of UBS
    account 0857. UBS records also reflect that, as of February 25, 2003,
    Mrs. Fairbank was not to receive any correspondence at her U.S.
    address; rather, all correspondence was to be sent to Dr. Lienert in
    Switzerland. As a result, UBS never mailed account statements to Mrs.
    Fairbank in the United States.
    As of March 9, 1983, Oswald Bühler and Dr. Lienert had sole
    signatory authority over the UBS account, and on February 25, 2003,
    Dr. Lienert signed a waiver of right to invest in U.S. securities on behalf
    of Xavana Establishment. On April 3, 2008, Dr. Lienert resigned from
    his role as signatory on the UBS account and, as of that date, all
    correspondence concerning the UBS account was to be sent to Mr.
    Besser. Despite no longer being a signatory on the UBS account, Dr.
    Lienert, on July 6, 2004, informed UBS that Mrs. Hagaman had
    remarried and now bears the surname Fairbank. Moreover, Dr. Lienert
    5 According to a UBS account document titled “’Domiciliary Companies’
    Decision Sheet” dated February 18, 2003, Xavana Establishment is noted as not being
    a “[c]ompany, institute, foundation, trust company, etc., operating in trade,
    manufacturing or any other business of a commercial type in the country of domicile.”
    It is further noted that Xavana Establishment does not “[o]wn business premises” or
    have “staff working exclusively for [it].” Lastly, UBS records indicate that Xavana
    Establishment is “[d]omicilied in a ‘tax haven.’”
    6   UBS records indicate that UBS account 0857 was invested in mutual funds,
    including UBS Investment Funds. Moreover, UBS Income Statements for UBS account
    0857 reflect interest income generated between 2003 and 2009 in the same amounts
    listed in the notice of deficiency, except for 2009.
    7 On December 31, 2001, UBS account 0857 had a balance of $1,406,735, most
    (approximately 90%) of which was invested in bonds.
    8
    [*8] provided UBS updated copies of Mrs. Fairbank’s passport, 8 which
    she had provided to him. Similar to the records concerning Xavana
    Establishment, UBS records reflect that Dr. Lienert, on November 17,
    2004, informed UBS that Mrs. Fairbank had moved and now lives in
    Sopchoppy, Florida.
    C.      Neue Privat Bank
    Xong Services, Inc. (Xong Services), was incorporated in the
    British Virgin Islands on April 1, 2009. Mr. Besser was the sole member
    of the board of directors of Xong Services and was appointed first
    director of the company. On May 6, 2009, Xong Services issued to Mrs.
    Fairbank 50,000 shares of stock, which made her the sole shareholder
    of the foreign corporation. In accordance with a consent action of the sole
    director of Xong Services, Mr. Besser facilitated Xong Services’ opening
    of a foreign bank account at Neue Privat Bank (NPB) in Zurich,
    Switzerland. Mr. Besser was the authorized signatory on the NPB
    account. On May 14, 2009, Mr. Besser wrote a letter to UBS directing it
    to transfer an initial tranche of $500,000 from UBS account 0857 to the
    National Bank of Dubai, United Arab Emirates, in the name of
    International Investments Holding Ltd. In that same letter, Mr. Besser
    informed UBS that the balance in UBS account 0857 would be
    transferred out of the account by the end of May 2009. In a subsequent
    letter dated May 25, 2009, Mr. Besser directed UBS to transfer the
    “remaining amount of approx[imately] [$]490,000.00 . . . to the account
    already specified . . . [in the May 14, 2009, letter].” 9 NPB records reflect
    Mrs. Fairbank as the beneficial owner of the NPB account and note her
    address as being in Sopchoppy, Florida. 10 An NPB account statement
    8 UBS records included photocopies of Mrs. Fairbank’s U.S. passports. One of
    the passports bore the name Barbara Jean Hagaman (issued May 3, 1994), and the
    other bore the name Barbara Jean Fairbank (issued March 4, 2004). The photocopy of
    Mrs. Fairbank’s 2004 U.S. passport includes a handwritten note: “Namensänderung
    aufgrund Heirat,” which indicates that Mrs. Fairbank’s surname has changed because
    of marriage.
    9 On July 21, 2009, Mr. Besser wrote Ms. Bühler and informed her that Mrs.
    Fairbank had developed other plans for the money held by Xavana Establishment and
    that “all accounts at UBS AG are [to] be netted out . . . [and that Mrs. Fairbank] no
    longer requires Xavana [Establishment].”
    10 NPB records contain a letter dated May 8, 2009, from Mr. Besser, in which
    he details the “beneficial ownership and the background of the assets surrounding
    Xong Services Ltd.” In the letter, Mr. Besser explains that
    9
    [*9] from May 31, 2009, indicates that the NPB account, held in the
    name of Xong Services, was funded with approximately $979,462. 11
    In a July 7, 2009, correspondence with NPB, Mr. Besser informs
    the Swiss bank that, per its request, he will be providing a copy of Mrs.
    Fairbank’s passport. NPB records include a photocopy of Mrs.
    Fairbank’s U.S. passport (issued March 4, 2004). 12 Just as the UBS
    records indicated that Mrs. Fairbank was not to receive any
    correspondence in the United States with respect to UBS account 0857
    and that all correspondence be sent to Dr. Lienert (and subsequently to
    Mr. Besser), so too did the NPB records, which indicated that all
    “correspondence and statements are to be mailed regularly to” Mr.
    Besser in Zurich, Switzerland. Consequently, Mrs. Fairbank never
    received NPB account statements in the United States.
    D.      Child Support Payments/Mrs. Fairbank’s Use of Foreign
    Accounts
    Mr. Hagaman retained Swiss attorneys Dr. Bernhard Hagenbach
    and Dr. Walter Müllhaupt to effect the child support payments to Mrs.
    Fairbank. Following their divorce in the early 1980s, Mr. Hagaman kept
    his word with respect to the interim agreement and the oral
    amendments made thereto and remitted child support payments to Mrs.
    [a]t the beginning of the 1980s, the later beneficial owner of the then
    Liechtenstein Establishment came into divorce with her husband. He
    had considerable problems with the IRS and left the USA hastily,
    leaving the beneficial owner [Mrs. Fairbank] behind with four children.
    Subsequently, the husband put the beneficial owner under pressure to
    either never receive money from him or to transfer undeclared money
    to a corresponding account at a Liechtenstein Establishment. The
    mother of four children had no choice but to consent, in particular to
    secure child support. The aforementioned Liechtenstein Establishment
    was founded for the beneficial owner, a citizen of the USA. During the
    following months, around 1,5 million USD flowed into this account in
    several large amounts. From the very beginning, a Swiss bank with a
    management contract took over the administration of the assets of the
    Liechtenstein Establishment.
    Moreover, Mr. Besser notes that “repeated payments were made in favor of the
    beneficial owner, the assets shrank to just over . . . [$]1,0 million at the end of 2008,”
    and that he “took over the management of the Liechtenstein Establishment in 2007.”
    11 The assets held at NPB were 100% invested in fixed interest instruments,
    resulting in a monthly return between 0 and ‒0.07% on the invested funds.
    12 This is a copy of the same passport that was included in the UBS records
    regarding UBS account 0857 held in the name of Xavana Establishment.
    10
    [*10] Fairbank. In fact, Mrs. Fairbank retained a record of the child
    support payments that she had received as of January 27, 2005. Mrs.
