DocketNumber: Tax Ct. Dkt. No. 26605-95
Judges: PARR
Filed Date: 10/6/1998
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/21/2020
Decision will be entered under Rule 155.
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
PARR, JUDGE: Respondent determined deficiencies in, and penalties on, the Federal income tax for 1991 and 1992 Accuracy-Related Penalty Year Deficiency Sec. 6662(a) 1991 $ 1,188,920 $ 237,784 1992 33,037 6,607
All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the taxable years in issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure, unless otherwise indicated. All dollar amounts are rounded to the nearest dollar, unless otherwise indicated.
The issues for decision are: (1) Whether petitioners may exclude from their gross income contingent fees of $ 3,455,500 paid to their attorneys from the settlement proceeds of petitioner's personal injury suit. We hold they may not. (2) Whether under
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. The stipulated facts and the accompanying exhibits are incorporated into our findings by this reference. Petitioners were husband and wife during the taxable years at issue and filed 1991 and 1992 Forms 1040, U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, using the status of "Married filing joint return". At the time the petition in this case was filed, petitioners resided in Midland, Texas.
Petitioner and Pascual are medical doctors. In 1970, petitioner graduated from a medical school in India. He came to St. Louis in 1972 for a residency in 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 364">*366 general surgery and later went to Canada to complete a residency in general and cardiothoracic surgery. In 1981, petitioner returned to the United States to practice medicine in Texas. Petitioner is certified as having an adequate level of training and practice for the cardiac surgery specialty by the American Board of Specialties Surgery and by the American Board of Thoracic Surgery.
THE LAWSUIT
In 1984 and 1985, petitioner was practicing as a cardiovascular thoracic surgeon in San Antonio, Texas. On February 8, 1985, a San Antonio television station, KENS-TV, began broadcasting a series of investigative reports about petitioner and his practice entitled "A Second Opinion". KENS-TV is a wholly owned subsidiary of Harte-Hanks Television, Inc., which in turn is owned by Harte-Hanks Communications, Inc. (Harte-Hanks Television, Inc., and Harte-Hanks Communications, Inc., are referred to hereinafter as Harte-Hanks). The reports claimed that petitioner performed unnecessary surgery and delivered poor quality medical care; the reports alleged acts that would be criminal under the laws of Texas. As a result of the broadcast reports, petitioner's reputation and medical practice were destroyed, 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 364">*367 his hospital privileges were revoked, his medical malpractice insurance was canceled, and he was subjected to multiple malpractice suits.
After the series aired, petitioner brought suit in the 224th Judicial District Court of Bexar County, Texas, based upon defamation due to libelous and false statements, invasion of privacy, infliction of emotional distress, tortious interference with contracts, libel per se, and loss of medical practice, patients, and potential patients. 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 364">*368 station acted with knowledge of the falsity or with reckless disregard for the truth or falsity of the subject matter of the broadcasts. The jury also found that the series constituted an intentional infliction of emotional distress and trauma on petitioner.
The jury awarded petitioner $ 11,500,000 in actual damages, composed of the following amounts: $ 1,750,000 for loss of past earnings from his medical practice, $ 5 million for loss of future earning capacity, $ 1 million for past mental anguish, including embarrassment and humiliation, $ 500,000 for future mental anguish, $ 1,500,000 for loss of past reputation, and $ 1,750,000 for future loss of reputation. In addition, the jury awarded punitive damages of $ 17,500,000, bringing the total award to $ 29 million, plus interest.
Petitioner moved for a posttrial amendment of his pleadings to allow for damages in excess of $ 10,500,000, the total amount he initially sought in his suit, and the court allowed petitioner to amend his pleadings to conform to the adduced proof and the jury's verdict. The district court then entered judgment (the judgment).
