DocketNumber: Docket No. 9324-08
Citation Numbers: 143 T.C. 41, 2014 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 34, 143 T.C. No. 3
Judges: HALPERN
Filed Date: 8/11/2014
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
An appropriate order will be issued denying respondent's motion for partial summary judgment.
LLC1 contributed a successor member interest in a second LLC (LLC2) to University. R moves for partial summary judgment that (1) the actuarial tables under
*41 HALPERN,
The case is presently before us on respondent's motion for partial summary judgment*35 (motion). Respondent moves for partial summary adjudication in his favor that (1) the actuarial tables under Previously in this case we disposed by order of a motion by respondent for partial summary judgment RERI was formed as a Delaware limited liability company on March 4, 2002. It was dissolved on May 11, 2004. RERI is classified as a partnership for Federal income tax purposes. For 2003, RERI filed a Form 1065, U.S. Return of Partnership Income (return). RERI reported on the return as a charitable contribution its transfer to the Regents of the University of what RERI described on the return as "100% of the remainder estate in*37 the membership interest in RS Hawthorne Holdings, LLC" (Holdings). Holdings, RERI reported, "owns all of the membership interest of a ['single purpose, single member'] Delaware limited liability company". That Delaware LLC is RS Hawthorne, LLC (Hawthorne), which RERI described on the return as owning "the fee simple absolute in a parcel of land improved as a AT&T web hosting facility located at 2301 West 120th Street, Hawthorne, California" (Hawthorne property). The Hawthorne property had come to be owned by Hawthorne on February 6, 2002, pursuant to Hawthorne's execution of a real estate contract that Hawthorne had received from Red Sea Tech I, Inc. (Red Sea). Hawthorne purchased the Hawthorne property from InterGate LAII, LLC (Intergate), for $42,350,000. To fund that purchase, Hawthorne borrowed $43,671,739 from Branch Banking & Trust Co. (BB&T), signing a promissory note (promissory note or note) and securing its repayment obligation by, among other things, a deed of trust (mortgage) and an "Absolute Assignment of Rents and Lease". The promissory note called for payments in installments (including interest) over a period of 14 years and 3 months (February 15,*38 2002--May 15, 2016), with the final payment, due May 15, 2016, constituting a "balloon" payment of $11.8 million. AT&T occupied the Hawthorne property pursuant to a triple net lease between it and Intergate. That lease had commenced on December 1, 2000, and was for a term of 15 1/2 years, until May 31, 2016, with AT&T having three renewal options of 5 years each. Initially, Red Sea was the sole member of Holdings. On February 7, 2002, Red Sea created two temporal interests in its membership interest in Holdings (Holdings membership interest or, sometimes, Holdings)--a possessory term of years member interest (TOYS interest) and a future, successor member interest (SMI). The TOYS interest commenced in February 2002 and is to run almost 18 years, through December 31, 2020. The SMI becomes possessory on January 1, 2021, on termination of the TOYS interest. RJS Realty Corp. (RJS) is a Delaware corporation. On February 7, 2002, RJS purchased the SMI for $1,610,000. By the agreement of sale (assignment agreement), among other things, Red Sea agreed to prohibit Holdings or Hawthorne from encumbering the Hawthorne property without the consent of RJS. Red Sea*39 also agreed to prohibit the transfer of any interest in the Hawthorne property or the creation of any "lien or encumbrance" on the property that would "materially adversely affect" its value. The assignment agreement limits Red Sea's (and any successor in interest's) liability for breach of the agreement. An assignee's recourse for breach of the agreement is limited to the interest (the TOYS interest) retained by Red Sea. The assignment agreement provides that it "shall be interpreted and construed in a manner consistent with the common law of estates in property of the State of New York and the statutory scheme of future interests and estates in property of the State of New York that is set forth in the New York Estates, Powers and Trust Law as in effect on the date hereof". On March 25, 2002, RJS sold the SMI to RERI for $2,950,000, RERI paying $1,880,000 in cash and executing a nonrecourse promissory note for the balance. On August 27, 2003, RERI's principal investor, Stephen M. Ross, pledged that he would make a gift of $4 million (later *45 increased to $5 million) to the University for the benefit of its Department of Athletics (gift agreement). Under*40 the gift agreement, Mr. Ross pledged and agreed "to transfer, or to have transferred" the SMI to the University no later than December 31, 2003. Upon receiving the SMI, the University was to hold it at a nominal value of $1 and credit Mr. Ross' pledge in the amount of $1. The University agreed to hold the SMI for a minimum of two years, "after which the