DocketNumber: Docket No. 23630-12
Citation Numbers: 110 T.C.M. 370, 2015 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 210, 2015 T.C. Memo. 201
Filed Date: 10/14/2015
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/18/2021
Decision will be entered under
LAUBER,
Midco transactions, a type of tax shelter, were widely promoted during the late 1990s and early 2000s. MidCoast Credit Corp. (MidCoast), which plays a supporting role in this case, and Fortrend, which plays the principal role, were leading promoters of Midco transactions. Both have been involved in numerous transactions*211 previously considered by this Court.
Although Midco transactions took various forms, they shared several key features, well summarized by the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in
Promoters of Midco transactions offered a purported solution to this problem. An "intermediary company" affiliated with the promoter--typically, a shell company, often organized offshore--would buy the shares of the target company. The target's cash would transit through the "intermediary company" to the selling shareholders. After acquiring the target's embedded tax liability, the "intermediary *204 company" would plan to engage in a tax-motivated transaction that would offset the target's realized gains and eliminate the corporate-level tax. The promoter and the target's shareholders would agree to split the dollar value of the corporate tax thus avoided. The promoter would keep as its fee a negotiated percentage of the avoided corporate tax. The target's shareholders would keep the balance of the avoided corporate tax as a premium above the target's true net asset value (i.e., assets net of accrued*213 tax liability).
In due course the IRS would audit the Midco, disallow the fictional losses, and assess the corporate-level tax. But "[i]n many instances, the Midco is a newly formed entity created for the sole purpose of facilitating such a transaction, without other income or assets and thus likely to be judgment-proof. The IRS must then seek payment from other parties involved in the transaction in order to satisfy the tax liability the transaction was created to avoid."
In a nutshell, that is what happened here. Petitioner engaged in a Midco transaction with a Fortrend shell company; the shell company merged into West Side and engaged in a sham transaction to eliminate West Side's corporate tax; the IRS disallowed those fictional losses and assessed the corporate-level tax against West Side; but West Side, as was planned all along, is judgment proof. The IRS accordingly seeks to collect West Side's tax from petitioner as the transferee of *205 West Side's cash. We hold that petitioner is liable for West Side's tax under the Ohio Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act and that the IRS may collect West Side's tax liabilities in full from petitioner under
The parties filed stipulations of facts with accompanying exhibits that are incorporated by this reference. At the time the Midco transactions were executed, petitioner resided in Ohio. He moved shortly thereafter to Nevada, and he resided in Nevada at the close of the 2003 taxable year and when he petitioned this Court.
Petitioner graduated from Case Western Reserve University and embarked on a career in the cellular telephone (cell phone) business. He incorporated West Side in 1988 as a C corporation. Petitioner was the president and sole shareholder of West Side, and he and his wife, Barbara Tricarichi, served as its directors.
Although petitioner had no formal tax training, he displayed familiarity with tax concepts. At trial he spoke easily about C corporations and S corporations, corporate tax rates, and other tax matters. He explained that he organized West *206 Side*215 as a C corporation because he thought it might ultimately have more shareholders than an S corporation would be permitted to have.
In 1991 petitioner approached Verizon and other major cellular service providers with a proposal that West Side would become a reseller of cell phone services. From 1991 through 2003 West Side engaged in various telecommunications activities in Ohio, including the resale of cell phone services. West Side had a retail presence in Ohio, customer and vendor relationships, goodwill, know-how, a workforce in place, trade names, and other tangible and intangible assets. At its peak West Side had about 15,000 subscribers throughout Ohio.
Beginning in 1991, West Side purchased network access from the major cellular service providers in order to serve its customers. Petitioner soon came to believe that certain of these providers were discriminating against West Side. In 1993 he engaged the Cleveland law firm of Hahn Loeser & Parks, LLP (Hahn Loeser), to file a complaint with the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio (PUCO) against certain of these providers, alleging anticompetitive trade practices. The PUCO lawsuit was a "bet the company" matter for petitioner, and*216 he took a hand-son role in the lengthy litigation that ensued. Hahn Loeser lawyers described him as a constant presence at the firm throughout this period.