Of the $ 11,500,000 in actual damages, the court found that $ 4,250,000 represented 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 364">*369 actual damages that had occurred between the date of the broadcast and the date of the judgment. Prejudgment interest of $ 2,597,201 had accrued on this portion of the award, which brought the total actual damages and prejudgment interest to $ 14,097,201 and the total actual and punitive damages and prejudgment interest to $ 31,597,201. Postjudgment interest of 10 percent per annum as provided by Texas law was ordered to be paid on this total sum.
After the judgment was entered, Harte-Hanks moved for a new trial, but its motion was denied on June 15, 1990. On August 3, 1990, Harte-Hanks appealed the case to the Court of Appeals for the Fourth Court of Appeals District, San Antonio. 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 364">*370 and each insurance company provided coverage for a defined level of liability. The television station's insurance coverage was provided as follows:
After the judgment had been communicated to the insurance companies, and while the appeal of the judgment was pending, petitioner learned that Mission had been declared insolvent, and Western was functionally insolvent. The insolvency of these two companies created an uninsured gap in Harte-Hanks' coverage between the $ 2 million and $ 12 million levels, which Harte-Hanks had to cover to activate coverage at the upper levels.
THE SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT
On January 17, 1991, after prevailing at the trial level 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 364">*371 but before he was aware that the two insurance companies were insolvent, petitioner attempted to settle the entire case with Harte-Hanks for $ 21 million; $ 9,500,000 to settle the actual damages and $ 11,500,000 to settle the punitive damages. Although this offer was rejected, the parties continued to negotiate.
On February 25, 1991, after he became aware of the insurance companies' insolvency, petitioner authorized his attorneys to settle with the lower tier insurance companies (the first $ 22 million of coverage) for $ 8,500,000, and to make a demand for settlement upon the upper tier insurance company (Federal) for $ 2 million. On March 14, 1991, upon authorization of petitioner, a partial settlement agreement (the agreement) was entered into by petitioner, petitioner's attorneys, and Harte-Hanks.
The agreement provided for a payment to petitioner of $ 8,500,000 from Harte-Hanks and its insurers. Of that amount, Continental agreed to pay $ 2,100,000, and Harte-Hanks agreed to pay $ 1 million to settle the first $ 7 million in principal liability of the judgment. Harte-Hanks agreed to pay $ 2,400,000 to settle the principal amount of the judgment between $ 7 million and $ 12 million, 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 364">*372 and to the extent necessary, to settle all postjudgment interest liability on the first $ 22 million of the judgment. Columbia and Hudson agreed to pay $ 3 million to settle the principal amount of the judgment between $ 12 million and $ 22 million.
In reaching agreement, none of the payors considered whether the amounts they were paying were for actual or punitive damages. Nor did the payors or petitioner discuss any allocation of the settlement amount between actual or punitive damages. Instead, the parties regarded the judgment as a claim that totaled in excess of $ 31 million, considered the tiered structure of the insurance coverage, and tried to work out a settlement that preserved petitioner's claim against the upper tier-insurer and resolved his claim against the lower tier insurers. 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 364">*373
THE CONTINGENCY FEE
Although petitioner was represented at trial by the law firm of Branton & Hall, petitioner was initially represented in his suit by "Racehorse" Haynes and his law firm (the Haynes Firm). Petitioner's payment agreement with the Haynes firm was a straight fee arrangement. However, due to difficulties associated with the dissolution of the Haynes firm, petitioner's case languished. By the time petitioner hired Branton & Hall on May 30, 1989, he could not afford to pay the attorneys by the hour; therefore, he agreed to a contingency fee arrangement.
The payment arrangement was characterized by Jim Branton (Branton) as a "standard contingent fee arrangement". In addition to providing that all expenses necessary to prepare the case for settlement or trial, as well as expenses for trying the case, were to be paid by the client, the fee contract provided in relevant part that
the undersigned, hereinafter called CLIENTS, employ the law firm of BRANTON & HALL, P.C., hereinafter called ATTORNEYS, understanding that 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 364">*374 the legal services rendered and to be rendered will be by ATTORNEYS of the professional corporation at its discretion. CLIENTS hereby sell, convey, and assign to BRANTON & HALL, P.C., as consideration for said services a forty percent (40%) interest in and to any and all causes of action, claims, demands, judgment or recoveries which CLIENTS may hold or receive because of damages and injuries received and sustained by DR. SUDHIR SRIVASTAVA and DR. ELIZABETH PASCUAL as a result of the television broadcasts on Channel 5 in February 1985.
