DocketNumber: Docket No. 12144-11L.
Citation Numbers: 104 T.C.M. 165, 2012 WL 3193934, 2012 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 227, 2012 T.C. Memo. 228
Judges: WELLS
Filed Date: 8/7/2012
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
An appropriate order will be issued.
WELLS,
The facts set forth below are based upon examination of the pleadings, moving papers, responses, and attachments, and they are not in dispute. Petitioners resided in California at the time they filed their petition.
During 2003, petitioners' financial adviser, Joe Ramos of Private Consulting Group, provided them with information about Derivium Capital, LLC (Derivium), a South *228 Carolina entity owned and controlled by Charles Cathcart and Yuri Debevc. Derivium*229 As explained in Derivium's marketing materials, the 90% Stock Loan permitted *230 investors to receive cash in the amount of 90% of the value of any stock the investors transferred to Derivium. Derivium would then "establish hedging transactions to protect the value" of the stock. The principal and interest on the 90% Stock Loan would not be due until maturity, after a term of at least three years. Derivium characterized the 90% Stock Loan as a nonrecourse loan and claimed that it offered investors the opportunity to generate liquidity without triggering a taxable event and to hedge against a market downturn while retaining the benefits of any market gains.
On August 5, 2003, petitioners signed a Master Loan Agreement and blank schedule A-1 with WITCO, Ltd. (WITCO), an entity that Derivium told petitioners was a foreign lender. WITCO was owned and controlled by Mr. Cathcart and Mr. Debevc. The Master Loan Agreement stated: The Client understands that by transferring custody of the Collateral to WITCO as agent for the Lender under terms of this Agreement and Schedule(s) A, the Client grants to the Lender and its agent, WITCO, the right and power, without the requirement of notice to or consent of the Client, to assign, transfer, pledge, repledge, hypothecate, rehypothecate, lend, encumber, short sell, and/or sell outright some or all of the Collateral during the Loan Term (as defined in Schedule(s) A). * * * * * * * * * * WITCO and the Lender unconditionally agree to return to the Client, at the end of the Loan Term, the same Collateral received for such Loan, as such Collateral is listed and described *230 in the associated Schedule A, so long as *231 the Client has then satisfied in full all outstanding Loan obligations to the Lender, including the payment of interest accrued on the Loan. If the Collateral is stock, the Collateral to be returned to the Client as per this paragraph shall reflect any and all stock splits, conversions, exchanges, mergers, or other dividends and distributions, except dividends paid on the Collateral that are to be credited toward interest due under the Loan to the Client, as provided in Schedule A.
On August 19, 2003, petitioners authorized the transfer of 320,000 shares of ValueClick stock from their account to WITCO's account. WITCO received the shares of ValueClick stock in two installments: 159,000 and 161,000 shares on August 28 and September 22, 2003, respectively. On August 28 and 29, 2003, WITCO sold 159,000 shares of ValueClick stock. The transfer and sale of petitioners' shares of ValueClick stock was conducted through WITCO's account *232 at Wachovia Securities, LLC (Wachovia). On a date not disclosed in the record but before September 22, 2003, WITCO distributed $1,260,410.52 to petitioners. On September 22, 2003, WITCO sold 161,000 shares of ValueClick stock. On September 29, 2003, WITCO distributed $1,362,804.48 to petitioners.
During 2004, petitioners entered into two more 90% Stock Loan transactions with entities related to Derivium. On July 6, 2004, through their wholly owned entity Helicon Investments, Ltd. (Helicon), petitioners signed a Master Loan Agreement with Optech, Ltd. (Optech). The terms of that Master Loan Agreement were identical to the terms of the WITCO Master Loan Agreement in all material respects. The estimated value of the collateral *232 was $3,540,000, the anticipated loan amount was 86% of the value of the collateral,*233 During November 2004, petitioners, through their wholly owned entity Gekko Holdings, LLC (Gekko), entered into another Master Loan Agreement with Optech. The terms of that Master Loan Agreement are not disclosed in the record,*233 26, 29, and 30, 2004, Optech sold 200,000 shares of ValueClick stock. On November 30, 2004, Optech provided Gekko with an "Activity Confirmation" statement reporting that the total value of Gekko's collateral was $2,400,299.83 and the amount of the 90% Stock Loan was $2,160,269.85. The statement noted that the loan term was three years and that the interest rate on the loan was 11.75%. On December 2, 2004, Optech transferred $2,160,266.92 in cash to Gekko.
During the terms of the loans, Optech sent petitioners quarterly and yearly account statements reporting the balance of the loans, the accrued interest, and the current value of the underlying collateral. Petitioners were not obligated to make *234 payments during the term of the loans, and they did not make any payments with respect to either the principal of or the interest on the loans. During the term of each of the loans, the share price of ValueClick stock increased so that the value of petitioners' underlying collateral greatly exceeded *234 the amount of the principal and interest on each loan.