University shall sell" the SMI and credit Mr. Ross' account "to a value equal to the net proceeds received by the University" for the SMI. RERI's donation of the SMI to the University was completed on the same day as the gift agreement, August 27, 2003. Consistent with the gift agreement, the agreement embodying RERI's donation of the SMI to the University required the University to hold the SMI "for a period of two years". (We shall hereafter refer to the University's obligations--first, to hold the SMI for a minimum of two years and, then, to sell it--as the two-year hold-sell requirement.) In September 2003, RERI retained Howard C. Gelbtuch of Greenwich Realty Advisors to appraise a hypothetical remainder interest in the Hawthorne property. Mr. Gelbtuch concluded that the fair market value of "the*41 leased fee interest in the * * * [Hawthorne] property as of August 28, 2003, is US $55,000,000", and that the "investment value" of a hypothetical remainder interest in that property vesting on January 1, 2021, was $32,935,000. On or about December 23, 2005, after the expiration of the required two-year holding period, and after obtaining its own appraisal of the remainder interest in the Hawthorne*42 property as of July 20, 2005, which valued that interest at $6.5 million (on the basis of a "Reversion Value" of the Hawthorne property after 15 years), the University sold the SMI to HRK Real Estate Holdings, LLC (HRK), a Delaware LLC indirectly owned by petitioner and one of his associates, for $1,940,000.*43 Hawthorne property. Pursuant to In most cases, the willing buyer-willing seller standard is not applied directly to annuities, life estates, terms of years, remainders, reversions and similar partial interests in property. In general, those interests are valued by determining the fair market value of the underlying property and dividing the value among the several interests in the property on the basis of their present values. In pertinent part, (1) under tables prescribed by the Secretary, and (2) by using an interest rate (rounded to the nearest 2/10ths of 1 percent) equal to 120 percent of the Federal midterm rate in effect under section 1274(d)(1) for the month in which the valuation date falls. *49 If neither the (iii) Remainder and reversionary interests. A standard See also The wasting nature of depreciable and depletable real property is reflected in a special rule requiring that, in determining the value of a remainder interest in real property for purposes of Respondent argues that Mr. Gelbtuch improperly appraised a hypothetical remainder interest in the Hawthorne property rather than the SMI that RERI did, in fact, donate to the University. He argues that, assuming the *51 Petitioner defends Mr. Gelbtuch's application of the Petitioner, recognizing that In We also find significant Judge Cohen's admonition in her concurring opinion (joined by 8 of the other 9 Judges joining in the 10-Judge majority opinion), that "[w]here the property transferred is an interest in a single-member LLC * * * validly created and recognized under State law, the willing buyer cannot be expected to disregard that LLC." We were faced in Thus, we agree with respondent that, on the rationale of On the basis of the rationale of It is true that Red Sea did divide the Holdings membership interest into a present (TOYS) interest and a future (SMI) interest; it is also true that, applying the There is an unresolved issue of fact concerning whether the value of a hypothetical remainder interest in the Hawthorne property can stand proxy for the SMI. That issue involves the two-year hold-sell requirement imposed on the University with respect*60 to its possession of the SMI. Does that requirement cause the SMI to be a restricted beneficial interest for which a standard If we determine the fact issue adversely to petitioner, we would agree with respondent that Mr. Gelbtuch's application of the The SMI is a remainder interest in Holdings, and its fair market value is its present value determined by applying the Respondent's principal argument is that Additionally, respondent argues that, because of the two-year hold-sell requirement, the SMI is a restricted beneficial interest within the meaning of Petitioner argues that the SMI follows a term of years interest (i.e., the TOYS interest) and is therefore an ordinary remainder interest within the meaning of Lastly, petitioner disputes respondent's argument that the two-year hold-sell requirement renders the SMI a restricted beneficial interest to which the We may summarily dispose of petitioner's argument that the preservation and protection requirements found in Therefore, for respondent to prevail on his claim that the Respondent argues that, because Hawthorne may encumber*65 or sell the Hawthorne property, there is no assurance that the value of the Holdings membership interest will be preserved and protected until the holder of the SMI comes into possession of that interest. Respondent has not shown that either Red Sea, Holdings, or Hawthorne intends a sale of the Hawthorne property. Moreover, the property