    Fairbank’s record notes that Mr. Hagaman paid the $40,000 of child
    support in years 1984 through 1988. Similarly, Mrs. Fairbank’s record
    also notes the receipt of $190,000 in 1990 and 1993, which corresponds
    to the lump-sum child support payments that Mr. Hagaman orally
    agreed to pay.
    On August 25, 2006, Dr. Lienert requested that UBS transfer
    $100,200 from UBS account 0857 to an account held in his name at UBS.
    On August 30, 2006, petitioners deposited a $50,000 check from UBS
    Zurich (dated August 25, 2006) into their joint bank account at USAA
    Federal Savings Bank. The UBS check was made payable to Barbara
    Fairbank. Similarly, on August 30, 2006, petitioners deposited $50,000
    into their joint bank account at Wakulla Bank.
    Just as he had done in 2006, Dr. Lienert requested on August 15,
    2007, that UBS transfer $200,000 from UBS account 0857 to his UBS
    account. Dr. Lienert directed UBS to issue three bank checks, two for
    $60,000 and one for $80,000, to be debited from his account and made
    payable to “Mr. Leigh Fairbank” in Sopchoppy, Florida. 13 On September
    6, 2007, petitioners deposited $200,000 into their joint bank account in
    the United States at Wakulla Bank.
    On April 4, 2008, Mr. Besser (Dr. Lienert’s successor), at the
    request of Mrs. Fairbank, requested that UBS transfer $100,000 from
    UBS account 0857 to the Beneficiary Dajekel Trust at the ANZ National
    Bank, Ltd., in Wellington, New Zealand. 14 Moreover, UBS records
    indicate that Mrs. Fairbank, along with Dr. Lienert, met with UBS
    bankers on February 21, 2008. On the same day, 500 Swiss francs was
    withdrawn from UBS account 0857 and ten $1,000 American Express
    Travelers Cheques numbered 316835887 through 316835896 were
    issued and likewise debited against UBS account 0857. Mrs. Fairbank
    deposited five American Express Travelers Cheques totaling $5,000 into
    petitioners’ World Savings bank account on February 25, 2008.
    Photocopies of the American Express Travelers Cheques included in
    World Savings bank records indicate that the travelers cheques were
    signed and countersigned by Mrs. Fairbank. Furthermore, the travelers
    13 At trial Mrs. Fairbank confirmed that she requested that the three checks
    totaling $200,000 be made payable to her husband, Mr. Fairbank, rather than to her.
    14 Mrs. Fairbank testified that the $100,000 was transferred to New Zealand
    to pay attorney’s fees associated with litigation against Mr. Hagaman.
    11
    [*11] cheques deposited into petitioners’ World Savings bank account
    bear cheque numbers 316835891 through 316835895, which are within
    the tranche of cheque numbers borne by the American Express
    Travelers Cheques issued by UBS on April 4, 2008.
    With respect to Mrs. Fairbank’s NPB account, which was opened
    in 2009 by Xong Services, Mrs. Fairbank was issued an NPB travel cash
    card on July 8, 2009. Mrs. Fairbank’s travel cash card was repeatedly
    loaded with $10,000, the maximum allowed by the bank. From August
    21, 2009, to March 24, 2011, Mrs. Fairbank used her NPB travel cash
    card to withdraw more than $220,000.
    III.   Petitioners’ Federal Income Tax Returns
    For the tax years at issue, petitioners timely filed their joint
    Forms 1040, which were prepared by Rex Holly, a CPA in California. In
    preparing petitioners’ annual tax returns, Mr. Holly would send them a
    tax organizer, on which petitioners generally checked “No” to the
    question about foreign bank accounts. Consequently, the tax returns
    contain no information concerning UBS account 0857 or Xavana
    Establishment. Moreover, for the tax years at issue, petitioners did not
    report any income or deductions relating to UBS account 0857, make an
    election under either section 1295 or 1296, file Form 3520, Annual
    Return To Report Transactions with Foreign Trusts and Receipt of
    Certain Foreign Gifts, or file Form 3520–A, Annual Information Return
    of Foreign Trust With a U.S. Owner, with respect to Xavana
    Establishment. Furthermore, for the tax years at issue, on Forms 1040,
    Schedules B, Interest and Ordinary Dividends, Part III, petitioners
    answered “No” to the questions of whether they “have an interest in or
    a signature or other authority over a financial account in a foreign
    country, such as a bank account, securities account, or other financial
    account” or whether they “receive[d] a distribution from, or were . . . the
    grantor of, or transferor to, a foreign trust.”
    IV.    IRS’s Discovery of Foreign Accounts/Entities
    In 2008 the IRS issued UBS a “John Doe” summons that
    requested information relating to UBS’s U.S. accountholders with
    undisclosed foreign accounts. 15 This summons was instrumental in the
    15 On August 19, 2008, Mr. Besser wrote a letter to UBS which included a
    newspaper excerpt from Mrs. Fairbank titled: “IRS gets OK to request UBS
    information.” The newspaper excerpt notes that a federal judge in Miami, Florida, had
    12
    [*12] U.S. Department of Justice’s (DOJ) securing a settlement with
    UBS under which UBS admitted to engaging in a scheme of aiding U.S.
    clients hiding income from the IRS. In 2009 UBS entered into a deferred
    prosecution agreement 16 with the DOJ on charges of conspiring to
    defraud the United States by impeding the IRS’s collection of taxes.
    Pursuant to the deferred prosecution agreement, UBS, in response to an
    order from the Swiss Financial Markets Supervisory Authority, agreed
    to provide the U.S. government with the identities of, and account
    information for, certain U.S. customers of UBS’s cross-border
    business. 17
    On April 27, 2010, UBS sent Mrs. Fairbank a letter informing her
    that the IRS has submitted a request 18 to the Swiss Federal Tax
    Administration (SFTA) for administrative assistance concerning the
    procurement of Reports of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts
    (FBARs). UBS informed Mrs. Fairbank that she was included in the
    administrative assistance program since she was the “beneficial owner
    of Xavana Establishment and its accounts with UBS AG.” In 2010 UBS
    complied with the IRS’s request and consented to SFTA to release to the
    IRS “all of the FBAR forms filed . . . during the period of 1999 to 2009
    and all other relevant declarations.”
    Petitioners’ tax returns for the years at issue were selected for
    IRS examination, and Revenue Agent Robert W. Wood III was assigned
    to the matter. On July 18, 2012, petitioners met with Revenue Agent
    Wood and provided him with a copy of the information that they had
    regarding Xavana Establishment and UBS account 0857, including,
    among other things, formation documents, an asset management
    agreement form, account transfer requests, UBS correspondence,
    granted the U.S. government’s request for a court order directing “UBS to produce
    records identifying U.S. taxpayers with accounts at UBS in Switzerland who elected
    to have their accounts remain hidden from the IRS.” Mr. Besser indicates that Mrs.
    Fairbank “asked if this process might be ‘of any concern’ for us or for [UBS].” Mr.
    Besser states his belief that “a request from the IRS to UBS is unlikely to trigger any
    feedback” since the “assets belonging to Xavana Establishment do not belong to . . .
    [Mrs. Fairbank], but to Xavana [Establishment].”
    16 As part of the deferred prosecution agreement, UBS agreed to pay the U.S.
    government $780 million in fines, penalties, interest, and restitution.
    17Sometime in September 2010 respondent received bank records from UBS
    concerning UBS account 0857.
