DocketNumber: Docket No. 8017-94
Judges: NIMS
Filed Date: 6/11/1997
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
*34 An appropriate order will be issued, and decision will be entered under Rule 155.
P, a California corporation, filed a petition for redetermination before the enactment of the Taxpayer
P's case was consolidated for trial, briefing, and opinion with that of Mr. and Mrs. O, with whom P had a business relationship. The nature of this relationship was litigated before a State court jury, which found in favor of P. P and Mr. and Mrs. O took positions in the State court litigation which were contrary to the positions each took in this case. To avoid whipsaw, R took inconsistent positions against*35 P and Mr. and Mrs. O. When Mr. and Mrs. O conceded the principal issue in their case, R conceded the issue in P's case. Thereafter, P filed a motion to recover administrative and litigation costs pursuant to
1.
2.
*431 OPINION
NIMS,
Respondent issued a statutory notice of deficiency on February 14, 1994, in which deficiencies in income tax and additions to tax were determined as follows:
Tax Year Ended | Tax | Additions to Tax | |
Sec. 6653(a) | Sec. 6661 | ||
July 31, 1988 (TYE 1988) | $ 93,500 | $ 4,675.00 | $ 23,375 |
July 31, 1989 (TYE 1989) | 73,651 | 3,682.55 | 20,883 |
Total | 167,151 | 8,357.55 | 44,258 |
The notice of deficiency also made adjustments to petitioner's fiscal 1990 tax year, although no deficiency was determined for that year. A petition was filed on May 16, 1994. At that time, petitioner (or MMC), a California corporation, had its principal office at 6800 Bayshore Walk, Long Beach, California.
On June 20, 1994, respondent filed an answer to the petition. After the case was calendared for trial, but prior to trial, the parties filed a Stipulation of Settled Issues. A stipulated Decision was entered*41 by the Court on November 29, 1996, setting forth deficiencies of $ 6,249 and $ 5,245, and no additions to tax, for TYE 1988 and TYE 1989, respectively. Petitioner thereafter filed its motion for costs. (Petitioner did not submit a memorandum of points and authorities in support *432 of its motion for costs.) In accordance with
The issues for decision are whether petitioner qualifies as a "prevailing party" for purposes of
The following facts are based on the entire record, including the affidavits and exhibits submitted by the parties with respect to the motion for costs, the parties' pleadings, their stipulated settlement, various other motions, *42 and supporting documents.
Petitioner was incorporated in 1984 to assist in managing the business activities and assets of John Ohanesian (Ohanesian) that he had received upon the dissolution of a previous partnership. Margaret Gehan (Margaret) is the president, and Glenn M. Gehan (Mike) is the vice president, of petitioner. Margaret was MMC's sole shareholder during all relevant times.
The relationship between petitioner and the Ohanesian family was not defined by written agreements until 1987. These agreements provided that petitioner was to provide management or consulting services to the Ohanesian Family Trust (the Trust) and Seven Resorts, Inc. (SRI), a corporation controlled by the Trust (collectively referred to herein as the related entities), in exchange for an annual fee equal to 2 percent of the gross assets owned by the Trust and 2 percent of the gross revenue realized by SRI. The written agreements contained no provision which obligated or required petitioner to pay personal expenses of the Ohanesian family or SRI. Nevertheless, during the years in issue, petitioner purchased and maintained several luxury automobiles for members of the Ohanesian family. Petitioner also*43 leased and furnished office space for SRI.
*433 During TYE 1988 and TYE 1989, petitioner received funds from SRI and the Trust through John and Ethel Ohanesian (the Ohanesians). Petitioner reported the amount of funds received as income on its Federal income tax returns for those years. On its returns for TYE 1988 and TYE 1989, petitioner claimed deductions for various expenses, including the depreciation and upkeep of the luxury vehicles for members of the Ohanesian family and office space for SRI. On their joint Federal individual income tax returns for the years overlapping petitioner's taxable years at issue, the Ohanesians deducted the amounts paid to petitioner as investment expenses.
