DocketNumber: Docket No. 30586-08.
Judges: WHERRY
Filed Date: 7/31/2014
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/18/2021
An appropriate order and decision will be entered.
This TEFRA case is before the Court on remand.
WHERRY,
The case constitutes a partner-level proceeding under the unified partnership audit and litigation procedures of the Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982 (TEFRA), Pub. L. No. 97-248, sec. 402(a), 96 Stat. at 648 (codified as amended at
In our previous Opinion, we held that we lacked jurisdiction to consider petitioners' income tax deficiency and related accuracy penalty.
We thought that these determinations, in a decision that had become final, led inexorably to the conclusion that any flowthrough income, loss, or deduction from the partnership,*46 as well as any loss claimed by Mr. Thompson on liquidation of his partnership interest, must be disallowed.
*158 The Court of Appeals reached a somewhat different conclusion. It noted petitioners' concession that our 2006 decision as to the penalties' applicability was res judicata.
*160 The Court of Appeals*50 found that we have jurisdiction to determine Mr. Thompson's outside basis in his partnership interest. We need not make such a determination, however, because the parties have stipulated the deficiency.
*161 Yet, in their opposition to respondent's motion for entry of decision, petitioners raise a new objection. Distilled, their arguments are: (1) TEFRA permits the IRS to employ deficiency procedures in assessing penalties relating to partnership items regardless of whether further partner-level determinations are required; (2) the notice of deficiency issued in this case gave this Court jurisdiction over the accuracy penalty determined in the notice; and (3) they are accordingly entitled to adjudication of any partner-level defenses in this prepayment forum.
These arguments do not undermine this aspect of our earlier holding, which the Court of Appeals left undisturbed,
The Court has considered all of petitioners' and respondent's contentions, arguments, requests, and statements. To the extent not discussed herein, we conclude that they are meritless, moot, or irrelevant.
To reflect the foregoing,
*. This opinion supplements our previously filed Opinion, Thompson v. Commissioner, 137 T.C. 220 (2011), rev'd and remanded, 729 F.3d 869 (8th Cir. 2013).↩
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended and in effect for the year at issue, 2001.↩
2. The Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit stated: "The issue before us on appeal is whether the Tax Court properly characterized RJT's 'sham, etc.' status as a 'partnership item' determination."
3. We had thought that to claim or find any tax basis in a disregarded "sham" partnership was an oxymoron. What petitioners actually had, when the dust cleared, was their cash which they had purported to have invested in the disregarded "sham" partnership and in which they already had a tax basis equal to its face value.↩
4. After the Court of Appeals issued its opinion, the Supreme Court decided another TEFRA case,
The Supreme Court answered both questions in the affirmative. The Court held that "TEFRA gives courts in partnership-level proceedings jurisdiction to determine the applicability of any penalty that could result from an adjustment to a partnership item, even if imposing the penalty would also require determining affected or non-partnership items such as outside basis."
As to whether partner-level adjustments of outside basis incident to a deficiency determination should also be merely computational,
In the sham partnership at issue here, the Court of Appeals concluded that such additional determinations were required, and we proceed in accordance with that mandate.↩
5. Though conditional, this stipulation suggests that the Court of Appeals' decision and our resulting exercise of jurisdiction will not alter the ultimate outcome for either party. As our previous Opinion in this case observes, we presume that respondent deems accurate the deficiency calculation in the stipulation. Respondent previously assessed, on September 23, 2008, tax of $4,634,243 and a penalty of $1,853,697.20 plus interest in reliance on our earlier TEFRA decision in the
6.