    18 According to the UBS letter, Mrs. Fairbank first received notice of the
    request for administrative assistance from the IRS to the SFTA in September 2009.
    13
    [*13] etc. 19 On March 27, 2014, petitioners’ counsel provided Revenue
    Agent Wood with a copy of the information petitioners had regarding
    Xong Services and the NPB account, including Xong Services’ certificate
    of incorporation, a stock certificate listing Mrs. Fairbank as the sole
    shareholder of Xong Services, the NPB account contract, monthly
    account statements, etc. 20
    The IRS used the records and information it received from
    September 2010 through March 2014 concerning Mrs. Fairbank’s
    foreign accounts to make the proposed adjustments reflected in the
    notice of deficiency.
    V.     Petitioners’ Foreign Account Reporting
    Upon the advice of counsel, petitioners filed Forms 5471,
    Information Return of U.S. Persons With Respect to Certain Foreign
    Corporations, reporting Xong Services for tax year 2009 through 2010.
    Respondent received Forms 5471 regarding Xong Services on June 18,
    2015. Additionally, on February 11, 2014, petitioners filed FBARs,
    reporting Mrs. Fairbank’s NPB account for tax years 2009 through 2011.
    During the tax years at issue (or thereafter), petitioners never filed
    Forms 3520 or 3520–A regarding Xavana Establishment.
    VI.    Notice of Deficiency
    The IRS mailed petitioners a notice of deficiency on April 12,
    2018. The IRS determined tax deficiencies and penalties relevant to this
    Opinion as follows:
    19 On or about January 9, 2014, respondent received additional information
    relating to Xavana Establishment, including bank statements for UBS account 0857,
    Xavana Establishment’s foundational deed, correspondence between representatives
    of Xavana Establishment and UBS, beneficial ownership forms listing Mrs. Fairbank
    as the beneficial owner of both Xavana Establishment and UBS account 0857, and
    photocopies of Mrs. Fairbank’s U.S. passports.
    20 By letter dated October 14, 2013, NPB informed Mrs. Fairbank that the DOJ
    was conducting investigations and law enforcement efforts against individuals and
    entities that use foreign bank accounts to evade U.S. taxes and reporting
    requirements. In the letter NPB informed Mrs. Fairbank that it would have to submit
    particularized information regarding accounts held by U.S. persons, covering a period
    dating back to August 1, 2008.
    14
    [*14]
    Year            Deficiency                      Penalty
    I.R.C. § 6662(a)
    2003             $20,088                        $4,018
    2004              5,078                          1,016
    2005              6,136                          1,227
    2006             23,011                          4,602
    2007             10,785                          2,157
    2008             15,910                          3,182
    2009             28,130                          5,626
    Totals            $109,138                       $21,828
    The deficiency determinations are largely based on unreported
    income from Mrs. Fairbank’s beneficial ownership of UBS account 0857.
    As relevant to this Opinion, respondent’s unreported income
    determinations are supported by UBS income statements in the record
    and are outlined below:
    15
    [*15]
    Year         2003      2004      2005      2006       2007      2008       2009
    I.R.C.            $1,843     —         $785     $8,972     $6,619    $6,368    $11,458
    § 1291(a)(1)
    PFIC Gain
    Taxable           24,920    22,500    22,500    19,222     34,753    30,286    7,122 21
    Interest
    Itemized           2,002     2,473     2,086     2,616      2,151    (5,986)   (21,684)
    Deductions
    Social             —        10,465    10,427    11,544      —         —          —
    Security/RRB
    Capital            —         —         —        (3,000)   (9,091)     —          —
    Gain/Loss
    Total            $28,765   $35,438   $35,798   $39,354    $34,432   $30,668    ($3,104)
    Adjustments
    OPINION
    I.         Summary of the Parties’ Arguments
    Petitioners’ principal contention is that all the adjustments in the
    notice of deficiency are time barred pursuant to section 6501(a) since the
    notice of deficiency was not issued within the applicable period of
    limitations. Respondent counters that the IRS timely issued a notice of
    deficiency because the period of limitations remained open under section
    6501(c)(8) since petitioners failed to notify the Secretary of certain
    foreign transfers with respect to Xavana Establishment and UBS
    account 0857. More specifically, respondent argues that section
    6501(c)(8) is applicable and that the period of limitations remains open
    for the years at issue since petitioners never furnished the information
    that was required to be reported under section 6048. Petitioners aver
    that even if section 6501(c)(8) were to apply, they furnished the
    information required to be reported under section 6048. In order to
    21 Respondent concedes that petitioners’ taxable interest for tax year 2009 is
    $6,122, rather than the $7,122 reflected in the notice of deficiency.
    16
    [*16] ascertain whether the applicable period of limitations has lapsed,
    we must first determine the proper entity classification of Xavana
    Establishment for U.S. federal tax purposes. Petitioners argue that
    Xavana Establishment should be classified as a controlled foreign
    corporation (CFC), while respondent contends that it is properly
    classified as a foreign trust.
    II.    Entity Classification
    The Code prescribes the classification of various organizations for
    federal tax purposes. 
    Treas. Reg. § 301.7701-1
    (a)(1). “Whether an
    organization is an entity separate from its owners for federal tax
    purposes is a matter of federal tax law and does not depend on whether
    the organization is recognized as an entity under local law.” 
    Id.
     In
    general, an arrangement will be treated as a trust if it can be shown that
    the purpose of the arrangement is to vest in trustees responsibility for
    the protection and conservation of property for beneficiaries who cannot
    share in the discharge of this responsibility and, therefore, are not
    associates in a joint enterprise for the conduct of business for profit. See
    Elm St. Realty Tr. v. Commissioner, 
    76 T.C. 803
    , 814–15 (1981); 
    Treas. Reg. § 301.7701-4
    (a). The four elements of a trust for federal tax
    purposes are (1) a grantor, (2) a trustee that takes title to property for
    the purpose of protecting or conserving it, (3) property, and
    (4) designated beneficiaries. See 
    Treas. Reg. § 301.7701-4
    (a). 22
    This Court applies a facts and circumstances analysis when
    determining whether an arrangement should be treated as a trust or a
    business entity by determining whether the arrangement includes
    (1) associates and (2) an objective to carry on a business and divide the
    gains therefrom. See Elm St. Realty Tr., 
    76 T.C. at
    809–18; see also
    Morrissey v. Commissioner, 
    296 U.S. 344
    , 356–58 (1935). The absence of
    either of these essential characteristics will cause an entity to be
    classified as a trust. See Estate of Bedell v. Commissioner, 
    86 T.C. 1207
    ,
    1218 (1986); Elm St. Realty Tr., 
    76 T.C. at 818
    .
    When distinguishing between an association and a trust for tax
    classification purposes, relevant features of the arrangement are its
    “nature,” “purpose,” and “operations.” See Swanson v. Commissioner,
    
    296 U.S. 362
    , 365 (1935); Morrissey v. Commissioner, 296 U.S. at 357.
    In assessing these features, weight should be given to the arrangement’s
    22 It is widely accepted under the laws of all 50 states of this country, and in
    many other countries, that a trust consists of these four elements.
    17
    [*17] organizing documents. See Swanson v. Commissioner, 296 U.S.
    at 363–65; Morrissey v. Commissioner, 296 U.S. at 360–61. The Supreme
    Court noted that the “parties are not at liberty to say that their purpose
    was other or narrower than that which they formally set forth in the
    instrument under which their activities were conducted.” Helvering v.