* * * * * * *
It is further agreed that this Contract does not include the appeal of any Judgment, and in the event of an appeal from any Judgment, CLIENTS shall advance the anticipated costs of appeal and the percentage contingent fee interest shall be increased from forty percent (40%) to fifty percent (50%).
Later, while the settlement negotiations were in progress, Branton & Hall hired Franklin S. Spears (Spears) in an of-counsel capacity to aid the firm with the appeal of petitioner's suit. Spears was also paid on a contingency fee basis. Spears' contract with Branton & Hall provided that he would be paid a contingency fee of $ 1,200,000 for the preparation 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 364">*375 of petitioner's briefs upon recovery of the total amount of the judgment, and a proportionally lesser amount if less than the total amount of the judgment was obtained. In the event of a partial settlement before the preparation and submission of petitioner's briefs, Spears would collect an amount determined on a sliding scale for each $ 1 million received in settlement.
When the case settled, Spears was paid $ 92,500 "off the top"; that is, the fee due Spears was deducted from the settlement proceeds before calculating the amount due Branton Hall. Branton & Hall was paid $ 3,363,000; 40 percent of the settlement proceeds reduced by the $ 92,500 paid to Spears. Petitioner received the balance of the proceeds, $ 5,044,500, from which petitioner paid Branton & Hall $ 44,730 for legal expenses.
Petitioners did not include any portion of the settlement proceeds in their income. In the notice of deficiency, respondent determined that the amounts paid to the attorneys did not reduce the amount of the settlement proceeds includable in petitioners' gross income; however, respondent allowed the attorney's fees as a Schedule A miscellaneous itemized deduction.
OPINION
ISSUE 1. WHETHER PETITIONERS 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 364">*376 MAY EXCLUDE FROM THEIR GROSS INCOME CONTINGENT FEES PAID TO THEIR ATTORNEYS
Respondent determined that petitioners received $ 8,500,000 in settlement of their claim, and that they may not exclude from their gross income the portion of the settlement proceeds paid to Branton & Hall. Petitioners assert that they never realized the amount paid to Branton & Hall, because they assigned Branton & Hall a 40-percent-ownership interest in the cause of action. Furthermore, petitioners assert that this issue was settled by the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in
This case is appealable to the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, and under the Golsen rule, we follow the law of the circuit in which a case is appealable.
In the Cotnam case, the taxpayer had entered into a contingent fee arrangement with her attorneys, under which the taxpayer agreed to pay the attorneys 40 percent of any amount recovered on a claim that they litigated on her behalf. The taxpayer received a judgment on the claim, and a check in the amount of the judgment was made payable to both her and the attorneys. The attorneys retained their share of the proceeds, and remitted the balance to the taxpayer. The Commissioner treated the amount of the judgment as taxable income and allowed a deduction for the attorney's fees. In holding that the amount retained by the attorneys was not includable in the taxpayer's gross income, the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit concluded that under applicable State (Alabama) law, the contingent fee operated to assign to the attorneys an equitable lien and interest as to 40 percent of the judgment. 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 364">*378
The State of Texas, unlike the State of Alabama, does not regulate attorney's liens by statute. Instead, Texas relies upon common law for authority on this issue.
In Texas, an attorney's lien is paramount to the rights of the parties in the suit and is superior to other liens on the money or property involved.
We do not find under the common law of Texas that because petitioner's attorneys were entitled to secure their earned contingent fee with a lien on the proceeds, the lien was a conveyance of an ownership interest in the settlement proceeds.
We turn next to petitioners' assertion that they never realized the amount paid petitioner's attorneys as they transferred to Branton 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 364">*380 & Hall a 40-percent ownership interest in petitioner's cause of action. Petitioners submit the contingency fee agreement as evidence of the transfer.
