DocketNumber: Docket No. 41978-84
Judges: PANUTHOS
Filed Date: 10/17/1994
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
*523 An order will be issued denying petitioner's motion.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
PANUTHOS,
In four consolidated test cases,
In 1980 and 1981, petitioner was an investor in the FTI Arbitrage and Carry Program. As part of the program, petitioner participated in what was known as the Merit Securities project. The project involved purchases and sales of substantially offsetting options to purchase ("call" options) Treasury Bills (T-Bills) and options to sell ("put" options) T-Bills to establish what is called a "spread" position. *525 *526 On November 20, 1980, FTI purchased a spread for petitioner's account, consisting of a purchase and sale of put options at two strike prices *527 in 1980. After the transaction, petitioner still held positions in options at six strike prices as part of trade No. 73.
All of the remaining positions in trade No. 73 and all of the positions from trade No. 80 were closed in 1981 on the expiration dates. In 1981, petitioner recognized gains from disposal of the trade No. 73 positions and recognized both gains and losses from disposal of the trade No. 80 positions. In all, the trades resulted in a net loss of $ 12,865 in petitioner's account for 1980 and 1981.
In
We also held the trades to be economic shams, finding that from an objective standpoint the trades were not likely to produce economic benefits aside from tax benefits.
After the opinions in
In October 1991, David L. Click, an attorney with the Internal Revenue Service, Office of Chief Counsel, was assigned to work on the Merit Securities project for the purpose of settling all outstanding cases consistent with this Court's opinions in
Sometime in the spring of 1992, Mr. Click and counsel for petitioner, Irwin S. Meyer, engaged in discussions concerning discounting petitioner's 1981 gains, but petitioner did not submit a copy of the 1981 returns and *530 no further meaningful communication took place until the fall of that year. The Service's records indicate that the 1981 (Mr. Lamborn's gain year) year is closed. Please forward a copy of the original 1981 tax return and an amended return reflecting the reversal of the gain. We will discount any refund into the open 1980 year. In the event a discount is necessary, please do not sign the enclosed decision document.
*531 In response to the October 19, 1992, letter, Mr. Meyer telephoned Mr. Click on November 6, 1992, to propose that the 1981 gains attributable to the disallowed 1980 losses be netted directly against the 1980 losses in determining petitioner's 1980 tax liability. Mr. Click rejected Mr. Meyer's proposal and indicated that acceptable methods for "netting" the gains and losses were to either (1) discount any calculated 1981 overpayment back to 1980 and net that against the 1980 deficiency or (2) allow the 1980 deficiency, in its entirety, to bear interest until April 15, 1982, before netting it against any 1981 overpayment for purposes of further interest calculations. *532 Mr. Meyer then suggested that, because of the excessive burden involved in determining which 1981 gains were related to the 1980 losses, the parties apply a formula using the ratio that the 1980 and 1981 losses bore to the 1981 gains. *533 reduced by $ 207,064 from the original 1981 return, resulting from the elimination of the 1981 gains related to the 1980 losses. In total, the amended return reflects a refund of $ 64,985 for 1981, which when discounted back to 1980, based on prevailing interest rates, amounts to $ 58,023. Mr. Lazaroff's calculations then applied that amount to reduce the 1980 deficiency to $ 5,515. The letter closed by stating the following: The enclosed documents should provide sufficient information to verify our computations and we, therefore, ask that you prepare stipulation and decision documents on that basis. Should you have any further questions regarding this matter, please do not hesitate to contact us.
Almost one year later, on December 9, 1993, Mr. Baker sent to Mr. Meyer a proposed decision document, along with supporting computations, which reflects a deficiency in petitioner's 1980 Federal income tax in the amount of $ 53,797 plus additions to tax. The reduction from the deficiency indicated in the October 19, 1992, letter was due primarily to a capital loss carryover from 1977, which respondent verified from the documents enclosed with the December 16, 1992, letter*534 sent by petitioner. Unlike petitioner, however, respondent did not carry any refund due for 1981 back to 1980 because, according to respondent's calculations, the net effect of reversing the 1981 Merit T-Bill options gains and losses resulted in a deficiency for 1981, not an overpayment. Respondent's calculations differ from petitioner's in that respondent reversed the tax effect of trade No. 80, which was closed entirely in 1981, as well as trade No. 73, which was closed in 1980 and 1981, whereas petitioner only reversed the tax effects of trade No. 73.
Subsequent discussions proved fruitless, with respondent insisting that the tax effects of trade No. 80 be reversed, and petitioner arguing that respondent's position was contrary to the offer set forth by Mr. Click on October 19, 1992, and November 6, 1992, and to other settlements reached with other investors. On May 2, 1994, petitioner filed the instant motion.
Petitioner contends that the October 19, 1992, letter and November 6, 1992, telephone conversation constituted a settlement offer made by respondent to petitioner, and petitioner accepted the offer in the December 16, 1992, letter. According to petitioner, *535 the terms of the agreement are the following:
1. The deficiency due for 1980 is $ 53,797 before the application of the refund due for 1981.
2. Petitioner is subject to an addition to tax under
3. Petitioner is subject to an addition to tax under
4. Petitioner is subject to additional interest under section 6621(c). *536 general agreement outlined by petitioner seems to comport with the positions taken by both parties, but it does not describe a method for calculating the 1981 gains to be eliminated. Therein lies the problem. The different methods of calculating the 1981 tax liability, when carried back to 1980, result in widely varying deficiencies for 1980 -- $ 5,515 according to petitioner's calculations and $ 53,797 according to respondent's calculations. The issue for us to decide is whether the parties agreed on a method to calculate the 1981 tax liability.