into possession of which the SMI holder will come is the Holdings membership interest, Respondent has not made his*68 case that the risk of Hawthorne's selling or encumbering the Hawthorne property jeopardizes the SMI holder's rights to future possession and enjoyment of the Holdings membership interest so as to preclude use of a standard The parties differ sharply as to whether the possibility that Hawthorne will be unable to make the $11.8 million balloon payment on the May 15, 2016, due date poses a sufficient risk of foreclosure and sale of the Hawthorne property to warrant a conclusion that the Holdings membership interest value will not be adequately preserved and protected for the benefit of the SMI. If there is sufficient risk of foreclosure, that would foreclose use of a standard remainder interest factor to determine the present value of the SMI. The record shows that the Hawthorne property is Hawthorne's only asset and that the AT&T lease is its only source of income. The promissory note calls for a final, $11.8 million balloon payment on May 15, 2016. By the end of May 2016 (the conclusion of the first term of the AT&T lease), Hawthorne should have received sufficient payments*70 under the AT&T lease to have made all installment payments called for by the note and to have accumulated a surplus (assuming no distributions) of approximately $5.7 million. That would leave $6.1 million to be raised to make the balloon payment. Petitioner views as remote the possibility of default on the balloon payment. Specifically, petitioner states: Petitioner submits that at the time of the donation it was expected that AT&T would exercise its option to renew the lease and thus the balloon payment paid. Defaulting on the final payment due on the loan was as remote as Hawthorne defaulting on the underlying mortgage. It can also be anticipated that at the time of the donation the balloon payment would be refinanced or restructured or the premises leased to another party if AT&T did not exercise its option. *62 In response to those arguments, respondent continues to maintain that "there is a possibility that the balloon payment would not get paid, thus resulting in foreclosure or acquisition of the Hawthorne Property", in which event, "the SMI holder would possess a worthless membership interest in * * * [Holdings]." Respondent further argues that there is no evidence that the loan would*71 be refinanced or even could be refinanced "due to the provisions petitioner relies upon to argue that encumbrances are not permitted", respondent's assumption apparently being that the parties would interpret such a replacement financing as the type of encumbrance that is prohibited by the Red Sea-RJS Assignment Agreement. The foregoing arguments by both parties are based entirely on speculation. Respondent, whose motion it is we are considering, has not convinced us that Hawthorne, as obligor on the promissory note, would not be able to raise the more than $6 million needed to make the $11.8 million balloon payment on May 15, 2016. Nor has respondent convinced us that the risk of refinancing the remaining debt presents anything other than a conventional commercial risk that has little effect on the safety of Holdings as a long-term investment. Moreover, given Hawthorne's expected payment of a substantial amount of principal (close to $32 million) before the due date of the balloon payment, what equity will Hawthorne have in the Hawthorne property, a portion of which might be recouped on a forced sale of the Hawthorne property to safeguard Holdings' (and the SMI's) value? Indeed, how*72 will the value of the SMI interest be affected by the fact that principal payments under the promissory note are to be paid from rental income that, but for the assignment of rents to BB&T, it would seem should be distributed to the TOYS interest holder?*63 that the lease payments will be insufficient (by more than $6 million) to enable Hawthorne to make that payment. And although, as petitioner argues, it was "expected" or "anticipated" at the time of RERI's gift of the SMI that there would be a refinancing, a lease extension, or a new lease, any one of which could have generated the funds needed to make the balloon payment, expectation and anticipation are not synonymous with certainty. Therefore, we find that the parties' dispute as to whether the risk of Hawthorne's defaulting on the $11.8 million balloon payment is the type of contingency that would jeopardize the value of Holdings and, thus, the value of the SMI, in contravention of Respondent summarizes his position with respect to the impact of the two-year hold-sell requirement as follows: As a result of the "hold-sell" restrictions imposed by the Gift Agreement and the * * * [Assignment Agreement], the successor member interest was a restricted beneficial interest for purposes of In rebuttal to respondent's arguments, petitioner cites our conclusion in Petitioner also relies upon two U.S. Courts of Appeals cases that hold that restrictions*75 on the marketability of an income stream constituting an interest