    Coleman-Gilbert Assocs., 
    296 U.S. 369
    , 374 (1935).
    Respondent argues that under the facts and circumstances
    analysis, Xavana Establishment qualifies as a trust. Xavana
    Establishment’s organizing documents state that it is to operate “on a
    trust basis,” its purpose is the “investment and management of assets,”
    and its “capital and its results as well as any clear profits of [Xavana]
    Establishment shall be due to the beneficiaries.” It is irrefutable that
    Mrs. Fairbank is reflected as the beneficial owner of Xavana
    Establishment; and the record does not indicate that Xavana
    Establishment involved any business associates or operated as a joint
    enterprise that conducted business. In fact, Xavana Establishment is
    explicitly noted as neither owning any business premises nor employing
    any staff working exclusively for it. Furthermore, Xavana
    Establishment did not operate any trade, manufacturing, or any other
    business of a commercial type. Accordingly, we conclude that Xavana
    Establishment is properly classified as a trust for federal tax purposes
    under Treasury Regulation § 301.7701-4(a). 23
    The arrangement here closely resembles a typical trust whereby
    a settlor (here, Mr. Hagaman)24 establishes a trust for the benefit of
    23  Petitioners argue that Xavana Establishment is properly classified as a
    business entity and cites IRS Chief Counsel Attorney Memorandum 2009-012
    (attorney memorandum). While the attorney memorandum does conclude, on the basis
    of certain information presented by respondent at the time, that Liechtenstein
    “Anstalts” or “Establishments” are generally not treated as trusts under Treasury
    Regulation § 301.7701-4(a), petitioners’ reliance is misplaced for several reasons. See
    I.R.S. Chief Couns. Att’y Mem. AM2009-012, 
    2009 WL 3336014
     (Oct. 16, 2009). First,
    this Court is not bound by the attorney memorandum, which clearly states that it “may
    not be used or cited as precedent” pursuant to section 6110(k)(3). 
    Id.
     Second, a
    Liechtenstein Anstalt or Establishment is not classified as a corporation under
    Treasury Regulation § 301.7701-2(b)(8)(i). Last, the classification and treatment of a
    foreign entity for federal tax purposes is a matter of U.S. federal tax law. See 
    Treas. Reg. § 301.7701-1
    (a)(1). Therefore, we are not persuaded by petitioners’ argument that
    Xavana Establishment is properly classified as a business entity under Treasury
    Regulation § 301.7701-2.
    24 On the basis of the record, Mr. Hagaman was the grantor of Xavana
    Establishment, funding its UBS account 0857 with approximately $1.5 million
    constituting child support payments to Mrs. Fairbank.
    18
    [*18] specified beneficiaries (Mrs. Fairbank), contributes property to the
    trust (30,000 Swiss francs, which was used to fund the trust in 1983),
    and designates a trustee (Mr. Bühler, Dr. Lienert, and Mr. Besser) to
    hold the property for the beneficiaries and act in their best interest. See,
    e.g., Cent. States, Se. & Sw. Areas Pension Fund v. Cent. Transp., Inc.,
    
    472 U.S. 559
    , 572 (1985) (noting that a trust is generally denoted by the
    vesting of duties in a trustee, including a duty to preserve and maintain
    trust assets); Owner Operator Indep. Drivers Ass’n, Inc. v. Comerica
    Bank (In re Arctic Express Inc.), 
    636 F.3d 781
    , 792 (6th Cir. 2011) (citing
    Restatement (Third) of Trusts for common law definition of a “trust”);
    United States v. De Bonchamps, 
    278 F.2d 127
    , 133 (9th Cir. 1960)
    (noting that a relationship is generally classified as a trust if it is
    “clothed with the characteristics of a trust”); Hart v. Commissioner, 
    54 F.2d 848
    , 850–51 (1st Cir. 1932), rev’g in part 
    21 B.T.A. 1001
     (1930);
    Johnson v. Commissioner, 
    108 T.C. 448
    , 475 (1997), aff’d in part, rev’d
    in part on other grounds, 
    184 F.3d 786
     (8th Cir. 1999); George Gleason
    Bogert, et al., Bogert’s Trusts and Trustees § 582 (2016).
    Consequently, we agree with respondent and find that the
    governing documents concerning Xavana Establishment, along with
    other documents in the record, show that Xavana Establishment was a
    trust for federal tax purposes.
    Now that we have determined that Xavana Establishment is
    properly classified as a trust for federal tax purposes, our analysis turns
    to the issue of whether Xavana Establishment is a domestic trust or a
    foreign trust. A foreign trust is “any trust other than a trust” that is a
    “United States person” (i.e., a domestic trust). I.R.C. § 7701(a)(30)(E),
    (31)(B); 
    Treas. Reg. § 301.7701-7
    (a)(2). Treasury Regulation § 301.7701-
    7(a) provides a two-factor test to determine whether a trust is domestic.
    A trust is domestic if (1) “[a] court within the United States is able
    exercise primary supervision over the administration of the trust” (court
    test) and (2) “[o]ne or more United States persons have the authority to
    control all substantial decisions of the trust” (control test). Id.
    subpara. (1). Failure to satisfy either the court test or the control test
    will result in the trust’s being deemed a foreign trust for federal tax
    purposes. Id. subpara. (2).
    A trust satisfies the court test if the governing document does not
    direct that the trust be administered outside of the United States, the
    trust, in fact, is administered exclusively in the United States, and the
    trust is not subject to an automatic migration provision that would move
    it outside the United States if a U.S. court were to attempt to assert
    19
    [*19] jurisdiction. 
    Treas. Reg. § 301.7701-7
    (c)(1), (4)(ii). With respect to
    the control test, control means having the power, by vote or otherwise,
    to make all of the substantial decisions of the trust, with no other person
    having the power to veto any of the substantial decisions. 
    Id.
     para.
    (d)(1)(iii). Substantial decisions are those decisions that are “authorized
    or required” under the trust instrument and applicable law, which
    include, but are not limited to, decisions concerning whether and when
    to distribute income or corpus, the amount of any distribution, whether
    to terminate the trust, etc. 
    Id.
     subdiv. (ii).
    In this case Xavana Establishment fails to satisfy the court test
    as defined by section 7701(a)(30)(E)(i). There is nothing in the record to
    suggest that a court within the United States was able to exercise
    primary supervision over the administration of Xavana Establishment.
    In fact, the Contract of Mandate, which is part of the organizing
    documents concerning Xavana Establishment, states that the parties
    agree that “disputes relating to this [c]ontract . . . shall be subject to the
    law of the Principality of Liechtenstein” and that the “place of
    jurisdiction is agreed as Vaduz, [Liechtenstein].” Accordingly, we find
    that Xavana Establishment fails the court test. I.R.C.
    § 7701(a)(30)(E)(i); 
    Treas. Reg. § 301.7701-7
    (a)(1)(i), (c)(1).
    Consequently, Mrs. Fairbank’s ownership interest in Xavana
    Establishment, a foreign trust, gives rise to reporting obligations under
    section 6048. 25
    25  We find that Xavana Establishment does satisfy the control test under
    Treasury Regulation § 301.7701-7(a)(1)(ii). It is undisputed that Mrs. Fairbank was a
    U.S. person during the tax years at issue. UBS records indicate that Mrs. Fairbank
    made substantial decisions within the meaning of Treasury Regulation § 301.7701-
    7(a)(ii) by corresponding with Dr. Lienert and Mr. Besser to effect transfers from UBS
    account 0857 to herself, to her husband, and to a trust account in New Zealand. See
    
    Treas. Reg. § 301.7701-7
    (d)(1)(ii)(A). UBS records also indicate that in July 2009 Mrs.