At some point in 1989, Mike and Ohanesian had a "falling out", which resulted in Ohanesian's terminating the agreements on November 15, 1989, and withholding payment of the contract fees to petitioner. Although the stock of petitioner was nominally owned by Margaret, Ohanesian claimed that petitioner was in fact "his" corporation. On this basis, Ohanesian demanded that Mike and Margaret (the Gehans) surrender to him the stock of petitioner, together with all assets "currently owned" by petitioner, *44 including the automobiles, office furnishings, and equipment. (Although petitioner held title to the property described above, the Ohanesian family and the related entities had possession of those assets.)
In response to the termination of the agreements, the Gehans and petitioner sued the Trust, the Ohanesian family, and SRI in Superior Court of the State of California for, among other things, breach of contract, recovery of the luxury automobiles, and for recovery of the office equipment and furnishings used by SRI. In its complaint, petitioner alleged the following facts to be true: (1) Petitioner was the owner of the luxury automobiles; (2) the members of the Ohanesian family had converted the automobiles to their personal use; (3) petitioner was the owner of the office equipment and furnishings used by SRI; and (4) the written agreements between the parties were valid and enforceable. In a sworn declaration accompanying the complaint, Margaret, as president of petitioner, stated that petitioner was at all times independent of the Trust and SRI.
The Ohanesian family, the Trust, and SRI alleged in their cross-complaint that the management agreements were "fictitious" *434 in that *45 the fees to be paid to petitioner were actually earmarked to pay the personal expenses of the Ohanesian family and SRI. This arrangement, according to Ohanesian, was established by oral agreement of the parties entered into prior to the date of the written agreements. Ohanesian maintained that petitioner was actually his corporation, and that Margaret owned the stock in name only so that it would appear that petitioner was an independent entity. Ohanesian later testified that MMC was incorporated at his behest because he "needed a means of buying vehicles, expensing items if * * * [he] was going on business trips, [and] paying * * * [his] children, without it looking like a gift." The cross-complaint further alleged that the office furniture, equipment, and luxury vehicles were the rightful property of the Ohanesian family or SRI.
At all times during the State court litigation, petitioner maintained that it was an independent entity and that the terms of the written agreements exclusively defined its relationship with the Ohanesian family and related entities. Petitioner contended that parol evidence could not be considered to vary or contradict the terms of such agreements or show*46 that there was a separate oral agreement that petitioner was to function as a conduit or agent of Ohanesian and the related entities. Petitioner asserted that it provided real and substantial management services in exchange for the agreed-upon fees. In his State court deposition, Mike explained petitioner's purchase of the luxury automobiles and the provision of the office space to SRI as due to "the substantial business relationships with the Ohanesian Family Trust, and John [Ohanesian] asked for it."
The suit between petitioner and Ohanesian was decided by a jury. In pertinent part, the jury's special verdict found as follows: (1) Valid contracts existed between petitioner and the related entities; (2) petitioner performed as required under the contracts; and (3) members of the Ohanesian family and the Trust converted personal property to their own use.
As a result of the conflicting allegations and testimony in the State court suit, and petitioner's and the Ohanesians' failure to offer any other evidence to substantiate their claims, respondent issued statutory notices of deficiency to both the Ohanesians and petitioner. In the notice of deficiency to the Ohanesians, respondent*47 determined that the *435 amounts paid to petitioner by the Ohanesians did not constitute investment expenses and were, therefore, not deductible. This determination was supported by Ohanesian's testimony in State court that petitioner was a conduit for payment of his personal expenses.
In petitioner's notice of deficiency, respondent disallowed, among other things, the following expenses (collectively referred to herein as the Ohanesian-related items):
Adjustments to Income | TYE 1988 | TYE 1989 |
Automobile depreciation | $ 17,280 | $ 21,900 |
Other automobile costs | 20,475 | 39,568 |
Ohanesian expenses | 26,592 | 12,569 |
SRI expenses | 164,352 | 128,268 |
In the Explanation of Adjustment attached to the notice of deficiency, respondent explained that petitioner had not established that the amounts claimed were paid or incurred during those taxable years or that the expenses were ordinary and necessary to petitioner's management and consulting business.