*207 The PUCO ruled in West Side's favor on the liability issue and the Ohio Supreme Court affirmed that decision. In early 2003 West Side returned to the Court of Common Pleas to commence the damages phase of the litigation. Not long thereafter a settlement was reached, pursuant to which West Side ultimately received, during April and May 2003, total settlement proceeds of $65,050,141. In exchange West Side was required to terminate its business as a retail provider of cell phone service and to end all service to its customers as of June 10, 2003.
Anticipating a large settlement, petitioner began to regret his decision, 15 years earlier, to organize West Side as a C corporation. He asked Jeffrey Folkman, a Hahn Loeser tax partner, to investigate how to "maximize whatever after-tax proceeds were available" from the anticipated settlement. Petitioner's goal was to "pay less tax than what the straight up, you know, 35% or whatever the corporate tax rate was" and avoid the two-level tax on the settlement proceeds.*217
Mr. Folkman had experience with MidCoast and thought it might help solve petitioner's problem. He arranged a meeting on February 19, 2003, with petitioner and MidCoast representatives. In preparation for this meeting, Hahn Loeser attorneys devoted five days of research and discussion to the "sham transaction" doctrine, "reportable transactions," and
Shortly after the meeting with MidCoast, petitioner's brother, James Tricarichi (James), introduced him to Fortrend. On February 24, 2003, petitioner received a letter from Fortrend; he subsequently had several conference calls and at least one face-to-face meeting with Fortrend representatives. Petitioner understood that Fortrend and MidCoast were both involved with "distressed debt receivables" and had basically the same business model. Fortrend*218 told petitioner that it would purchase his West Side stock and would offset the taxable gain with losses, thereby eliminating West Side's corporate income tax liability.
MidCoast and Fortrend each expressed interest in acquiring petitioner's West Side stock, and each made an offer proposing essentially the same transactional structure. An intermediary company would borrow money to purchase the stock. The cash held by West Side would be used immediately to repay the loan. The cash petitioner received from the intermediary company would substantially exceed West Side's net asset value. The intermediary company would receive a *209 fee equal to a negotiated percentage of West Side's tax liabilities. And after the sale closed, the intermediary company, after merging into West Side, would use bad debt deductions to eliminate those tax liabilities.
Because petitioner regarded MidCoast and Fortrend as competitors, he began negotiating with both in the hope of stirring up a bidding war. James arranged further conference calls with both companies. Rather than compete, MidCoast secretly agreed with Fortrend to step away from the transaction in exchange for a fee of $1,180,000 (ultimately paid by West*219 Side on September 14, 2003). MidCoast's final offer was adjusted to make it seem unattractive, and petitioner therefore chose to pursue discussions with Fortrend in order to "maximize" his profits.
James recommended that petitioner retain PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) to advise him about the proposed stock sale. Acting as a conduit between petitioner and PwC, James sent a letter dated April 8, 2003, to PwC partner Richard Stovsky. This letter requested advice concerning a stock sale to MidCoast or Fortrend and a fallback strategy to mitigate petitioner's tax liability if the stock sale did not occur. PwC sent petitioner a draft engagement letter on April 10, 2003.