in property are not the type of restriction that would render the Lastly, petitioner argues that the gift agreement embodying the sell requirement has no bearing on the issue because it did not affect the University's rights with respect to the property "as * * * [the University] would still own and control * * * [the SMI] regardless of whether * * * [it] adhered to the gift agreement." We find fault with both parties' analyses of the impact of the two-year hold-sell requirement. Our principal problem with respondent's argument is his apparent assumption that no restricted beneficial interest may be valued*76 using the Petitioner agrees that application of the Nor are we bound by the doctrine of stare decisis to follow our holding in We conclude that the impact of both the restriction on alienation (i.e., the two-year hold requirement) and the two-year sell requirement is a restriction that must be measured against the unrealistic and unreasonable fair market value *67 standard. It is true, as petitioner argues, that the latter requirement is found only in the gift agreement and not in the assignment agreement. But, as a signatory to both agreements, the University was bound by both, and it is quite possible to interpret the two-year hold-sell requirement in the gift agreement as, in effect, a condition of Mr. Ross' $5 million pledge to the University thereunder. Disputes under the gift agreement were to be governed by Michigan law, and the assignment agreement was to be construed in accordance with Delaware law. Neither party has addressed Mr. Ross' rights under Michigan and Delaware law in the event the University were to violate*80 the two-year hold-sell requirement. Thus, there remains a question of fact*81 Therefore, the impact *68 on the SMI's value of the two-year hold-sell restriction also presents issues of material fact. In In this case, sales of the SMI and an appraisal commissioned by the University (University appraisal) all indicate that the actual fair market value of the SMI, within a timeframe stretching from approximately 18 months before *69 RERI's August 27, 2003, gift of the SMI to the University to 2 years and 4 months thereafter, was substantially less than Mr. Gelbtuch's $32,935,000 valuation of the hypothetical remainder interest in the Hawthorne property using the The relevant sales (and valuation) of the SMI are as follows: (1) February 7, 2002: Red Sea's sale of the SMI to RJS for $1,610,000. (2) March 25, 2002: RJS' sale of the SMI to RERI for $2,950,000. (3) July 20, 2005: the University appraisal determining the value of a remainder interest in the Hawthorne property to be $6.5 million. (4) On or about December 23, 2005: the University's sale of the SMI to HRK for $1,940,000. (5) December 26,*84 2005: purported sale of the SMI by HRK to an unidentified purchaser for $3 million. All four of the foregoing sales were for amounts substantially below Mr. Gelbtuch's appraised value of a hypothetical remainder interest in the Hawthorne property, determined using the Neither party has directly addressed this issue of actual versus derived (per the In any event, the issue of whether the disparity between the SMI's value based upon the University appraisal and the sales of the SMI both before and after its contribution to the University, and its value based upon the Gelbtuch appraisal using the Because there remain genuine disputes as to material facts, we will deny the motion to the extent that respondent asks us to rule that the As noted (A) a description of the property appraised, (B) the fair market value of such property on the date of contribution and the specific basis for the valuation, (C) a statement that such appraisal was prepared for income tax purposes, (D) the qualifications of the qualified appraiser, (E) the signature and TIN of such appraiser, and (F) such additional information as the Secretary prescribes in such regulations. [ In response to that directive, the Secretary issued (A) A description of the property in sufficient detail for a person who is not generally familiar with the type of property to ascertain that the property that was appraised is the property that was (or will be) contributed; * * * * *73 (D) The terms of any agreement or understanding entered into (or expected to be entered into) by or on behalf of the donor or donee that relates to the use, sale, or other disposition of the property contributed, including, for example,*91 the terms of any agreement or understanding that-- (1) Restricts temporarily or permanently a donee's right to use or dispose of the donated property, (2) Reserves to, or confers upon, anyone (other than a donee organization or an organization participating with a donee organization in cooperative fundraising) any right to the income from the contributed property or to the possession of the property, including the right to vote donated securities, to acquire the property by purchase or otherwise, or to designate the person having such income, possession, or right to acquire, * * * * * * * (I) The appraised fair market value (within the meaning of (J) The method of valuation used to determine the fair market value, such as the income approach, the market-data approach, and the replacement-cost-less-depreciation approach; and (K) The specific basis for the valuation, such as specific comparable sales transactions or statistical sampling, including a justification for using sampling and an explanation of the sampling procedure employed. Under certain circumstances, "substantial compliance" with the requirements for a qualified*92 appraisal will be sufficient to consider an appraisal qualified within the meaning of Respondent argues that, because Mr. Gelbtuch appraised the wrong property, his appraisal "does not present a method of valuation of the property contributed * * * [and] also fails to contain a specific basis for a method of valuation for the actual property conveyed to the University" in violation of Respondent also argues that, by failing to mention the two-year hold-sell requirement, the Gelbtuch appraisal violates the requirement in Respondent also points to other perceived deficiencies in the Gelbtuch appraisal: its failure to take into account (1)*95 AT&T's right to "remove the improvements made to the Hawthorne property should it elect not to exercise the five year options" and (2) the "mortgage and depreciation on the Hawthorne property". Respondent apparently views those disclosure omissions as additional failures to disclose restrictions on the use or disposition of the property in violation of In addition, respondent points to the Gelbtuch appraisal's determination of the SMI's "investment value" rather than its fair market value as a violation of Lastly, respondent argues that the Gelbtuch appraisal is not a qualified appraisal because it grossly overvalues a hypothetical remainder*96 interest in the Hawthorne property. *76 In response to respondent's argument that the Gelbtuch appraisal fails to constitute a qualified appraisal because it values the wrong property interest, petitioner argues: "Regardless of whether Petitioner also argues that Mr. Gelbtuch's failure to mention the gift agreement containing the two-year hold-sell requirement does not warrant a conclusion that the Gelbtuch appraisal failed to substantially comply with the requirements for a qualified appraisal. He bases that argument on the fact that petitioner gave the gift agreement to the agent at the beginning of the audit and that respondent "had sufficient information to determine whether an audit was necessary as intended by the purpose of the regulations." Petitioner also repeats his argument, made in defending the application of the In response to respondent's argument that Mr. Gelbtuch's failure to mention either the mortgage or AT&T's right to remove improvements violated the requirement in Petitioner also disputes respondent's argument that the Gelbtuch appraisal is fatally flawed because it fails to compute the SMI's fair market value, but, instead computes the "investment value" of a remainder interest in the Hawthorne property. Petitioner points out that, in the case of a remainder interest in real property (in petitioner's view, the asset properly valued pursuant to the "check-the-box" regulations), pursuant to We agree with petitioner that both We find that Mr. Gelbtuch's appraisal of the hypothetical remainder interest in the Hawthorne property, rather than of the SMI, does not, in and of itself, prevent his appraisal from constituting a qualified appraisal under*102 The two-year hold-sell requirement is a restriction on the disposition of the SMI, not of the hypothetical remainder interest in the Hawthorne property. As such, it creates two potential problems for petitioner. First, it may mean that the We have determined The lease agreement between Intergate and AT&T provides that, upon the expiration or termination of this Lease, all improvements and additions to the Premises except * * * [cabling and wiring included within the scope of AT&T's work, its alterations from all interstitial/ceiling plenum areas, furniture, equipment and personal property, and back-up generators and associated equipment] shall be deemed property of Landlord and shall not be removed by Tenant from the Premises. Mr. Gelbtuch's failure to consider the mortgage on the Hawthorne property in his appraisal thereof also does not constitute an omission of "[t]he terms of * * * [an] agreement * * * entered into * * * by or on behalf of the donor or donee", as required by Similarly,*107 Mr. Gelbtuch's failure to discuss the potential impact of depreciation on the Hawthorne property is not an *82 omission covered by the foregoing regulation. Therefore, it too is not germane to the qualified appraisal issue.Mr. Gelbtuch's Finding of "Investment Value" Rather Than Fair Market Value In his appraisal, Mr. Gelbtuch does refer to the value he assigns to the hypothetical remainder interest in the Hawthorne property as its "investment value", for which he provides the following dictionary definition: "The specific value of an investment to a particular investor or class of investors based on individual investment