    Fairbank requested that the remaining funds held in UBS account 0857 be transferred
    to the NPB account and stated that the Xavana Establishment would no longer be
    required. See 
    id.
     subdiv. (ii)(E). Nothing in the record suggests that any other person
    had the power to or attempted to veto Mrs. Fairbank’s choice in making these
    substantial decisions. See 
    id.
     subdiv. (iii). Therefore, we find that Xavana
    Establishment satisfies the control test. See I.R.C. § 7701(a)(30)(E)(ii); 
    Treas. Reg. § 301.7701-7
    (a)(1)(ii), (d)(1). Notwithstanding satisfaction of the control test, Xavana
    Establishment is properly classified as a foreign trust since it fails the court test. See
    I.R.C. § 7701(a)(30)(E)(i); 
    Treas. Reg. § 301.7701-7
    (a)(2).
    20
    [*20] III.   Reporting Obligations
    The Code requires disclosures regarding foreign trusts. See I.R.C.
    § 6048. Pursuant to section 6048(b), each United States person 26 who is
    treated as the owner of any portion of a foreign trust, under the grantor
    trust rules of sections 671 through 679, is responsible for ensuring that
    the trust annually “makes a return . . . which sets forth a full and
    complete accounting of all trust activities and operations for the year,
    the name of the United States agent for such trust, and such other
    information as the Secretary may prescribe.” I.R.C. § 6048(b)(1)(A). This
    prescribed information is provided by filing Form 3520–A. See Rost v.
    United States, 
    44 F.4th 294
    , 298 (5th Cir. 2022); Wilson v. United States,
    
    6 F.4th 432
    , 434 (2d Cir. 2021). Moreover, any United States person who
    is a beneficiary of a foreign trust and receives any distribution from that
    foreign trust must file an information return that includes the name of
    the trust, the aggregate amount of the distribution received from the
    trust during the taxable year, and such other information as the
    Secretary may prescribe. I.R.C. § 6048(c)(1). Per IRS guidance, this
    mandatory reporting requirement is satisfied when the U.S. beneficiary
    files Form 3520. See I.R.S. Notice 97-34, 1997-
    1 C.B. 422
    ; see also
    Wilson, 6 F.4th at 434.
    Respondent argues that Mrs. Fairbank is the owner of the foreign
    trust pursuant to section 679(a), which provides that any United States
    person who directly or indirectly transfers property to a foreign trust
    shall be treated as the owner for his taxable year of the portion of the
    trust attributable to that property if for the year there is a United States
    beneficiary of any portion of the trust. Respondent relies on SEC v. Wyly,
    
    56 F. Supp. 3d 394
    , 414–16 (S.D.N.Y. 2014), and avers that Mrs.
    Fairbank merely named Mr. Hagaman the grantor of Xavana
    Establishment to avoid triggering section 679(a) and to circumvent the
    grantor trust rules. We are not persuaded by respondent’s argument,
    and we are unable to conclude that Mrs. Fairbank is deemed the owner
    of Xavana Establishment under section 679(a). Respondent has neither
    introduced evidence that sheds a light on Mr. Hagaman’s citizenship
    status at the time the foreign trust was established nor shown to our
    satisfaction that Mr. Hagaman was acting as Mrs. Fairbank’s nominee
    in 1983, the year in which Xavana Establishment was founded.
    26 A “United States person” includes U.S. citizens and residents. I.R.C.
    § 7701(a)(30)(A).
    21
    [*21] However, “[w]hen a grantor or other person has certain powers in
    respect of trust property that are tantamount to dominion and control
    over such property, the Code ‘looks through’ the trust form and deems
    such grantor or other person to be the owner of the trust property and
    attributes the trust income to such person.” Estate of O’Connor v.
    Commissioner, 
    69 T.C. 165
    , 174 (1977); see also I.R.C. § 671. A person
    other than the grantor shall be treated as the owner of any portion of a
    trust with respect to which that person has a power exercisable solely
    by himself to vest the corpus or the income therefrom in himself. I.R.C.
    § 678(a)(1).
    Mrs. Fairbank exercised authority over Xavana Establishment,
    and the record provides numerous instances in which Mrs. Fairbank
    corresponded with Dr. Lienert and Mr. Besser to effect transfers from
    UBS account 0857 to herself, to her husband, and to a trust account in
    New Zealand. Dr. Lienert even escorted Mrs. Fairbank during her in-
    person visit to UBS in February 2008 when she received travelers
    cheques and made a cash withdrawal from her UBS account. 27
    Consequently, we find that Mrs. Fairbank’s powers over Xavana
    Establishment (and its UBS account) were sufficiently extensive to
    cause her to be the owner thereof under section 678. See Estate of
    O’Connor, 69 T.C. at 174. Therefore, as the owner of Xavana
    Establishment, Mrs. Fairbank was obligated to file Form 3520–A during
    the tax years at issue. See I.R.C. § 6048(b)(1)(A).
    The documentary evidence in the record has established that Mrs.
    Fairbank was the beneficial owner of both Xavana Establishment and
    UBS account 0857 during the tax years at issue. Furthermore, Mrs.
    Fairbank, as the beneficiary, received distributions and was obligated to
    file Form 3520 to provide respondent the requisite information in
    accordance with I.R.S. Notice 97-34. See Wilson, 6 F.4th at 434.
    Accordingly, Mrs. Fairbank, as a United States person deemed the
    owner of Xavana Establishment and its named beneficiary, held
    reporting obligations under the Code to file both Forms 3520–A and
    3520.
    Next, we address petitioners’ contention that they complied with
    their filing obligations under section 6048, notwithstanding their failure
    27 This in-person visit to UBS is corroborated by UBS bank records and the
    records maintained by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s TECS system,
    which indicate that Mrs. Fairbank departed from Zurich, Switzerland on February 23,
    2008.
    22
    [*22] to report Mrs. Fairbank’s ownership interest in either Xavana
    Establishment or UBS account 0857 on any IRS prescribed forms;
    therefore, the period of limitations on assessment under section 6501
    has passed.
    IV.     Statute of Limitations
    In general, section 6501(a) provides that any tax imposed under
    the Code shall be assessed within three years after the return was filed
    (whether or not the return was filed on or after the date prescribed) and
    no proceeding in court without assessment for the collection of the tax
    shall be begun after the expiration of that period.
    For a timely filed return, the three-year period begins to run as of
    the due date of the return. See I.R.C. § 6501(b). 28 It is undisputed that
    petitioners timely filed their Forms 1040 for the years at issue and it is
    also undisputed that more than three years had passed between these
    tax return filings and the time respondent issued the notice of deficiency
    at issue. 29 In fact, eight or more years had passed since the filings of
    petitioners’ Forms 1040 for the years at issue.