In their respective Tax Court cases, petitioner and Ohanesian adopted positions substantially at odds with each other, as well as with the position each had taken in the State court case. Ohanesian maintained that his payments to petitioner were*48 for legitimate management expenses. Ohanesian further contended that the consulting agreements were valid and enforceable as written. Petitioner, on the other hand, posited that it was an agent of Ohanesian and that the payments for the automobiles and other expenses of the Ohanesian family and related entities were on account of that relationship. In this regard, petitioner theorized that, since it had recognized income on moneys received from its principal (Ohanesian) that were used to pay expenses as directed by Ohanesian, it was entitled to deduct those payments. (Remaining adjustments were unrelated to the Ohanesian-related items. It was generally understood by petitioner and respondent that these items would be resolved after the Ohanesian-related items were resolved, since the former were so small as to be de minimis in comparison with the latter.) In so arguing, petitioner relied on the existence and validity of a purported oral agreement--the same oral agreement that petitioner previously had denied the existence *436 or validity of in the State court action. Further, petitioner disregarded the jury's finding that the automobiles and office furnishings and equipment were its personal*49 property and not the property of the Ohanesian family or related entities. In the alternative, petitioner contended that the expenses were deductible business expenses because "the jury decision includes a determination that the Petitioner was obligated to pay each and every one of the expenses disallowed by the Notice of Deficiency, as a part of its contractual obligation with the Ohanesian Entities." Petitioner asserted that its receipt of management fees was conditioned on its payment of the disallowed expenses on behalf of Ohanesian and the related entities.
The Ohanesians and petitioner subsequently settled their cases with respondent prior to trial. The Ohanesians conceded that they were not entitled to deductions for the portion of the fees paid to petitioner which were ultimately used to pay for nondeductible personal expenses. The Ohanesians' concession in turn enabled respondent to concede that the payments made by petitioner to fund those same personal expenses were made in petitioner's capacity as a conduit for the Ohanesians. As such, the payments were allowed to offset income which MMC had recognized on the funds it had received from the Ohanesians. The Stipulation *50 of Settled Issues resulted in "no-change" for petitioner as to the Ohanesian-related items.
We must decide whether petitioner is entitled to reasonable litigation and administrative costs pursuant to
Congress has enacted and amended several versions of
In 1986 and 1988, Congress extensively amended
(4) Prevailing party.-- (A) In general.--The term "prevailing party" means any party in any proceeding to which subsection (a) applies (other than the United States or any creditor of the taxpayer involved)-- (i) which establishes that the position of the United States in the proceeding was not substantially justified,
(B) Exception if United States establishes that its position was substantially justified.-- (i) General Rule.--A party shall not be treated as the prevailing party in a proceeding to which subsection (a) applies if the United States establishes that the position of the United States in the proceeding was substantially justified.
We first consider whether TBR2 applies in this case. The petition was filed on May 16, 1994, and the motion for costs was filed on January 2, 1997. If the "proceeding" were commenced with the filing of the petition, then
Following the enactment of
Similarly, this Court has consistently looked to the filing date of the taxpayer's petition in applying the effective date provisions of the amendments to
In enacting and amending
Additional guidance for deciding when "proceedings" are commenced under TBR2 comes from the meaning of the word "proceeding" as it is used throughout
For example, (a) IN GENERAL.--In any administrative or court proceeding (1) reasonable administrative costs incurred in connection with such administrative proceeding within the Internal Revenue Service, and (2) reasonable litigation costs incurred in connection with such court proceeding. [Emphasis added.]