It is not necessary that the parties execute a closing agreement under section 7121 in order to settle a case pending before this Court, but, rather, a settlement agreement may be reached through offer and acceptance made by letter, or even in the absence of a writing.
An objective manifestation of mutual assent to essential terms is a prerequisite to the formation of a contract.
On October 19, 1992, respondent made an offer to petitioner to settle the case. The offer did not reverse petitioner's 1981 gains from trading in the Merit T-Bill program, *538 and invited petitioner to accept by signing and returning the enclosed settlement documents. Petitioner did not accept this offer.
The second paragraph of the October 19, 1992, letter advised petitioner to refrain from signing the settlement documents, if he did not agree with the amounts, and forward a copy of the original 1981 Federal income tax return and a 1981 amended return reflecting the manner by which petitioner proposed the gain be reversed. The basis of the claimed offer is the statement in the letter that respondent "will discount any refund into the open 1980 year", taken in conjunction with respondent's previous position that the 1981 gains related to the disallowed 1980 losses may be reversed. Petitioner claims to have accepted the offer by enclosing the 1981 returns with the December 16, 1992, letter. Although the claimed offer contains no calculations, petitioner suggests that such general offers have resulted in agreements that have been upheld in other cases.
We do not agree with petitioner. Mr. Click, in the October 19, 1992, letter, intended to bind respondent only according to the specific terms stated in the enclosed settlement agreement. The statement*539 in the second paragraph that respondent "will discount any refund", unlike the first paragraph, does not specifically set forth a deficiency amount or additions to tax, nor does it suggest a precise method of calculation of "discounting any refund." As such, the statement, alone, is too vague and incomplete to be considered an offer. It does not suggest that petitioner had the ability to close the deal.
The statement contained in the second paragraph of the October 19, 1992, letter did not evidence that petitioner could close the deal by acceptance. Furthermore, the statement left open the possibility for widely divergent deficiency calculations.
Petitioner also claims that statements made by Mr. Click during the November 6, 1992, telephone conversation, in conjunction with the letter, constitute *541 respondent's offer -- the letter stating that respondent would give effect to the 1981 gains and the telephone conversation discussing the method by which those gains would be calculated. In so arguing, petitioner ignores the fact that, during the telephone conversation, Mr. Meyer made the suggestions as to calculating the 1981 gains.
We believe the telephone conversation only supports our conclusion that Mr. Click did not intend to bind respondent. Mr. Meyer made the proposal during the telephone conversation and, thus, became the offeror, leaving it to Mr. Click to accept, and he did not. In fact, in response to a suggestion as to the manner by which to determine the 1981 gains that were attributable to the 1980 losses, Mr. Click stated, according to Mr. Meyer, that "such an approach sounded reasonable but he would have to review the calculations [of the 1981 gains to be reversed according to the proposed ratio]
It is important to emphasize that Mr. Click withheld consent as to the "concept" of petitioner's proposal. Petitioner argues that Mr. Click's entertainment of the proposal suggests that Mr. Click was prepared to enter into an agreement that only discounted the 1981 gains that were related to the 1981 losses. This may or may not have been the case, but Mr. Click at no time expressed the intent to bind respondent.
Mr. Baker's position of reversing not only the 1981 gains related to the 1980 losses but also the 1981 gains and losses from trade No. 80 may differ from positions that might have been adopted by Mr. Click, or by other Office of Chief Counsel attorneys in this case, or from the terms of other FTI/Merit settlements, but that is not relevant in determining whether the parties reached an agreement in this case. The only issue that concerns us is whether Mr. Click bound respondent to an agreement, and we find that he did not. Accordingly, petitioner's motion is denied.
1. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the year in issue, unless otherwise indicated. All Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. To be consistent with our opinion in
3. Each leg of the spread had identical expiration dates, and each dealt with identical T-Bills. In each spread, the T-Bills had identical principal amounts and identical maturity dates.
4. The "strike" price is the price at which the T-Bill would be sold upon exercise of the option.↩
5. Respondent had made two previous offers by letters dated June 5, 1991, and Dec. 23, 1991, to settle the case in accordance with the
6. In Mr. Meyer's affidavit, submitted with petitioner's motion, Mr. Meyer does not state that Mr. Click proposed any method for determining the 1981 gains that respondent would eliminate in calculating any overpayment in 1981 to net against the deficiency in 1980.↩
7. Mr. Meyer was not aware of the existence of, and he and Mr. Click did not discuss, a detailed and agreed upon analysis of the Merit transactions that reflected which 1981 gains were attributable to the 1980 loss transactions.↩
8. The notice of deficiency does not contain a determination of additional interest under sec. 6621(c). In his reply to respondent's objection to the instant motion, petitioner stated that respondent has not asserted additional interest under sec. 6621(c) in any pleadings and that sec. 6621(c) is not a part of the case. Petitioner concedes, however, that the settlement agreement that he seeks to enforce contains a provision concerning liability under sec. 6621(c) to which he is subject should the agreement be enforced.↩
9. Petitioner seemed unsure of whether additional interest under sec. 6621(c) was included in the offer.↩