DocketNumber: Tax Ct. Dkt. No. 19575-91. Docket Nos. 22780-91, 29878-91, 621-92, 623-92, 3968-92, 4432-92, 13014-92, 15641-92, 12062-94
Citation Numbers: 111 T.C. 198, 1998 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 42, 111 T.C. No. 7
Judges: DAWSON
Filed Date: 8/24/1998
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
Pursuant to
*198 DAWSON, JUDGE: These cases were assigned to Special Trial Judge Carleton D. Powell pursuant to the provisions of section 7443A(b)(4) and Rules 180, 181, and 183. *199 agrees with and adopts the opinion of the Special Trial Judge, which is set forth below.
OPINION OF THE SPECIAL TRIAL JUDGE
POWELL, SPECIAL TRIAL JUDGE: These consolidated cases are before the Court on participating partners' (participants) motions pursuant to
The relevant facts are not in dispute and may be summarized as follows. The partnerships involved in these cases were formed to purchase and exploit the rights to certain films. *200 Partnership Petition Partnership Docket No. Taxable Years FPAA Date Date Greenberg #4/ Breathless 19575-91 1983-87 June 3, 1991 Aug. 30, 1991 Greenerg #12/ Lone Wolf 22780-91 1983-86 July 8, 1991 Oct. 7, 1991 Easy Money Associates 29878-91 1983-86 Oct. 7, 1991 Dec. 20, 1991 Cinema '84 621-92 1984-89 Oct. 15, 1991 Jan. 8, 1992 First Blood Associates 623-92 1983-87 Oct. 21, 1991 Jan. 8, 1992 Under Fire Associates 3968-92 1983-86 Dec. 9, 1991 Feb. 24, 1992 Cinema '85 4432-92 1985-89 Sec. 2, 1991 Feb. 28, 1992 First Blood Associates 13014-92 1988 Mar. 24, 1992 June 12, 1992 First Blood Associates 15641-92 1989 Apr. 20, 1992 July 10, 1992 First Blood Associates 12062-94 1990 Mar. 14, 1994 July 11, 1994
It is undisputed that the petitions were timely filed and the requests for consistent settlement terms were timely made in these cases. With the exception of docket No. 12062-94, at the time the petitions were filed in these cases, each partnership's principal place of business was located at Greenwich, Connecticut. At the time the petition was filed in docket No. 12062-94, that partnership was in dissolution; the partnership's principal place of business during its winddown period was located in New York, New York.
Each of the settlement agreements with which participants seek consistent settlement was entered into and effective on February 8, 1995 (the original settlement agreement). Each original settlement agreement is contained on a Closing Agreement on Final Determination Covering Specific Matters (Form 906), and the essential provisions (excluding the names of each partnership, the names of the settling partners, the partnership taxable years involved, and the actual dollar amounts contributed to each partnership) are identical.
Among the key provisions of the various original settlement agreements are the following:
1. No adjustment to the partnership items shall be made for the taxable years in issue for purposes of this settlement.
2. The taxpayers are entitled to claim their distributive share of the partnership losses for the years in issue only to the extent they are at risk under
3. The taxpayers amount at risk for the years in issue is their capital contribution to the partnership.
* * * * * * *
6. The taxpayers are not at risk under
Pursuant to
Partnership items include each partner's proportionate share of the partnership's aggregate items of income, gain, loss, deduction, or credit.
A nonpartnership item is "an item which is (or is treated as) not a partnership item."
TEFRA -- CONSISTENT SETTLEMENT
The present dispute involves
Other partners have right to enter into consistent agreements. -- If the Secretary enters into a settlement agreement with any partner with respect to partnership items for any partnership taxable year, the Secretary shall offer to any other partner who so requests settlement terms for the partnership taxable year which are consistent with those contained in such settlement agreement. * * *
*203 In construing
(b) Requirements for consistent settlements. "Consistent" settlement terms are those based on the same determinations with respect to partnership items. SETTLEMENTS WITH RESPECT TO PARTNERSHIP ITEMS SHALL BE SELF-CONTAINED; THUS, A CONCESSION BY ONE PARTY WITH RESPECT TO A PARTNERSHIP ITEM MAY NOT BE BASED UPON A CONCESSION BY THE OTHER PARTY WITH RESPECT TO A NONPARTNERSHIP ITEM. SETTLEMENTS SHALL BE COMPREHENSIVE, THAT IS, A SETTLEMENT MAY NOT BE LIMITED TO SELECTED ITEMS. The requirement for consistent settlement terms applies only if --
(1) The items were partnership items for the partner entering into the original settlement immediately before the original settlement, and
(2) The items are partnership items for the partner requesting the consistent settlement at the time the partner files the request. Emphasis supplied.