The question before us is to what extent, if any, petitioner could transfer to his attorneys an interest in his cause of action. We must look to the law of Texas for the answer to the question thus posed. Our determination in this regard should, according to the mandate of the Supreme Court of the United States in
In
The court first noted the fact that as the case involved the attorney-client relationship, it could not regard the case as one involving an ordinary assignment, devoid of public policy considerations. The court stated that the basic fallacy of the attorney's position was that it ignored the fact that the lawyer's rights, based on the contingent fee contract, are wholly derivative from those 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 364">*382 of his client. In Texas, the attorney-client relationship is one of principal and agent. Id.
Furthermore, the court stated that
there is but one cause of action. OUR DECISIONS UPHOLD AN AGREEMENT TO ASSIGN A PART OF THE RECOVERY on the cause of action to the attorney. But we have never held that the cause of action is divisible and may be tried for only a percentage of the cause of action. Id.; emphasis added.
An attorney with a contingent fee contract is not so directly interested in the subject matter of a lawsuit as to make him a party; thus, Texas attorneys operating under a contingent fee contract do not have the same rights as their clients in the cause of action. 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 364">*383
State law determines what property rights and interests a taxpayer has, but Federal law determines the consequences of such rights and interests for tax purposes.
Although it is unclear what constitutes the defining moment at which the contingency occurs, at minimum, the contingency cannot occur before judgment is affirmed on appeal or when the time for filing an appeal has lapsed.
Accordingly, until the contingent fee agreement between petitioner and Branton & Hall ripened through finalization of the 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 364">*385 lawsuit, it was executory. Once the contingency occurred, the attorneys were entitled to a lien on the funds, which ultimately was satisfied when they received payment according to the terms of the agreement.
The Supreme Court has held that
The rule that income is not taxable until realized has never been taken to mean that the taxpayer, * * * , who has fully enjoyed the benefit of the economic gain represented by his right to receive income, can escape taxation because he has not himself received payment of it from his obligor. * * * Taxation may occur when he has made such use or disposition of his power to receive or control the income as to procure in its place other satisfactions which are of economic worth.
* * * * * * *
The import of the statute is that the fruit is not to be attributed to a different tree from that on which it grew.
It is for this reason that "taxation cannot be escaped by anticipatory arrangements and contracts however skillfully devised to prevent * * * the settlement amount when paid from vesting even for a second in the man who earned it."
Accordingly, we find that petitioners realized benefit from the entire amount of the settlement proceeds, and they may not exclude from their gross income the portion of the settlement proceeds paid to Branton & Hall and Spears.
ISSUE 2. WHETHER UNDER
Respondent and petitioners agree that the amount received by petitioner for actual damages is excludable from petitioners' income under
Respondent determined that the $ 8,500,000 settlement amount should be allocated proportionally to the judgment of $ 11,500,000 in actual damages, $ 17,500,000 in punitive damages, and prejudgment interest of $ 2,597,201. 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 364">*387
Petitioners assert that as $ 8,500,000 is exactly the amount that petitioner initially pled as actual damages, and as it is less than the amount awarded by the jury for only actual damages, the entire settlement amount is excluded from their gross income under
We have often been asked to decide the proper allocation of proceeds of a settlement agreement in the context of
In the instant case, the partial settlement agreement does not specify how the $ 8,500,000 settlement amount is allocated between actual and punitive damages, or between principal and interest. Accordingly, we consider all the facts and circumstances to ascertain in lieu of what the settlement amount of $ 8,500,000 was paid. Id.
