DocketNumber: Docket No. 21741-14L
Judges: PUGH
Filed Date: 6/19/2017
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/21/2020
An appropriate order will be issued.
PUGH,
The following facts are based on the parties' pleadings and the parties'*113 summary judgment motions, including the attached affidavits and exhibits. Petitioner, a C corporation wholly owned by William and Ann Zintl, is a commercial construction subcontractor with a principal place of business in *121 Minnesota. On May 28, 2013, respondent sent a notice of intent to levy to petitioner with respect to its employment tax liabilities from: (1) Forms 941 for the quarterly periods ending June 30, September 30, and December 31, 2011; and March 31 and June 30, 2012; and (2) Forms 940 for 2010 and 2011. In response on June 3, 2013, petitioner submitted Form 12153, Request for a Collection Due Process or Equivalent Hearing. On June 4, 2013, respondent sent a notice of intent to levy to petitioner with respect to its Form 941 unpaid tax liability for the period ended on December 31, 2010. In response on June 13, 2013, petitioner submitted Form 12153. On June 18, 2013, respondent sent a notice of intent to levy to petitioner with respect to its Form 941 unpaid tax liability for the period ended on March 31, 2011. In response on July 16, 2013, petitioner submitted Form 12153. On all Forms 12153 petitioner checked "offer in compromise" as a collection alternative and wrote*114 "We believe that it is premature to take collection action in this matter. An Offer in Compromise is an appropriate collection alternative."
On a Form 656, Offer in Compromise, submitted on August 27, 2013, petitioner made an OIC of $1 million. In support thereof petitioner provided a profit and loss statement and a balance sheet ending June 30, 2013, and a Summary Appraisal Report by Hoff Appraisal Associates dated February 12, *122 2013, indicating a "Forced Liquidation Value" for petitioner's machinery and equipment of $1,155,000. In an accompanying letter to Settlement Officer (SO) Albright, petitioner indicated an accounts receivable balance of $3,359,920 as of August 9, 2013. After quoting the Internal Revenue Manual (IRM) regarding the proper treatment of accounts receivable, the letter explained that "Zintl is profitable and its receivables are part of the income stream required for the production of income. The company must pay for materials and labor to continue operating. Without the income flow from these receivables the business could not operate." Petitioner also explained that "[t]he liquidation of Zintl's inventory, machinery, and equipment would end its ability to operate. Zintl*115 recently sold all of the assets it could spare to satisfy an obligation to Citizens State Bank that was secured by its inventory and equipment."
SO Albright requested additional documentation, including a valuation of the business as a going concern and a copy of the equipment appraisal listing the fair market value of petitioner's physical assets. Petitioner sent the documents requested, including a going-concern appraisal prepared by Shenehon Co. dated April 16, 2014. The going-concern appraisal estimated a going-concern fair market value of $2,100,000, using three valuation methods, each of which subtracted accrued payroll tax liability and interest of $4,190,290. The largest *123 single asset reflected in the appraisal was the accounts receivable (in excess of $7 million at the end of petitioner's fiscal year ending January 2014*116 [The] appraisal estimated the value of the business to be $2,100,000 after allowing for the IRS debt of $4,190,980. In other words the value of the business for purposes of the OIC is estimated to be $6,290,980. In determining the reasonable collection potential in an OIC, the IRS would generally reduce the asset values by 20%. As a result, in this case the reasonable collection potential is computed to be $5,032,784 ($6,290,890 x .8).
SO Albright gave petitioner an opportunity to submit an amended OIC "in an amount at least equal to the reasonable collection potential" and stated that he likely would reject the original $1 million offer if an amended offer were not received by May 8, 2014. By letter dated May 1, 2014, petitioner disagreed with *124 the "use of the going concern valuation of Zintl to calculate an acceptable Offer in Compromise amount".
On June 17, 2014, SO Albright issued petitioner a letter stating that he had "been unable to find anything to indicate that the going-concern value cannot be used in determining the RCP when the taxpayer is a business (as opposed to when the taxpayer is the shareholder of a business)". The letter advised petitioner that any OIC had to cover*117 all of the tax owed and at least some of the penalties and interest and explained the basis for this conclusion (relating to the growth of the business over the period the business was delinquent on its tax obligations and the enhanced going-concern value due to this growth). SO Albright calculated the unpaid taxes to be approximately $3,666,000 and the total liability, with penalties and interest, to be $6,423,000. Finally he advised petitioner that if it wanted to amend the OIC to reflect the computed RCP of $5,032,784 it should submit an amended Form 656 by July 1, 2014.