On August 10, 2006, petitioners completed an Optech form electing to renew or refinance their September 29, 2003, loan for another term of three years.*235 Additionally, during the course of their 2006 investigation, petitioners learned that the California*235 Corporations Commission had filed suit against Derivium to enjoin it from engaging in the 90% Stock Loan program. After learning these facts during late 2006, petitioners reported to the Federal Bureau of Investigation that Derivium had stolen their ValueClick stock.
Petitioners did not report the Derivium transactions or the funds received from Derivium on their 2003 or 2004 return. Petitioners filed an amended tax return for their 2006 tax year, claiming a theft loss of $7,593,956 from "the illegal sale of 820,000 shares of ValueClick stock sold without their knowledge or permission". That amount was equal to their basis in the shares of ValueClick stock, the fair market value of which, at the time the alleged theft was allegedly discovered during late 2006, petitioners reported to be $17,716,000. Because their claimed theft loss was so large, petitioners also filed an amended tax return for their 2003 tax year, claiming a theft loss carryback of $5,386,786.
During September 2007, petitioners filed an arbitration demand against their financial advisers, Joe Ramos and Private Consulting Group, for breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, professional negligence, and constructive *236 fraud in connection with the 90% Stock Loan. However, petitioners recovered from their financial advisers only what they characterized as a "paltry sum", the amount *236 of which is not disclosed in the record. Petitioners also attempted to recover from Wachovia and one of Wachovia's financial advisers. On July 19, 2010, petitioners filed a Financial Industry Regulatory Authority arbitration claim against Wachovia, asserting: (1) fraud, concealment, and conspiracy to commit fraud; (2) breach of fiduciary duty; (3) breach of contract; (4) aiding and abetting fraud and breach of fiduciary duty; (5) violation of the California Securities Act; (6) violation of National Association of Securities Dealers and New York Stock Exchange rules; and (7) conversion.
Respondent examined petitioners' 2003 tax return and disallowed certain business expense deductions related to a horse breeding business. Petitioners entered a closing agreement with respondent during February 2009 with respect to their 2003 tax liability. Additionally, petitioners consented *237 to the assessment and collection of their 2003 tax liability.*237 On August 3, 2009, respondent issued petitioners a notice of intent to levy with respect to their 2003 tax liability. On August 12, 2009, petitioners submitted a Form 12153, Request for a Collection Due Process (Levy) Hearing. On October 1, 2009, respondent mailed to petitioners a Notice of Federal Tax Lien Filing and Your Right to a Hearing Under
On October 22, 2010, petitioners received a letter from Theresa Amper with respondent's Appeals Office. Before the hearing, petitioners' counsel Emily J. Kingston provided Ms. Amper with copies of petitioners' amended 2003 and 2006 tax returns showing the claimed theft loss. On November 16, 2010, Ms. Amper conducted the hearing with Ms. Kingston and determined that the matter should be assigned to another settlement officer to determine whether to allow the theft loss *238 deduction claimed on petitioners' amended 2006 return and the corresponding carryback on their amended 2003 return.
After that settlement officer returned the matter to Ms. Amper, she conducted another hearing with Ms. Kingston on February 11, 2011. During the hearing, Ms. Kingston contended that Ms. Amper should suspend the collection actions while respondent considered the theft loss deduction claimed on petitioners' amended 2006 return. However, Ms. Amper declined to consider the theft loss carryback *239 and determined that it was appropriate to sustain the lien and levy; and on April 19, 2011, respondent's Appeals Office mailed petitioners a Notice of Determination Concerning Collection Action(s) Under
Respondent concedes that petitioners' carryback with respect to their claimed theft loss during 2006 was within the scope of the Appeals hearing and should have been considered by Ms. Amper. However, respondent's motion indicates that respondent does not intend to seek remand of petitioners' case to the Appeals Office for consideration of the issue.
Where the validity of the underlying tax liability is properly in issue, the Court will review the determination of the Appeals Office de novo.
In the instant case, we have jurisdiction to consider petitioners' claimed theft loss deduction on their amended 2006 return because the carryback of that loss would reduce or eliminate the amount of unpaid tax with respect to petitioners' 2003 tax year.
*242 We have decided a number of other cases involving the 90% Stock Loan marketed by Derivium and its affiliates. In
Petitioners contend that the 90% Stock Loan was neither a loan nor a sale but rather a theft.
For tax purposes, whether a theft loss has been sustained depends upon the law of the jurisdiction in which the loss occurred.