Likewise,
Similarly,
any party in any proceeding*58 * * *
* * * * (ii) which-- (I) has substantially prevailed with respect to the amount in controversy, or (II) has substantially prevailed with respect to the most significant issue or set of issues presented, and (iii) which meets the * * * [applicable net worth requirements].
Further,
Based on the foregoing discussion, we conclude that TBR2 does not apply to a case in this Court unless the taxpayer's petition is filed after July 30, 1996. See
Under
(1) Establish that the position of the United States in the civil proceeding was not substantially justified,
(2) substantially prevail in the litigation,
(3) if the taxpayer is a corporation, meet the net worth and number of employee requirements of
Courts will not award litigation costs under
Respondent agrees that petitioner has: (1) Substantially prevailed with respect to the amount in controversy; (2) exhausted the administrative remedies available to it; and (3) shown that the net worth and number of employee requirements have been met. Respondent contends, however, that respondent's position was substantially justified so that petitioner is not a prevailing party for purposes of
Petitioner bears the burden of proving that respondent's position in the proceedings was not substantially justified or was unreasonable.
We must identify the point at which the United States is first considered to have taken a position, and then decide whether the position taken from that point forward was or was not substantially justified. The "not substantially justified" standard is applied as of the separate dates that respondent took positions, first *62 in the administrative proceedings and afterwards in the proceedings in this Court.
For purposes of the court proceedings in this case, respondent's position is that which is set forth in the answer to the petition on June 20, 1994.
*443 More specifically, respondent's position was that petitioner had not fully substantiated claimed expenditures, their deductibility, or their*63 business purpose. Therefore, in the answer respondent denied petitioner's allegations that it had paid or incurred all the expenses in dispute as ordinary and necessary business expenses. In respondent's answer, it is further stated that petitioner had provided insufficient information to prove that it was an agent of Ohanesian and the related entities.
The administrative and litigation positions of respondent are substantially justified if they have a reasonable basis in both law and fact. E.g.,
The fact that the Commissioner eventually loses or concedes a case does not by itself establish that the position taken is unreasonable.
We conclude that petitioner has failed to prove that respondent's position did not have a reasonable basis in fact *444 and law and was not strongly supported by substantial evidence. Although petitioner claimed to be a mere agent or conduit of Ohanesian and SRI in the administrative proceeding before the IRS and in the judicial proceeding before the Tax Court, petitioner had taken the exactly opposite tack in its State court suit. In the State court suit, the jury accepted the position of MMC (petitioner here) that it was an independent entity. Moreover, the special verdict found that the written agreements between petitioner and the related entities were valid and enforceable, and that the luxury automobiles and other personal property belonged to petitioner. These findings were wholly inconsistent with petitioner's position in the instant proceedings that the property was purchased by petitioner as an agent for Ohanesian and the related entities.
The doctrine of judicial estoppel precludes a party to a judicial proceeding from taking a position contrary to one it took and persuaded a court to accept in an earlier*66 proceeding. See
Even if one were to assume that the doctrine of judicial estoppel did not apply in the instant case, respondent was entitled to require from petitioner cogent evidence of the *445 genuineness of an agency relationship. See
the genuineness of the agency relationship is adequately assured, and tax-avoiding manipulation adequately avoided, when the fact that the corporation is acting as agent for its shareholders with respect to a particular asset is
In the instant case, petitioner alleged that an oral agreement to pay personal expenses as an agent of the Ohanesians existed, and that Ohanesian had de *68 facto control over petitioner even though he was not the nominative shareholder. In State court, however, petitioner contended that the relationship between it and Ohanesian was defined solely by the written agreements, that Margaret was petitioner's sole shareholder, that petitioner was independent, and that any alleged oral agreements did not exist or were unenforceable. Agreeing with petitioner's position in that case, the jury found in effect that an agency relationship did not exist. Therefore, based on the facts and related legal precedent, we conclude that respondent reasonably argued that the expenses deducted by petitioner on account of the automobiles and other items were not incurred as agent for Ohanesian and the related entities.