We do not find that the evidence supports petitioners' assertion that none of the amount paid in settlement was paid in lieu of either punitive damages or interest. To the contrary, the partial settlement 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 364">*389 agreement shows that Harte-Hanks agreed to pay, and petitioner agreed to accept, $ 2,400,000 in satisfaction of the principal amount of the judgment between $ 7 million and $ 12 million, and to extinguish any and all postjudgment interest liability on the first $ 22 million of the judgment. Furthermore, Columbia and Hudson agreed to pay, and petitioner agreed to accept, $ 3 million in satisfaction of the principal amount of the judgment between $ 12 million and $ 22 million. Columbia's and Hudson's liability threshold was $ 12 million, and the judgment provided total actual damages of $ 11,500,000; Columbia and Hudson would not have paid $ 3 million unless they thought prejudgment interest and punitive damages would total at least $ 3,500,000.
Harte-Hanks' agreement to pay postjudgment interest and Columbia's and Hudson's actual payment of several millions of dollars speak with a voice heard more clearly than petitioners' assertions. We find that petitioners have not carried their burden of proving that respondent's determinations are erroneous.
On brief, respondent proposes an alternative method of allocation which he concedes may be "the most proper methodology to use to allocate the 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 364">*390 settlement payment." Under this alternative method, it is presumed that actual damages would be paid before prejudgment interest, postjudgment interest, or punitive damages, and that prejudgment interest would be paid before punitive damages.
Under this methodology, the combined $ 3,100,000 payment made by Continental and Harte-Hanks, which was the amount agreed upon to settle Harte-Hanks' liability for the first $ 7 million of damages, is allocated to settle $ 7 million of the $ 11,500,000 of actual damages provided by the judgment. Accordingly, petitioners would exclude $ 3,100,000 under
Harte-Hanks paid $ 2,400,000, to settle the principal amount of the judgment between $ 7 million and $ 12 million, and to the extent necessary, to settle all postjudgment interest on the first $ 22 million of the judgment. This amount is allocated to actual damages of $ 4,500,000, 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 364">*391 and postjudgment interest.
Finally, the $ 3 million paid by Columbia and Hudson to settle their liability for coverage between $ 12 million and $ 22 million is allocated entirely to prejudgment interest and punitive damages. At this level, all of the $ 11,500,000 in actual damages has been exhausted, in addition to $ 500,000 of prejudgment interest and all of the postjudgment interest. Furthermore, the settlement amount of $ 3 million for $ 10 million of liability ($ 22 million minus $ 12 million) reflects the diminished likelihood 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 364">*392 of petitioner's recovering damages and interest in an amount above $ 12 million if the case was appealed.
Extending respondent's alternative method of allocation, we find that of the $ 3 million paid by Columbia and Hudson, $ 629,160 was paid in lieu of prejudgment interest, and $ 2,370,840 was paid in lieu of punitive damages. 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 364">*393
Accordingly, on the basis of all the facts and circumstances of this case, we find that $ 4,682,116 of the settlement proceeds was paid to petitioner in lieu of actual damages, which is excluded from gross income under
ISSUE 3. DEDUCTIBILITY OF ATTORNEY'S FEES UNDER SECTION 162
In the notice of deficiency, respondent allowed petitioners a deduction under
In analyzing the issue of whether the attorney's fees were an expense incurred for the production or collection of income under
As there is no general Federal common law of torts, nor controlling definitions in the tax code, we must look to State law to analyze the nature of the claim litigated.
Petitioner's personal injury suit was for libel, a defamation action. All defamatory statements (whether libel or slander) attack a person's good name.
If as a result of defamatory statements attacking the individual's character, the individual suffers some impairment of his professional relationships -- in this case, petitioner's relationship with his patients and hospitals -- the injury is to the person, although it may have derivative consequences for the business.
As the defamation of an individual is a personal injury under the law of Texas, the expenses of litigating petitioner's claim for personal injury are not deductible as ordinary and necessary expenses incurred in carrying on a trade or business.