In a July 9, 2014, meeting and subsequent calls petitioner advised SO Albright that it was unable to secure financing to fund a $5 million OIC but was continuing to work with banks on financing. On August 4, 2014, petitioner's attorney notified SO Albright that petitioner anticipated receiving a loan of $3 million that if approved would allow petitioner to increase its OIC to $3,200,000. *125 In the Case Activity Record SO Albright noted, among other concerns, that the deadline for increasing the OIC had lapsed and the loan had not yet been approved. SO Albright indicated that he had a number of other reasons for rejecting*118 petitioner's OIC on public policy grounds but would recommend rejection based on RCP rather than public policy.
On August 11, 2014, respondent issued a notice of determination rejecting petitioner's offer of $1 million because its RCP exceeded that amount and sustaining the disputed collection actions.
Where (as here) there is no dispute as to the taxpayer's underlying liabilities, we review the Appeals Office's determination for abuse of discretion.
The only issue in dispute is whether SO Albright abused his discretion by using the going-concern value as described in
1. Evaluation of a business as a going concern is sometimes necessary when determining RCP of an operating business owned individually or by a corporation, partnership, or LLC. This analysis recognizes that a business may be worth more than the sum of its parts, when sold as a going*121 concern. 2. To determine the value of a business as a going concern consider the value of assets, future income, and intangible assets such as: - Ability or reputation of a professional. - Established customer base. - Prominent location. - Well known trade names, trade marks, or telephone number. - Possession of government licenses, copyrights, or patents. Generally, the difference between what an ongoing business would realize if sold on the open market as a going concern and the traditional RCP analysis is attributable to the value of these intangibles. * * * * 5. Generally, the value of a business as a going concern would not be included in RCP of a viable, ongoing business, unless the value is substantially greater than the income produced by the business.
Petitioner contends that the going-concern valuation method in
In effect petitioner asks us to decide that use of the going-concern value of a business is never appropriate when the business being valued is the taxpayer. We cannot so conclude, nor need we, because we find that SO Albright's calculation of RCP was faulty for a different reason: In calculating petitioner's RCP, SO Albright increased petitioner's going-concern value by the amount of the unpaid tax liability that the appraisal took into account in its calculation of value and based his determination of RCP solely on this modified value.
This modification to the value at first blush seems logical. Reducing petitioner's going-concern value by its tax liability when determining how much of this tax liability petitioner can pay would seem to double count the tax liability and provide a boon to a business taxpayer whose tax debt is part of the business being valued. It is this tax liability that will be satisfied with the OIC, after all. The problem is that*123 the going-concern value is intended to give some indication of *130 the value of petitioner as a continuing business, that is, what a third party might pay to buy petitioner as a whole, including all of its assets and liabilities. No third party would buy petitioner without taking into account the unpaid tax liability. And the record shows that petitioner could not obtain financing for the modified amount either. This highlights the logical difficulty of using going-concern value--which presumes that a taxpayer can sell itself--to determine RCP. Nonetheless, we cannot conclude that consideration of the going-concern value and the information in the appraisal is irrelevant or that the settlement officer may not consider this information, including the specific assets and liabilities, including the tax liability, on remand. We also do not hold that petitioner's offer was reasonable. We hold only that SO Albright's rejection of petitioner's OIC solely on the basis of his calculation of RCP that used petitioner's going-concern valuation but disregarded completely its tax liability was not reasonable on this record.
We hold that SO Albright's calculation of petitioner's RCP was not*124 reasonable on the record before us. Accordingly, we will remand this case to the Office of Appeals for the purpose of having it determine petitioner's RCP.
*131 To reflect the foregoing,
1. Unless otherwise indicated all section references are the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended and in effect at all relevant times. Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. All monetary amounts are rounded to the nearest dollar.↩
3. The receivables figure included over $4.8 million in receivables for projects that were not yet completed. The appraisal assumed that collecting these receivables, for projects not yet completed, would be doubtful and therefore reduced the accounts receivable by this amount when calculating the liquidation value of petitioner.↩