requirements; distinguished from market value, which is impersonal and detached." As defined by Mr. Gelbtuch, the term "investment value" appears to be unrelated to the value that he actually derives for the hypothetical remainder interest in the Hawthorne property. We agree with petitioner that Mr. Gelbtuch's method for valuing a hypothetical remainder interest in the Hawthorne property was in accordance*108 with Respondent argues that Mr. Gelbtuch grossly overvalued the hypothetical remainder*109 interest in the Hawthorne property (apparently assuming, for the sake of argument, that it may be considered a proxy for the SMI) in the light of the much smaller amounts paid for the SMI in a series of sales thereof both shortly before and after RERI's donation of it to the University. Once again, respondent's argument is inapposite as it goes to the accuracy of Mr. Gelbtuch's appraisal, not to its status as a qualified appraisal under the DEFRA regulations. Respondent's arguments in support of his motion for partial summary judgment that the Gelbtuch appraisal fails to satisfy the DEFRA regulations' definition of (and, therefore, does not constitute) a qualified appraisal are either inapposite or involve unresolved disputes of material fact. Therefore, we will deny the motion to the extent respondent asks us to rule that petitioner failed to substantiate the value of the SMI with a qualified appraisal.
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for 2003, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. Respondent moved for partial summary adjudication in his favor that, if the valuation tables provided for in
3. The appraisal and professional fees were calculated as $84,000, for a total reported charitable contribution by the partnership of $33,019,000.↩
4. Mr. Gelbtuch was asked to and did, in fact, appraise a hypothetical remainder interest in the Hawthorne property, not the SMI.↩
5. As a result of petitioner's donation of the SMI to the University and other donations of similar successor member interests in other LLCs arranged by Mr. Ross, the University derived sale proceeds of $4,276,604, which it credited to Mr. Ross' $5 million pledge. Respondent alleges that, in at least some of those cases, the amounts realized by the University on its sales of the donated successor remainder member interests were far less than the appraisal thereof for which the donor, presumably, claimed a
6. The regulations cited and discussed herein are those that were in effect for 2003, the year in issue.↩
7. As discussed
8. Nevertheless, the value of a remainder interest in real property contributed to a qualified charitable organization may be greater for gift tax or estate tax purposes than it is for income tax purposes. Unlike
9. In support of that statement, respondent states: "
10. We note in passing that, in valuing the Hawthorne property, Mr. Gelbtuch assumed that it was unencumbered by any indebtedness. Our intuition is that any valuation of Holdings (a holding company) would reflect Hawthorne's net asset value (i.e., the value of its assets less the value of its liabilities), thus taking into account the liability represented by the promissory note and the mortgage. In that event, Mr. Gelbtuch's valuation of the Hawthorne property on the assumption that it was "free and clear of any and all liens or encumbrances" could not be considered a substitute for a valuation of Holdings, and, hence, his valuation of a hypothetical remainder interest in the Hawthorne property (applying the
11. The same would be true should we ultimately determine that Mr. Gelbtuch's appraisal cannot substitute for a valuation of the SMI because of his failure to take the mortgage into account.↩
12. Both petitioner and respondent refer to the possibility that the owner of the TOYS interest might encumber the Hawthorne property. In fact, it would appear that Hawthorne, the owner of the property, would be the only person who could encumber the property. That is the occurrence actually contemplated (and prohibited without RJS' consent) by the parties to the assignment agreement.↩
13. We note in passing that, in discussing the limitation-on-liability provision of the assignment agreement, which respondent claims jeopardizes the SMI holder's future interest in the Holdings membership interest, respondent may have confused the TOYS interest and the SMI. That provision (paragraph C of the covenants portion of the assignment agreement) provides that, in the event of an assignor's (Red Sea's or one of its successor's) breach of the agreement, the assignee's (RJS' or one of its successor's, e.g., RERI's or the University's) recourse is limited to the assignor's "Retained Interest" (i.e., the TOYS interest) in Holdings. Respondent's claim is that the limitation-on-liability provision "only permits the successor member interest holder to receive, as damages, the very interest promised", i.e., the SMI. That is not the case. The SMI holder could receive as damages all of the TOYS interest, which, when united with the SMI, represents complete ownership of Holdings.