Petitioner cites
In McKay, the taxpayer was an employee who brought suit for wrongful termination, breach of employment contract, RICO, and punitive damages. The taxpayer was awarded damages for lost compensation, "future" damages, and punitive damages for wrongful, malicious, and oppressive acts by his employer. 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 364">*397 After trial, the parties settled, and the settlement agreement provided that sums were paid in extinguishment of the taxpayer's tort claim for wrongful discharge and extinguishment of his breach of contract claim. In the settlement agreement, the parties agreed that the amount attributable to the wrongful discharge claim represented compensatory damages excludable under
We held that under
The facts of
We agree with respondent's determination that the portion of petitioner's legal expenses allocable to the punitive damages and the interest received on the award are deductible under
In
Total attorney's fees | Nonexempt income | Deductible | ||
and legal expenses | X | = | expenses | |
Total award |
We have held that a portion of the settlement proceeds is attributable to punitive damages and interest and is includable in petitioners' income. Accordingly, we find that $ 1,572,173 of attorney's fees and legal expenses is deductible under
ISSUE 4. ACCURACY-RELATED PENALTY UNDER
Respondent determined that petitioners are liable for accuracy-related penalties for the substantial understatement of tax under
There is a substantial understatement of income tax if the amount of the understatement for the taxable year exceeds the greater of (1) 10 percent of the tax required to be shown on the return or (2) $ 5,000.
After adjustments, 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 364">*401 respondent determined that the amounts of tax required to be shown on the returns are $ 1,194,296 and $ 45,969, and the amounts of the understatements of tax are $ 1,188,920 and $ 33,037 for 1991 and 1992, respectively. As each of these understatement amounts exceeds the greater of 10 percent of the tax required to be shown on the return or $ 5,000 for the year at issue, respondent applied the penalty.
It is the taxpayer's responsibility to establish he is not liable for the accuracy-related penalty imposed by
Respondent pled in his answer that petitioners negligently failed to report any portion of the settlement payment as gross income for 1991 and, therefore, are liable for the
PUNITIVE DAMAGES
The issue of whether 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 364">*403 punitive damages received in a tort or tortlike suit are excludable from income was resolved by the Supreme Court in
It is clear from the Supreme Court's decision that the issue of whether punitive damages received in a tort suit are excluded under
Furthermore, before the decision in
The Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit reversed
After we decided Estate of Moore, but before it was reversed, this Court decided
Under
As the lawsuit in the Robinson case included an award for mental anguish, as well as punitive damages, we allocated a percentage of the settlement amount to punitive damages and held that the taxpayers could exclude that percentage from their gross income under
It is clear from these decisions that, until
Because of our finding that there was substantial authority for petitioners' reporting position, we need not address the issue of whether they were negligent in not reporting the punitive damages as income.
Accordingly, we find that petitioners are not liable for the
INTEREST
Petitioners did not report any of the amount of the settlement proceeds that they received in 1991 as interest income. Respondent determined that a portion of the settlement amount is attributable to interest. Petitioners have presented no argument to support their reporting position on this issue, other than their assertion that
In
Furthermore, in Kovacs, we stated that the issue of the excludability of damages and the interest awarded thereon first arose in
Finally, we observed that since Riddle was decided, the exclusion for personal injury damages has been reenacted and amended numerous times; nevertheless, the statute continues to exclude only "damages" and omits any reference to "interest", which implies a continuing acceptance by Congress of the existing interpretation of the exclusion.
Accordingly, 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 364">*409 we find that there was no substantial authority for petitioners' reporting position for the interest portion of the settlement amount they received in 1991.
REASONABLE CAUSE AND GOOD FAITH EXCEPTION
The determination of whether a taxpayer acted with reasonable cause and good faith within the meaning of
Petitioners assert that they are not liable for any
Petitioner testified that at different times he asked Branton, who was hired to represent petitioner in his personal injury lawsuit, Thomas Weir (Weir), a tax attorney from San Antonio, and Bill Elms (Elms), petitioners' certified public accountant, if the settlement amount was taxable. Petitioner testified that all told him that none of the settlement amount was taxable.