Participants interpret "settlements" in the regulation as referring only to the consistent settlement terms of partnership items. They maintain that paragraph one of the original settlement agreement constitutes a "settlement agreement * * * with respect to partnership items" for purposes of the consistent settlement provisions and request settlement in accord with paragraph one. This interpretation of
Participants argue in the alternative that the regulation is invalid insofar as it adds restrictions that are inconsistent with
If * * * the court determines Congress has not directly addressed the precise question at issue, the court does not simply impose its own construction on the statute, as would be necessary in the absence of an administrative interpretation. Rather, if the statute is silent or ambiguous with respect to the specific issue, the question for the court is whether the agency's answer is based on a permissible construction of the statute. Fn. refs. omitted.
We have already concluded that the statute is silent as to the scope of consistent settlements. Under the Chevron analysis, the question remains whether the requirements in
need not conclude that the agency construction was the only one it permissibly could have adopted to uphold the construction, or even the reading the court would have reached if the question initially had arisen in a judicial proceeding.
In promulgating regulations, the Secretary has the discretion to formulate rules not found in the statute: "supplementation of a statute is a necessary and proper part of the Secretary's role in the administration of our tax laws."
The instant cases afford a prime example of the mischief that the temporary regulation aims to curtail. If, as participants argue, paragraph one of the original settlement agreements *207 may be the subject of a consistent settlement agreement, then they are entitled to receive consistent treatment only with respect to this provision through their request under
Participants attempt to place these cases within the realm of those decisions in which courts have invalidated Treasury regulations. Although it is well settled that respondent "may not usurp the authority of Congress by adding restrictions to a statute which are not there", Partnership/Docket No. Participants Greenberg Brothers Partnership #4, John M. Kash a.k.a. Breathless Associates -- Gerlad N. and Margie L. Cooper 19575-91 Helen (Maude) L. Shepler Jack and Shirlee Pines James D. and Mary Kay Hudson Dale C. and Sarah L. Hudson Margaret A. Hudson Dennis C. and Kellie S. Hudson John A. and Maria A. Barnett Greenberg Brothers Partnership Wilderness Village Properties #12, a.k.a. Lone Wolf McQuade Lyman F. Bush Associates -- 22780-91 Robert G. Wekell Murray D. and Bonnie B. Nelson Warren A. Secord Richard K. Baker Edwin A., Jr. and Karin M. Locke Dick E. and Janet R. Jones Shirley M. and Lois B. Wekell Herman M. and Gloria R. Nirschl Stephen O. and Lynn M. Roberts William H. Bratton James A. and Patricia A. Grever Robert A. Mandich William M. and Rose Marie Wagner Douglas C. and Robin T. Larson William Edward Duncan Easy Money Associates -- 29878-91 Albert Louis Wade, Jr. David D. & Joyce N. Fagerland Henry W. and Patricia D. Bates Charles W. and Naomi J. Yett George R. Blitch Lynn F. Cassidy Ronald Braunschweig Cinema '84 -- 621-92 Friar Tuck Partners Lyman F. Bush C. William and Charlotte I. Clay Adwin A., Jr. and Karin M. Locke Dick E. and Janet R. Jones Mohan S. and Kalyani Phanse Jack and Shirley Pines John M. and Mary D. Kash Henry J. and Shirlene Romain Tommy S. Shelton Raymond and Develya Cox Jeffrey Dubnow Stephanie Lite Francis Dan and Mary Day Whitehurst James S. Greenwood Kenneth G. and Patricia Gamble Jerry R. and Marlynne Olson Roger A. and Rebecca M. Myklebust Richard J. and Patricia Paicco Karl E. Epstein Charles and Jane Osborn First Blood Associates -- 623-92, Joe A. Clements 13014-92, 15641-92, and 12062-94 Joseph E. and Bernice L. Goodwin Don R. and Patsy A. Slaughter Charles W. and Collette L. Russell Vincent L. and Marilyn L. Mogas Hurdle H., Jr. and Frances J. Lea William L. Green Thomas L. and Lynda L. Arnold Lance H. and Franzel S. Bondy * David D. and Betty A. Maytag Glenna Goodacre Louis F., Jr. and Cynthia B. Wood William H. Bratton Charles S. and Julie Filleman Richard K. Baker Ronald and Elaine Altman Barry J. MacNeal Michael J. and Jo Ann Scarfia Stephen O. and Lynn M. Roberts Thomas M. Nixon Under Fire Associates -- 3968-92 Louis D. Cross C. William and Charlotte I. Clay Charles W. and Collette L. Russell Howard W. and Carole L. Neuner Cinema '85 -- 4432-92 Jack P. McCarthy Roger A. and Rebecca M. Myklebust Thomas L. and Miriam Holt Paul E. and Kathleen A. Weaver Wallace and Maria Steinberg William A. Newman Karl E. Epstein Lawrence C. Board * Only as to the Motion for Entry of Order to Compel Respondent to Extend Offers of Consistent Settlement filed in each of the First Blood Associates cases.
