DocketNumber: Docket No. 38295-86
Filed Date: 9/25/1989
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
*518
MEMORANDUM OPINION
WHITAKER,
In its motions, petitioner argues "that the Court cannot reject [petitioner's] argument that [it] had a creditor's claim superior to a shareholder's claim without deciding the 'alter-ego' or 'single-entity' issue. * * * [Petitioner] should be given the opportunity to show the Court that [it] had a creditor claim against Grayson's assets that was satisfied in accordance with the requirements of the Texas Business Corporation Act." This argument is in response to our holding that we need not consider whether Lee Optical, Inc. (Lee Optical) was Grayson's alter ego since the distribution was made to petitioner in its capacity as a shareholder not a creditor.
In our*520 prior opinion we found as a fact, and petitioner does not deny, that upon Grayson's liquidation its assets were distributed equally to its three shareholders, Theodore Shanbaum (Shanbaum), Ellis Carp (Carp) and petitioner. In support of its claim that it received those assets in satisfaction of Lee Optical's debt, petitioner argues that Grayson was the alter ego of Lee Optical, which was indebted to petitioner at the time of Grayson's liquidation. Petitioner cites section 6.04 of the Texas Business Corporation Act which requires a dissolving corporation to pay the claims of its creditors before making distributions to shareholders. Petitioner argues that "it follows that if [petitioner] can show that it had a creditor's claim against Grayson's assets, the transfer, to the extent of the claim, must be treated as a transfer to the plan in its capacity as a creditor, rather than as a shareholder." We disagree.
Petitioner's argument with respect to section 6.04 assumes that the statute was complied with. However, the fact that a corporation's debts are required to be paid upon its liquidation does not mean that they are actually paid. As we found in our prior opinion, equal distributions*521 were made to all three of Grayson's shareholders. However, and assuming arguendo that Grayson and Lee Optical were alter egos, the satisfaction by Grayson of Lee Optical's debt would give rise to an entirely different distribution scheme. Upon Grayson's liquidation, a total of $ 7,642,193.76 in cash and property was available for distribution. Had the purported debt of $ 2,437,244.27 been paid to petitioner from these assets, there would have been $ 5,204,949.49 ($ 1,734,983.16 each) remaining to be distributed to the three shareholders in their capacity as such. Therefore, a proper distribution scheme, taking into account the debt purportedly owed to petitioner, would have allocated $ 4,172,227.43 to petitioner, and $ 1,734,983.16 each to Shanbaum and Carp.
The circumstances of the distribution are not the only grounds upon which petitioner's argument must be rejected. As we found in our prior opinion, Grayson adopted its plan of complete liquidation on June 30, 1980, and its assets were distributed between July 21, 1980, and*523 June 3, 1981. However, when Lee Optical filed its petition for reorganization pursuant to Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code,
In accordance with the foregoing,
1. Unless otherwise noted, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended and in effect for the years in issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