Branton testified that he did not consider himself to be a Federal tax lawyer. In response to a question by the Court, Branton stated that whenever a client asked him whether an item was taxable, his response has always been that he is not a tax lawyer, and that the client should get a tax lawyer. Thus, petitioners could not reasonably and in good faith rely upon Branton regarding the taxability of the settlement amount. See
Petitioner testified that he consulted with a tax attorney, Weir. Petitioner was not certain whether he spoke with Weir on the phone or 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 364">*411 consulted with him in person. Nor was petitioner certain of what documents he provided Weir. We cannot assume the testimony of absent witnesses would have been favorable to petitioner. Rather, the normal inference is that it would have been unfavorable.
Petitioner testified that he consulted with his accountant, Elms. Elms testified that in his initial interview with petitioner they talked extensively about the lawsuit. When Elms prepared petitioners' Federal income tax return for 1991, petitioners were involved in a bankruptcy proceeding and had given their only copy of the settlement agreement to that court. Elms therefore never saw a copy of the settlement agreement. Petitioner did provide Elms with a copy of the Texas district court's charge to the jury and the jury's answers to the interrogatories submitted to them. This document lists the amounts the jury awarded on each of the charges on which petitioner brought suit; it does not, however, indicate that prejudgment or postjudgment 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 364">*412 interest is to be provided on the amounts.
Elms testified that at the time he prepared petitioners' return, it was his understanding that punitive damages awarded on a personal injury case were not taxable. Elms was concerned whether the award included some interest income; however, he concluded that no part of the amount received would be considered interest income.
Petitioner signed the partial settlement agreement; therefore, he knew that Harte-Hanks agreed to make a settlement payment in part for all of the postjudgment interest on the first $ 22 million of liability. Petitioner knew the actual damages totaled $ 11,500,000, he knew that Columbia and Hudson were not liable to pay anything unless the total award exceeded $ 12 million, and he knew that Columbia and Hudson paid $ 3 million to settle their potential liability. Therefore, petitioner knew that the settlement agreement contained pertinent information that was not included in the document he provided Elms.
Petitioner, in possession of pertinent information, may not claim good faith and reasonable cause when he stands mute while his tax adviser in ignorance of such information comes to an incorrect opinion.
We therefore find 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 364">*413 that petitioners are liable for the
Due to our finding that petitioners are liable for the accuracy-related penalty for the substantial understatement of tax, we need not address the issue of whether they are liable for the accuracy-related penalty for negligence or disregard of rules or regulations. See
To reflect the foregoing,
Decision will be entered under Rule 155.
1. The deficiency for 1992 is for petitioners' short taxable year that began on Jan. 1, 1992, and ended July 7, 1992.↩
2. The suit was styled Sudhir Srivastava, M.D. vs. Harte-Hanks Television, Inc. d/b/a KENS-TV and Harte-Hanks Communication, Inc..↩
3. This case was styled Harte-Hanks Television, Inc. and Harte-Hanks Communications, Inc. (Appellants) vs. Sudhir Srivastava, M.D. (Appellee).↩
1. Continental and American Casualty hereinafter are collectively referred to as Continental↩
4. Federal did not participate in the settlement negotiations, nor did it join in the appeal of the trial court's judgment. After the agreement was entered into, Federal filed a motion seeking a declaratory judgment that it had no liability for insurance coverage for any loss or damages arising out of the judgment obtained against Harte-Hanks by petitioner.
Federal's motion was granted, and a judgment was entered on Apr. 24, 1992, and subsequently affirmed by the Court of
5. As stated in the provision of the Alabama Code relied upon by the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit:
2. Upon suits, judgments, and decrees for money, * * * attorneys shall have a lien superior to all liens but tax liens, and no person shall be at liberty to satisfy said suit, judgment or decree, until the lien or claim of the attorney for his fees is fully satisfied; and attorneys at law shall have the same right and power over said suits, judgments and decrees, to enforce their liens, as their clients had or may have for the amount due thereon to them.
6. The contingent fee contract, which the Texas Supreme Court characterized as "the usual one", provided that the plaintiff agreed to "sell, transfer, assign and convey to my said attorneys the respective undivided interests in and to my said claim * * * and to any judgment or judgments that I may obtain".