1. Cases of the following petitioners are consolidated herewith: Greenberg Brothers Partnership #12, a.k.a Lone Wolf McQuade Associates, Richard M. Greenberg, Tax Matters Partner, docket No. 22780-91; Easy Money Associates, Richard M. Greenberg, Tax Matters Partner, docket No. 29878-91; Cinema '84, Richard M. Greenberg, Tax Matters Partner, docket No. 621-92; First Blood Associates, Richard M. Greenberg, Tax Matters Partner, docket No. 623-92; Under Fire Associates, Richard M. Greenberg, Tax Matters Partner, docket No. 3968-92; Cinema '85, Richard M. Greenberg, Tax Matters Partner, docket No. 4432-92; First Blood Associates, Richard M. Greenberg, Tax Matters Partner, docket No. 13014-92; First Blood Associates, Richard M. Greenberg, Tax Matters Partner, docket No. 15641-92; First Blood Associates, Eugene C. Lipsky, A Partner Other Than the Tax Matters Partner, docket No. 12062-94.↩
2. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the years in issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
3. A list of the participants is attached to this opinion in an Appendix.↩
4. On the partnerships' respective returns for the years in issue, the partnerships claimed loss deductions based upon the alleged purchase of various first-run motion pictures. The films represent a roster of the famous and forgotten from 1980's cinema. The partnerships and their underlying films include, inter alia, the following: Greenberg Brothers Partnership #4, a.k.a. Breathless Associates (the 1983 remake of "Breathless" starring Richard Gere); Greenberg Partnership #12, a.k.a. Lone Wolf McQuade Associates ("Lone Wolf McQuade" starring Chuck Norris); Easy Money Associates (Rodney Dangerfield and Joe Pesci starring in "Easy Money"); Cinema '84 (James Cameron directing Arnold Schwarzenegger in "The Terminator", horror genre entries "The Howling II" and "Return of the Living Dead"); First Blood Associates ("First Blood" the initial entry in Sylvester Stallone's "Rambo" series); Under Fire Associates (Nick Nolte and Gene Hackman starring in "Under Fire"); and Cinema '85 ("Salvador" directed by Oliver Stone and starring James Woods and James Belushi and "At Close Range" starring Sean Penn and Christopher Walken).↩
5. As we understand, at least until these cases were submitted, respondent was still offering the settlement to partners who were willing to accept all of the settlement terms.↩
6. There are two types of affected items: (1) Those requiring factual determinations to be made at the partner level, and (2) a computational adjustment made to record the change in a partner's tax liability resulting from the proper treatment of partnership items.
7. For example, paragraph six of the original settlement agreement refers to the suspension of losses under
8. No court has yet ruled upon the effect of
9. Even where the statutory language appears to be clear we are not precluded from consulting legislative history.
10. The conference report simply notes in passing: "The Secretary must offer to any partner who so requests settlement terms that are consistent with the settlement with any other partner." H. Conf. Rept. 97-760, at 602.(1982),
11.
12. As a general proposition, temporary regulations are accorded the same weight as final regulations.
13. Participants' opening brief regarding the consistent settlement issues states as follows: "
14. A mechanism exists by which a settlement agreement may be effected so as to comply with the requirements of the temporary regulation. The Court takes notice of the fact that respondent has utilized Form 870-L(AD) (Settlement Agreement for Partnership Adjustments and Affected Items) to settle adjustments with individual partners. The form contains two separate and distinct parts: Part one is used to settle partnership items, while part two is used to settle nonpartnership and affected items. See, e.g.,
15. See, e.g.,
16. Participants argue that respondent provided them with the necessary information regarding each of the original settlement agreements, fully aware that participants sought the information for the purpose of making requests for offers of consistent settlement terms. Therefore, participants suggest that respondent should be estopped from now claiming that the original settlement agreements are not subject to requests for consistent settlement terms.
Equitable estoppel is a judicial doctrine that precludes a party from denying that party's own acts or representations which induced another to act to his or her detriment.
A key element required for an estoppel is reasonable reliance on the acts or statements of the one against whom estoppel is claimed.
United States v. American Trucking Associations , 60 S. Ct. 1059 ( 1940 )
Burlington Northern Railroad v. Oklahoma Tax Commission , 107 S. Ct. 1855 ( 1987 )
Hachette Usa, Inc., as Successor to Hachette Publications, ... , 87 F.3d 43 ( 1996 )
United States v. Ron Pair Enterprises, Inc. , 109 S. Ct. 1026 ( 1989 )
Atlantic Mutual Insurance v. Commissioner , 118 S. Ct. 1413 ( 1998 )
Chevron U. S. A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, ... , 104 S. Ct. 2778 ( 1984 )
The Ann Jackson Family Foundation v. Commissioner Internal ... , 15 F.3d 917 ( 1994 )
State of Washington v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 692 F.2d 128 ( 1982 )
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Morton v. Ruiz , 94 S. Ct. 1055 ( 1974 )