    Subsection (c) provides for a number of exceptions to the general
    three-year period of limitations rule found in section 6501(a). In this
    case, respondent asserts subsection (c)(8), entitled “Failure to notify
    Secretary of certain foreign transfers,” is applicable. Section 6501(c)(8)
    provides as follows:
    In the case of any information which is required to be
    reported to the Secretary under section 6038, 6038A,
    6038B, 6046, 6046A, or 6048, the time for assessment of
    any tax imposed by this title with respect to any event or
    period to which such information relates shall not expire
    before the date which is 3 years after the date on which the
    28 For a return filed before the due date, the filing date of the return is deemed
    to be the return’s due date. See I.R.C. § 6501(b)(1).
    29 For example, petitioners timely filed their 2009 Form 1040 on or before April
    15, 2010, while the IRS issued its notice of deficiency in this matter some years later
    on April 12, 2018.
    23
    [*23] Secretary is furnished the information required to be
    reported under such section.[30]
    Respondent argues that section 6501(c)(8) applies since
    petitioners failed to report the foreign transactions pursuant to section
    6048 during the tax years at issue. As we have established above,
    petitioners were required to report Mrs. Fairbank’s interest in Xavana
    Establishment, and the parties agree that section 6501(c)(8) is
    applicable; however, they disagree over the specific phrase “furnished
    the information required to be reported under [section 6048]” of section
    6501(c)(8).
    Petitioners contend that no specific form is required under section
    6501(c)(8) and argue that they provided the IRS the “information
    required to be furnished” under section 6048 pursuant to a request by
    the IRS in 2014; therefore, the period of limitations is closed, and the
    assessment is time barred. Petitioners further argue that had they filed
    Forms 3520–A and 3520, they would “simply be transposing the
    information already provided to the IRS onto an IRS form.” Respondent
    argues that section 6501(c)(8) is not satisfied “unless and until a
    taxpayer has filed the required information returns [Forms 3520–A and
    3520].”
    Now we turn to section 6048(b) and (c) to determine the statutory
    reporting obligations of Mrs. Fairbank as the United States owner and
    beneficiary of Xavana Establishment and whether petitioners have
    furnished the information required to be reported under that section.
    Section 6048(b), entitled “United States Owner of foreign trust,”
    provides that each United States person treated as the owner of any
    portion of a foreign trust shall be responsible to ensure that (A) the trust
    makes a return for the year which sets forth a full and complete
    accounting of all trust activities and operations for the year, the name
    of the United States agent for such trust, and such other information as
    the Secretary may prescribe and (B) the trust furnishes such
    information as the Secretary may prescribe to each United States person
    (i) who is treated as the owner of any portion of the trust or (ii) who
    30 In a 2010 amendment to section 6501(c)(8), Congress added a reasonable
    cause exception for failure to furnish the information required under this section,
    effective for returns filed after March 18, 2010. Petitioners did not adequately raise
    the issue of reasonable cause for their failure to comply with the reporting obligations
    under section 6048.
    24
    [*24] receives (directly or indirectly) any distribution from the trust.
    I.R.C. § 6048(b)(1).
    Section 6048(c), entitled “Reporting by United States
    beneficiaries of foreign trusts,” provides that any United States person
    who receives (directly or indirectly) during any taxable year of the
    person any distribution from a foreign trust shall make a return with
    respect to that trust for the year which includes (A) the name of the
    trust, (B) the aggregate amount of the distributions so received from the
    trust during the taxable year, and (C) the other information as the
    Secretary may prescribe. I.R.C. § 6048(c)(1).
    Petitioners’ citation of section 6501(c)(8) and their argument on
    brief that the period of limitations has run is incomplete. 31 Section
    6501(c)(8) refers the reader to the requirements under section 6048;
    therefore, a detailed analysis of a taxpayer’s statutory obligations under
    section 6048 is necessary. We conclude that Mrs. Fairbank, as the
    deemed U.S. owner of Xavana Establishment, has failed to provide any
    written return to respondent setting forth a full and complete
    accounting of Xavana Establishment’s activities for the years at issue.
    See I.R.C. § 6048(b)(1). Similarly, we conclude that Mrs. Fairbank, as
    Xavana Establishment’s U.S. beneficiary, has failed to make any return
    that includes the name Xavana Establishment and which outlines the
    aggregate amount of distributions she received during each of the tax
    years at issue from Xavana Establishment. See I.R.C. § 6048(c)(1).
    Finding that petitioners have not complied with section 6048(b)
    and (c), we similarly find that the period of limitations has not expired
    under section 6501(c)(8). Our conclusion is consistent with those of other
    courts that have considered this issue. See Rost, 44 F.4th at 298; Wilson,
    6 F.4th at 434.
    Accordingly, we are constrained to conclude that the period of
    limitations has not expired for the tax years at issue since petitioners
    31 On brief petitioners state that “the Court must determine what qualified as
    the ‘furnishing’ of ‘information required to be reported under [section 6038 and/or
    6048].’” However, there is little analysis by petitioners of how these legal requirements
    were in fact satisfied, notwithstanding their failure to file either Form 3520–A or Form
    3520. Rather, petitioners continue to maintain that Mrs. Fairbank was unaware of her
    interest in the foreign trust and that petitioners furnished to the IRS, during the audit,
    bank statements, banker notes, transaction ledgers, internal letters, incorporation
    documents, and other correspondence notes “between agents of Xavana Establishment
    and UBS.”
    25
    [*25] neither filed IRS Form 3520–A or Form 3520 nor satisfied their
    reporting obligations under section 6048, assuming those obligations
    could be satisfied without the filing of the forms prescribed by the IRS. 32
    Consequently, we find respondent’s notice of deficiency in this case was
    timely issued. 33
    V.      Deficiencies
    Generally, the Commissioner’s determinations in a notice of
    deficiency are presumed correct, and the taxpayer bears the burden of
    proving error. Rule 142(a); Welch v. Helvering, 
    290 U.S. 111
    , 115 (1933).
    Section 61(a) provides that gross income “means all income from
    whatever source derived,” including gains derived from interest. I.R.C.
    § 61(a)(4). However, a special rule applies to determinations of
    unreported income. In cases of unreported income, the Commissioner’s
    determinations are presumptively correct if supported by a minimal
    evidentiary foundation connecting the taxpayer with an income-
    32The U.S. Supreme Court has also held that certain documents drafted by
    taxpayers that do not comply with the forms prescribed by the Secretary will
    nevertheless be treated as valid returns, for purposes of the statute of limitations, if
    they contain certain elements. See Badaracco v. Commissioner, 
    464 U.S. 386
    , 397
    (1984); Commissioner v. Lane-Wells Co., 
    321 U.S. 219
     (1944); Zellerbach Pager Co. v.
    Helvering, 
    293 U.S. 172
     (1934); Lucas v. Pilliod Lumber Co., 
    281 U.S. 245
     (1930);
    Florsheim Bros. Drygoods Co. v. United States, 
    280 U.S. 453
     (1930). In Beard v.
    Commissioner, 
    82 T.C. 766
    , 777 (1984), aff’d, 
    793 F.2d 139
     (6th Cir. 1986), we
    summarized the Supreme Court’s test for a valid return as follows:
    First, there must be sufficient data to calculate [the] tax liability;
    second, the document must purport to be a return; third, there must be
    an honest and reasonable attempt to satisfy the requirements of the
    tax law; and fourth, the taxpayer must execute the return under
    penalties of perjury.