14. In response to respondent's prior motion for partial summary judgment, A life tenant is under no obligation to pay the principal of a mortgage encumbering the property; this must be paid by the remainderman. If the life tenant does pay it, he may recover such payment from the remainderman. [9] [FN9]
15. In so holding, the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit followed the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in
16.
17. In that regard, we note that, before the University's sale of the SMI to HRK for $1,940,000, Mr. Ross had threatened to treat his pledge as offset by the full amount of HRK's offer of that amount if the University were to reject it and, later, sell the SMI for less.↩
18. Even if the University's violation of the two-year hold-sell requirement would have had adverse economic consequences to the University, it is not clear that that violation would have had any impact on the actual value of the SMI (which is the relevant inquiry herein), as the violation would have been irrelevant to the purchaser of the SMI from the University. Conversely, if the University felt bound to abide by the requirement (as, apparently, it did), respondent argues that the "consequence" of the two-year hold-sell restriction "dictated that the University would never become the owner of the underlying Hawthorne Property or enjoy the benefits and burdens of * * * [owning it]." But respondent furnishes no evidence that that fact would have adversely affected the SMI's value. Moreover, it is arguable that the two-year hold restriction did not adversely affect value because, at the time of sale, the purchaser from the University would have been two years closer to possession than was the University when it acquired the SMI, a fact that might have enhanced its value; and the two-year sell restriction would not have been a factor in the negotiations between the University and any prospective purchaser because the latter would not have been restricted by it.
19. With regard to the presence of significant market fluctuations, we note that Mr. Gelbtuch made a second appraisal of the Hawthorne property and a hypothetical remainder interest therein as of December 26, 2006, in which he concluded that the fair market value of the property was $64,185,000 and that of the hypothetical remainder interest (per the
20. RERI's contribution of the SMI to the University resulted in a claimed deduction far in excess of RERI's investment therein. That contribution was followed by the University's sale of the SMI to HRK and HRK's resale of it, which was followed, ultimately, by the last purchaser's contribution of the SMI to another charitable organization, again allegedly resulting in a large deduction in excess of either HRK's or the donor's investment. That chain of events suggests the presence of a scheme to generate large deductions, through application of the
21. The DEFRA regulations govern this case. Congress largely codified those regulations in 2004 by enacting
22. See also
23. Petitioner attempts to further distinguish
24. At the conclusion of his response to the motion, petitioner concedes that, if we find
25. Our conclusion in that regard is consistent with our determination herein that an appraisal of the "wrong" property might not be fatal to the appraisal's status as a qualified appraisal if the "wrong" property is shown to have (or potentially have) a value no different from that of the donated property.↩
26. Respondent does not argue nor do we find that a failure to discuss depreciation constitutes a failure to discuss "the physical condition of the property", in violation of
27. Mr. Gelbtuch did not take into account depreciation in valuing the hypothetical remainder in the Hawthorne property, which, like his failure to consider the mortgage, goes to the accuracy of his appraisal.↩
28. a What's in a name? that which we call a rose By any other name would smell as sweet;↩
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