7. The court clarified that its holding does not necessarily apply to the case where a plaintiff has assigned a portion of his cause of action to an independent third party.↩
8. See
9. We note that this method of allocation was approved in
10. This figure equals the $ 11,500,000 total actual damages minus the $ 7 million actual damages which were settled for $ 3,100,000.↩
11. Respondent calculated postjudgment interest on the first $ 22 million of the judgment assuming a period of 303 days, from May 15, 1990 (the judgment date), to Mar. 14, 1991 (the date of the partial settlement agreement), a a 365-day calendar year, and rate of 10 percent per annum.↩
12. This amount is calculated by multiplying the $ 2,400,000 paid by Harte-Hanks by $ 4,500,000 of remaining actual damages divided by the sum of the $ 4,500,000 (actual damages), $ 500,000 (prejudgment interest), and $ 1,826,301 (postjudgment interest).↩
13. In the alternative allocation scheme, respondent assumed that the prejudgment interest would be paid before the punitive damages. The prejudgment interest totaled $ 2,597,201, of which $ 500,000 was already settled out of the $ 2,400,000 payment by Harte-Hanks. Columbia and Hudson would therefore pay the balance of the prejudgment interest, $ 2,097,201, before they paid any punitive damages.
The portion of Columbia's and Hudson's payment allocated to interest is calculated by dividing the balance of the prejudgment interest by Columbia's and Hudson's total liability, $ 10 million, and multiplying that amount by their $ 3 million payment.
Similarly, the amount allocated to punitive damages is calculated by dividing the balance of their liability, $ 10 million minus $ 2,097,201, by their total liability, $ 10 million, and multiplying that amount by their $ 3 million payment.
14. Texas law provides the following:
A libel is a defamation expressed in written or other graphic form that tends to blacken the memory of the dead or that tends to injure a living person's reputation and thereby expose the person to public hatred, contempt or ridicule, or financial injury or to impeach any person's honesty, integrity, virtue, or reputation or to publish the natural defects of anyone and thereby expose the person to public hatred, ridicule, or financial injury.
15. The Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit vacated our decision in this case. Citing
16. Respondent determined that computational adjustments should be made for 1991 which would preclude petitioners from claiming deductions for personal exemptions, eliminated their deductions for medical expenses, adjusted the amounts of self-employment tax and the deduction for self-employment tax, and increased the allowance for charitable contributions.
Respondent determined that computational adjustments should be made for 1992 which would adjust petitioners' deduction for charitable contributions to conform with the percentage limitations.↩
17. Petitioners timely filed their return for calendar year 1991 on Oct. 15, 1992, and the return for their short taxable year 1992 on Mar. 15, 1993.↩
18. See
19. The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1989 (OBRA), Pub. L. 101-239, sec. 7641(a), 103 Stat. 2379, amended
The Supreme Court decided the issue in
Estate of Moore v. Commissioner ( 1995 )
Miller v. Commissioner ( 1989 )
Commissioner v. Schleier ( 1995 )
Aames v. Commissioner ( 1990 )
Riddle v. Commissioner ( 1933 )
Paul F. Roemer, Jr. And Marcia E. Roemer v. Commissioner of ... ( 1983 )
Samuel Pollack and Annie Pollack v. Commissioner of ... ( 1968 )
Jack R. Hawkins, Cynthia J. Hawkins, Husband & Wife v. ... ( 1994 )
Ethel West Cotnam v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue ( 1959 )
Crutcher v. Continental Nat. Bank ( 1994 )
Newspapers, Inc. v. Matthews ( 1960 )
Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Bonnie A. Miller ( 1990 )
Jack E. Golsen and Sylvia H. Golsen v. Commissioner of ... ( 1971 )
Gulf Atlantic Life Insurance Co. v. Hurlbut ( 1985 )
Finkelstein v. Roberts ( 1920 )
MacFadden Publications, Inc. v. Wilson ( 1938 )