    Even if we were to consider the foregoing elements here, we cannot conclude
    that all four elements prescribed above have been satisfied. While the information
    petitioners provided the IRS was sufficient data to calculate petitioners’ correct tax
    liabilities, there has been no showing by petitioners that the documents furnished
    purport to be information returns (i.e., Forms 3520–A or 3520), that they made an
    honest attempt to satisfy their legal obligations under section 6048, and that the
    information was furnished under penalties of perjury. Moreover, petitioners have cited
    no precedent binding on this Court to support their contention that filing anything but
    Forms 3520–A or 3520 commences the running of the period of limitations under
    section 6501(c)(8).
    33 We note that if we were to accept petitioners’ argument that a specific form
    is not required to trigger the running of the period of limitations, we would create
    uncertainty in an area of the law where absolute clarity benefits both the IRS and
    taxpayers.
    26
    [*26] producing activity. See Blohm v. Commissioner, 
    994 F.2d 1542
    ,
    1549 (11th Cir. 1993), aff’g 
    T.C. Memo. 1991-636
    ; United States v.
    McMullin, 
    948 F.2d 1188
    , 1192 (10th Cir. 1991). Once the Commissioner
    has established some evidentiary foundation linking the taxpayer with
    an income-producing activity, the burden shifts to the taxpayer to prove
    that the determinations are arbitrary or erroneous. See Blohm v.
    Commissioner, 
    994 F.2d at 1549
    ; Erickson v. Commissioner, 
    937 F.2d 1548
    , 1551–52 (10th Cir. 1991), aff’g 
    T.C. Memo. 1989-552
    .
    To satisfy his burden, respondent has introduced extensive
    banking records concerning UBS account 0857. These records establish
    that from 2003 through 2009, Mrs. Fairbank derived income from her
    beneficial ownership of the UBS account, which generated income in the
    form of interest and gains from foreign investment instruments, namely,
    mutual funds, which are considered “passive foreign investment
    company” (PFIC) assets. The record is replete with evidence of Mrs.
    Fairbank’s control, use, and enjoyment of the funds held in UBS account
    0857. Respondent has therefore supplied a “minimal evidentiary
    foundation” that connects petitioners with unreported income. See
    McMullin, 
    948 F.2d at 1192
    . Consequently, petitioners bear the burden
    of proving that respondent’s determinations of unreported income are
    arbitrary or erroneous. 34
    Petitioners do not deny that UBS account 0857 earned interest
    income and that it generated investment income from trading foreign
    investment instruments. Rather, petitioners contend that Mrs.
    Fairbank is not subject to tax since she did not have control over the
    accounts. In fact, Mrs. Fairbank testified that she does not “know
    anything about UBS,” did not engage Dr. Lienert or Mr. Besser, and
    never asked anyone to create Xong Services on her behalf. 35 We are not
    convinced. Mrs. Fairbank was listed as the “beneficial owner” of both
    Xavana Establishment and UBS account 0857, and the records admitted
    into evidence show that Mrs. Fairbank exercised significant control over
    34 The record does not support a shifting of the burden back to respondent. See
    I.R.C. § 7491(a); Higbee v. Commissioner, 
    116 T.C. 438
    , 442 (2001).
    35 As the trier of fact, we observe a witness’s candor, sincerity, and demeanor
    in order to evaluate the testimony and assign it appropriate weight in determining
    disputed facts. See Neonatology Assocs., P.A. v. Commissioner, 
    115 T.C. 43
    , 84 (2000),
    aff’d, 
    299 F.3d 221
     (3d Cir. 2002). We are not bound to accept a taxpayer’s self-serving
    testimony. See Tokarski v. Commissioner, 
    87 T.C. 74
    , 77 (1986); Hradesky v.
    Commissioner, 
    65 T.C. 87
    , 90 (1975), aff’d per curiam, 
    540 F.2d 821
     (5th Cir. 1976). We
    find Mrs. Fairbank’s testimony to be self-serving, unreliable, unverified, and in
    contradiction with some of the stipulated documents in this case.
    27
    [*27] them. 36 In 2009 the remaining funds held in UBS account 0857
    were transferred to Mrs. Fairbank’s NPB account. Additionally, through
    Mr. Besser, Mrs. Fairbank indicated to UBS that all accounts were to be
    netted out and that she would no longer be requiring Xavana
    Establishment.
    This course of conduct clearly shows that Mrs. Fairbank had the
    requisite control over the account. See Rutkin v. United States, 
    343 U.S. 130
    , 137 (1952) (holding that a gain “constitutes taxable income when
    its recipient has such control over it that, as a practical matter, he
    derives readily realizable economic value from it”). It does not matter
    that Mrs. Fairbank did not withdraw additional funds from the UBS
    account or otherwise receive distributions therefrom. See Harrington v.
    Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 2021-95
    , at *19, aff’d, No. 22-9000, 
    2022 WL 17333080
     (10th Cir. Nov. 30, 2022). A taxpayer need not actually
    withdraw cash for an investment gain to be taxable. See 
    Treas. Reg. § 1.451-2
    (a) (“Income although not actually reduced to a taxpayer’s
    possession is constructively received by him in the taxable year during
    which it is credited to his account, set apart for him, or otherwise made
    available so that he may draw upon it at any time . . . .”). Petitioners
    provided no evidence that Mrs. Fairbank’s requests that funds be
    transferred out of UBS account 0857 were “subject to substantial
    limitations or restrictions.” See 
    id.
     To the extent that Mrs. Fairbank
    forwent any additional transfers from her UBS account, we find that she
    willingly did so. See Murphy v. United States, 
    992 F.2d 929
    , 931 (9th Cir.
    1993) (holding that a taxpayer constructively received income where
    “his failure to receive cash was entirely due to his own volition”).
    Respondent does not dispute that the funds originally transferred
    to UBS account 0857 were nontaxable child support payments.
    However, respondent argues, and we agree, that Mrs. Fairbank was
    required to report the activities within UBS account 0857 on her federal
    income tax returns during the years at issue. Consequently, we find that
    petitioners have not carried their burden of proving that respondent’s
    determinations of unreported income are “arbitrary or erroneous.” See
    Erickson v. Commissioner, 
    937 F.2d at
    1554–55. Accordingly, we sustain
    respondent’s deficiency determinations and computational adjustments
    36 Having already determined Mrs. Fairbank to be a beneficial owner of a
    foreign trust under section 678, said income of the trust is attributable to her under
    the grantor trust rules. See I.R.C. §§ 671–679.
    28
    [*28] since Mrs. Fairbank earned interest and investment income from
    her UBS account, as outlined below.
    A.      Interest Income
    For tax years 2003 through 2009 respondent determined total
    taxable interest income of $160,303. While petitioners placed the entire
    notice of deficiency at issue, they neither presented any evidence
    disputing the amount of interest earned in the UBS account nor
    disputed respondent’s characterization of this amount as interest
    income. Accordingly, respondent’s interest income determination is
    sustained.
    B.      UBS Investment Income
    Through Mrs. Fairbank’s beneficial ownership of UBS account
    0857, she earned income from the trading of PFIC assets. See I.R.C.
    §§ 1297, 1298(a)(3). Respondent determined PFIC income and tax
    according to section 1291. Petitioners do not dispute the amount of PFIC
    income earned in the account but rather ask this Court to disallow the
    PFIC-related adjustments on the grounds that Xavana Establishment
    is properly classified as a CFC, therefore not subject to the PFIC-related
    adjustments under sections 1291 and 1297. 37 Having already
    determined that Xavana Establishment is properly classified as a
    foreign trust for federal tax purposes, we are not persuaded by
    petitioners’ argument. Moreover, petitioners neither presented evidence
    rebutting respondent’s PFIC adjustment amounts reflected in the notice
    of deficiency nor made an election under either section 1295 or section
    1296 for the tax years at issue. Consequently, we sustain respondent’s
    PFIC income determinations.