Because the alleged theft took place in California, we will apply California law. In California, all larcenous crimes have been consolidated into the single crime of theft,
Petitioners *248 attempt to distinguish the facts of their case from those of
We are not convinced by petitioners' "Loan Term" argument. The loan agreements in the prior Derivium cases we have considered are nearly identical to the loan agreements in the instant case. For instance, in
However, the instant case is distinguishable from the prior Derivium cases we have considered for a different reason. In none of the prior Derivium cases we have considered did the taxpayers attempt to exercise their rights to a return of their collateral after the maturity dates. Rather, in the prior Derivium cases we have considered: (1) the value of the supposed collateral had *250 declined so that the taxpayers either (a) walked away from the loan,
As we stated in
From the beginning, according to Mr. Raifman's affidavit, Derivium misrepresented the nature of the transaction into which petitioners *253 entered. As far as we can tell, Derivium never engaged in a plausible hedging strategy. Instead, *250 its alleged actions appear to be tantamount to a massive bet that the price of all of its clients' stocks would fall, "hedged" only by a Ponzi scheme. Mr. Raifman also states in his affidavit that petitioners relied on Derivium's misrepresentations when they chose to enter into the 90% Stock Loan program and that they were defrauded. Indeed, it appears that the failure of Derivium to honor petitioners' options to repurchase their ValueClick stock cost petitioners millions of dollars. On the basis of the statements in Mr. Raifman's affidavit,Landow and the other prior Derivium cases. Accordingly, we conclude that there remains a dispute over genuine issues of material fact concerning the existence of a theft loss under California law.
Additional genuine *254 issues of material fact appear to us to remain in dispute with respect to petitioners' claim of a theft loss. At trial, we expect that petitioners will need to introduce, inter alia, evidence proving the amount of their loss, which will likely require valuation of the options to repurchase the ValueClick stock. Additionally, we expect that petitioners will need to introduce evidence showing that, at the time they claimed the theft loss deduction for 2006, they had no *251 reasonable prospect of recovery, including no possibility of recovery on their claims against their investment advisers or Wachovia.
On the basis of the foregoing, we will grant respondent's motion for summary judgment insofar as we conclude that petitioners' transfers of stock to Derivium under the 90% Stock Loan were sales and not loans, but we will deny respondent's motion for summary judgment insofar as we conclude that genuine issues of material fact remain as to whether petitioners may be entitled to a deduction for a theft loss in the amount of the value of the options they purchased from Derivium that may be carried back from petitioners' 2006 tax year to petitioners' 2003 tax year.*255
*252 In reaching these holdings, we have considered all the parties' arguments, and, to the extent not addressed herein, we conclude that they are moot, irrelevant, or without merit.
To reflect the foregoing,
1. Unless otherwise indicated, section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, and Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. As noted below, petitioners signed agreements with two entities related to Derivium. For convenience, unless we indicate that we are discussing the specific terms of those agreements, we will refer to all of the entities involved in the 90% Stock Loan program as Derivium.↩
3. Although we refer to the Derivium program as the "90% Stock Loan" and sometimes use terms such as "loan", "collateral", "loan term", "maturity", etc., we use those terms for convenience only. We do not intend our use of those terms to imply that the transaction constituted a loan for tax purposes.
4. It is unclear from the record why the anticipated loan amount was only 86% of the value of the collateral instead of 90%.↩
5. The record contains two copies of the July 6, 2004, Master Loan Agreement. It appears that respondent mistakenly produced two copies of that agreement instead of a copy of the November 2004 agreement.↩
6. The September 29, 2003, loan was made by WITCO; it is unclear from the record how Optech came to hold the loan.↩
7. As part of his examination, respondent also determined that the 2003 90% Equity Loan should have been treated as a sale of 320,000 shares of ValueClick stock and that petitioners owed tax on the capital gain from the sale. Although petitioners therefore have had a prior opportunity to dispute the characterization of their 2003 transaction with Derivium, because most of the purported theft loss stems from the 2004 transactions respondent does not contend that petitioners are precluded, on the basis of their waiver with respect to their 2003 tax liability, from disputing the characterization of the underlying transaction.↩
8. In An option is a contract that gives the buyer the right, but not the obligation, to buy or sell an asset at a predetermined price (the strike price). In exchange for selling an option, the seller receives from the purchaser a premium which reflects the value of the option. The risk to a purchaser of an option is limited to the premium. The risk to the seller of an option can be unlimited; it is the difference between the strike price and the market price of the asset at expiration less the premium. * * *↩
9. We are required, for purposes of deciding respondent's motion for summary judgment, to view these factual statements in the light most favorable to petitioners, as the nonmoving party.
10. We are puzzled by respondent's choice not to seek remand of petitioners' case to the Appeals Office, despite respondent's concession that the Appeals Office erred by failing to consider whether petitioners' carryback with respect to their claimed theft loss during 2006 was within the scope of the Appeals hearing. Accordingly, we will order respondent to wait until he has concluded the examination of petitioners' amended 2006 return before proceeding with the instant case in this Court. In that regard, we will also order the parties to submit a status report advising the Court when the examination of petitioners' 2006 return has been concluded.
Grayson Consulting, Inc. v. Wachovia Securities, LLC (In Re ... , 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 4365 ( 2010 )
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People v. Davis , 79 Cal. Rptr. 2d 295 ( 1998 )
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Sundstrand Corp. v. Commissioner , 98 T.C. 518 ( 1992 )