Petitioner alternatively asserts that, even if it were not an agent, respondent unreasonably refused to concede the deductibility of the expenses under section 162 because the State court jury found MMC to be contractually liable to pay the expenses of the Ohanesians. Based upon this fallacious assumption as to what the jury found (see
The jury verdict states that petitioner performed what it was required to do under the contracts; the verdict does not state that everything petitioner did was required by those contracts. Moreover, Mike himself testified that he bought the cars due to the substantial business relationship of the parties and because Ohanesian
Furthermore, petitioner has not shown that respondent was not substantially justified in refusing to concede the case with petitioner until the Ohanesians conceded with respect to the Ohanesian-related items. Respondent was caught in a potential "whipsaw" position. A whipsaw occurs when different taxpayers treat the same transaction involving the same items inconsistently, thus creating the possibility that income could go untaxed, or two unrelated parties could deduct the same expenses on their separate returns. In such circumstances, respondent was fully entitled to defend against inconsistent results by holding both parties to the transaction liable for the deficiency. See
In addition, where, as here, the evidence in a case consists of the testimony of persons who have maintained inconsistent positions in prior proceedings, respondent also is entitled to maintain inconsistent positions with respect to those parties until this Court can hear the evidence and determine the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be given their *447 testimony. See
In the instant case, in the absence of a settlement, the deductibility of expenses would have hinged on whose testimony the Court found credible. Thus, we conclude that petitioner has failed to prove that there*72 was not good cause for respondent's inconsistent positions. As the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit has stated in an analogous context where the same taxpayer receives conflicting notices of deficiency concerning the same items of income: If the Commissioner * * * had chosen incorrectly to make only one tax deficiency determination * * * under a theory of tax liability reasonably grounded on the data procured, conceivably the bar of the statute of limitations on assessment would preclude other assessments on other determinations predicated on other theories of tax liability reasonably grounded on the data in * * * [her] possession. We find no legal or logical reason which compels the Commissioner to run such risk in the proper performance of * * * [her] duty to protect the revenue. [
Petitioner nonetheless asserts that such inconsistent positions need not have been taken by respondent, and therefore much litigation expense could have been avoided. Petitioner avers that it told respondent that, rather than moving to consolidate petitioner's case with that of the Ohanesians, respondent*73 should have urged the Court to wait to decide petitioner's case until after the Ohanesians' case was decided. However, petitioner ignores that much of the litigation cost was run up by its own intransigence. The IRS had asked petitioner to sign a Form 872, Consent to Extend the Time to Assess Tax, as early as December 9, 1993, but was rebuffed, and so it was forced to prepare the notice of deficiency to defend against inconsistent results. Petitioner also disregards the unnecessary expenditure of judicial time and resources that two separate trials involving substantially the same evidence would have entailed.
Petitioner has not proven that respondent was not substantially justified in maintaining respondent's position against petitioner. In a case such as this, respondent is charged with the difficult task of protecting the fisc. Petitioner *448 and Ohanesian asserted fundamentally conflicting versions of the nature of their relationship and the payments of the Ohanesian-related items. Based on such evidence, and the fact that Ohanesian and petitioner both reversed the positions they took in the State court case, respondent acted reasonably in maintaining the position taken in petitioner's*74 case until the Ohanesians conceded with respect to those items.
Petitioner lamely asserts that respondent's agent took an instant dislike to the Gehans which clouded his judgment as to the strength of petitioner's position. However, we find no indication in the record that respondent sought to extract unjustified concessions from petitioner, or that respondent pursued the litigation to harass or embarrass petitioner, and petitioner has pointed to none. See
Since we hold that petitioner has not proven that respondent's position was not substantially justified with respect to the deductibility of the Ohanesian-related items, we need not address whether the costs claimed by petitioner are reasonable or whether petitioner unreasonably protracted the administrative and litigation proceedings.
For all of the above reasons, we hold that petitioner is not entitled to administrative and litigation costs pursuant to
To reflect the foregoing,
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