    37 By default, PFIC income is taxed according to section 1291, unless a taxpayer
    elects otherwise. See I.R.C. §§ 1291(a)–(c), 1295, 1296. In 1996 Congress enacted
    section 1296, allowing taxpayers to elect mark-to-market treatment. In 2002 the
    Secretary promulgated proposed regulations setting forth the rules for making such
    an election. Prop. 
    Treas. Reg. § 1.1296-1
    , 
    67 Fed. Reg. 49,634
    , 49,639 (July 31, 2002).
    Those regulations became final in 2004. T.D. 9123, 2004-
    1 C.B. 907
    ; see 
    Treas. Reg. § 1.1296-1
    (h)(1). Under either the proposed or the final regulations, for a taxpayer’s
    PFIC income to be taxed according to section 1296, he generally must make an election
    by the due date for filing his income tax return for the first year to which the election
    will apply. 
    Treas. Reg. § 1.1296-1
    (h)(1); Prop. 
    Treas. Reg. § 1.1296-1
    (h)(1), 67 Fed. Reg.
    at 49,642.
    29
    [*29] VI.     Accuracy-Related Penalties
    Respondent determined accuracy-related penalties under section
    6662(a) and (b)(1) for negligence. Section 6662(a) and (b)(1) imposes a
    penalty equal to 20% of the portion of an underpayment that is
    attributable to negligence or disregard of rules or regulations.
    “Negligence” includes any failure to make a reasonable attempt to
    comply with the provisions of the internal revenue laws or to exercise
    ordinary and reasonable care in the preparation of a tax return. I.R.C.
    § 6662(c); 
    Treas. Reg. § 1.6662-3
    (b)(1). “Disregard” includes any
    careless, reckless, or intentional disregard of rules or regulations. I.R.C.
    § 6662(c); 
    Treas. Reg. § 1.6662-3
    (b)(2)
    The Commissioner bears the burden of production with respect
    to a penalty imposed by section 6662(a) and is required to present
    sufficient evidence showing that the penalty is appropriate. See I.R.C.
    § 7491(c); Higbee, 116 T.C. at 446–47. This includes showing compliance
    with the procedural requirements of section 6751(b)(1). 38 See I.R.C.
    § 7491(c); Graev v. Commissioner, 
    149 T.C. 485
    , 493 (2017),
    supplementing and overruling in part 
    147 T.C. 460
     (2016). Once the
    Commissioner meets his burden of production, the taxpayer bears the
    burden of proving that the Commissioner’s determination is incorrect.
    Higbee, 116 T.C. at 447.
    Pursuant to this Court’s Order dated November 30, 2021,
    granting respondent’s motion for partial summary judgment filed
    October 13, 2021, we find that respondent has established compliance
    with the managerial approval requirements of section 6751(b).
    Respondent has likewise satisfied his burden of production to show that
    the imposition of the section 6662(a) and (b)(1) penalties is appropriate
    since the evidence in the record shows that petitioners, during the tax
    years at issue, never made any attempt to comply with the federal tax
    reporting obligations stemming from Mrs. Fairbank’s ownership
    interest in Xavana Establishment and UBS account 0857. Accordingly,
    respondent has satisfied his burden of production for the imposition of
    the accuracy-related penalties under section 6662(a) and (b)(1).
    Therefore, the only issue remaining is whether petitioners are entitled
    to a reasonable cause defense.
    38 Section 6751(b)(1) provides that no penalty shall be assessed unless “the
    initial determination” of the assessment was “personally approved (in writing) by the
    immediate supervisor of the individual making such determination.”
    30
    [*30] A taxpayer may avoid a section 6662(a) penalty by showing that
    there was reasonable cause for any portion of the underpayment and
    that the taxpayer acted in good faith. I.R.C. § 6664(c)(1). Reasonable
    cause requires that the taxpayer have exercised ordinary business care
    and prudence as to the disputed item. See United States v. Boyle, 
    469 U.S. 241
    , 246 (1985). Whether a taxpayer acted with reasonable cause
    and in good faith within the meaning of section 6664(c)(1) is determined
    on a case-by-case basis, taking into account all relevant facts and
    circumstances. 
    Treas. Reg. § 1.6664-4
    (b)(1). The most important factor
    is the extent of the taxpayer’s effort to assess his proper tax liability for
    the year. 
    Id.
     Circumstances that may indicate reasonable cause and
    good faith include an honest misunderstanding of fact or law that is
    reasonable under all of the circumstances, including the taxpayer's
    education, experience, and knowledge. 
    Id.
    During the years at issue, petitioners timely filed their joint
    Forms 1040, which were prepared by Mr. Holly. In preparing
    petitioners’ tax returns, Mr. Holly sent them a tax organizer each year,
    on which petitioners generally checked “No” to the question about
    foreign bank accounts. Additionally, on petitioners’ Forms 1040 filed for
    the tax years at issue, petitioners checked “No” to the questions of
    whether they “have an interest in or a signature or other authority over
    a financial account in a foreign country, such as a bank account,
    securities account, or other financial account” or whether they
    “receive[d] a distribution from, or were . . . the grantor of, or transferor
    to, a foreign trust.”
    Where a taxpayer claims reliance on professional advice, section
    6664(c) will apply if “the taxpayer meets each requirement of the
    following three-prong test: (1) the adviser was a competent professional
    who had sufficient expertise to justify reliance, (2) the taxpayer provided
    necessary and accurate information to the adviser, and (3) the taxpayer
    actually relied in good faith on the adviser’s judgment.” Neonatology
    Assocs., P.A., 115 T.C. at 99. The record establishes that petitioners did
    not satisfy this test with respect to any of their advisers who assisted
    preparing their federal income tax returns for the years at issue.
    As for Mrs. Fairbank’s reliance on Mr. Holly, petitioners have
    failed to demonstrate that they have satisfied the latter two prongs of
    the Neonatology test. As to the first Neonatology prong, we accept that
    Mr. Holly, as a CPA, was a competent professional who had sufficient
    expertise to justify reliance. As to the second Neonatology prong,
    petitioners have provided no evidence that they supplied Mr. Holly with
    31
    [*31] necessary and accurate information. In fact, petitioners told him
    that they had no foreign accounts, all while Mrs. Fairbank was
    corresponding with Dr. Lienert and Mr. Besser to effect transfers from
    UBS in Switzerland. As to the final Neonatology prong, petitioners have
    not demonstrated that their reliance on Mr. Holly was in good faith. In
    this case, Mrs. Fairbank provided Mr. Holly with inaccurate information
    regarding her ownership interests in foreign bank accounts, thereby
    negating the relied-in-good-faith prong.
    On the basis of the facts and circumstances of this case as
    established by the evidence in the record, we find that petitioners are
    not entitled to the reasonable cause defense to the section 6662(a)
    accuracy-related penalties asserted and sustain respondent’s
    determination accordingly.
    VII.   Conclusion
    We have considered all of the arguments that the parties made
    and to the extent they are not addressed herein, we find the arguments
    to be moot, irrelevant, or without merit.
    To reflect the foregoing,
    Decision will be entered under Rule 155.