By this time petitioner had had extensive discussions with Mr. Folkman about Working with tax professionals from several PwC offices, Mr. Stovsky prepared an internal memorandum addressing the proposed sale of West Side stock to Fortrend or MidCoast. This memorandum was revised multiple times as the negotiations *211 evolved, and various drafts were discussed*221 with petitioner and his advisers. The first draft of the memorandum, dated April 13, 2003, stated the following assumptions about the proposed transaction: • [Buyer will] borrow $36,000,000 and purchase 100% of the Westside shares outstanding from * * * [petitioner]. * * * • [Buyer will] contribute to Westside * * * high basis/low fair market value property (the assumption is that these are delinquent receivables). • Westside is now in the business of purchasing "distressed/chargedoff" credit card debt * * * at pennies on the dollar and collecting on this debt. • The business purpose for the acquisition of Westside is based on the new business' need for cash to purchase the charged-off credit card debt as commercial financing for such purchases is apparently difficult. Westside's cash and accounts receivable will provide such needed cash (note that most of the $40,000,000 cash in Westside will be distributed out of Westside and used by * * * [the buyer] to pay back the cash borrowed to purchase * * * [petitioner's] Westside stock). • Westside writes off (apparently deductible for federal income tax purposes) some of the high basis/low fair market value property contributed by * * * [the*222 buyer]. The deduction offsets the taxable income created within Westside upon the receipt of the $65,000,000 from the legal verdict. • Westside, now a charged off debt business, utilizes "cost recovery tax accounting" which, apparently, results in tax deductions as a portion of the purchased credit card debt is collected. • The suggested result, from a federal tax perspective, is as follows: *212 • [Petitioner] recognizes long-term capital gain upon the sale of his shares in Westside * * *. • Westside offsets the taxable income from the legal verdict with the write off of high basis property. PwC understood that The memorandum concluded that the proposed transaction was not without risk. It noted a particularly high level of risk in the "high basis/low value" debt receivable strategy that the buyer proposed to eliminate West Side's tax liabilities. PwC characterized this as a "very aggressive tax-motivated" strategy and indicated that the IRS would likely challenge the deductibility of the bad debt loss expected *213 to be reported by West Side after the stock sale. Pointedly absent from the memorandum is any indication that PwC believed this strategy was "more likely than not" to be successful. Regardless, the memorandum suggested that "this is not * * * [petitioner's] concern" since the result would be a corporate tax liability and not petitioner's liability. The memorandum noted that PwC had provided no formal written advice to petitioner but had discussed its conclusions orally with him. Petitioner's representatives communicated with Fortrend after meeting with PwC. During these conversations Fortrend made clear*224 that it did not want to acquire West Side's accounts receivable or any of its other operating assets. Rather, Fortrend wanted all operating assets stripped out of West Side before the closing so that West Side would be left with nothing but cash and tax liabilities. In order to meet Fortrend's requirements, petitioner and three West Side employees formed LXV Group, LLC (LXV), an Ohio limited liability company, on May 2, 2003, to acquire West Side's operating assets. Each contributed $25,000 for his respective 25% interest in LXV. As mandated by the PUCO settlement agreement, West Side had to discontinue providing cell phone service to its customers by June 10, 2003. On June 11, 2003, LXV purchased all of West *214 Side's operating assets, namely, its goodwill and its "revenue producing wireless customer base, accounts receivable, Trade names, Trade marks, chattels, fixtures, software and equipment" used in the operation of West Side's business. The purchase price that LXV paid for these assets was $100,044. That amount was substantially less than the sum of West Side's net physical assets and accounts receivable ($74,564 + $166,940 = $241,504) as stated on West Side's balance sheet.*225 parties to this transaction thus appear to have attached a value of zero to West Side's wireless customer base, trade marks, and trade names. Mr. Stovsky voiced concern that if fair market value were not paid for these assets, petitioner might face risk because of "the transferee liability issue." Despite this warning, petitioner did not obtain a valuation of the assets thus transferred. Petitioner testified that his motivation for this sale was to "continue to service West Side's customers." The Court did not find this testimony credible. The parties' placement of zero value on West Side's intangible assets, including its wireless customer base, trade name, and trade marks, belies any intention to serve those customers in the future. Indeed, it is not clear how LXV could continue to *215 serve West Side's cell phone customers*226 because West Side's principals, who were also LXV's principals, were barred after June 10, 2003, from conducting any form of cell phone business. The Court finds as a fact that petitioner arranged the sale of West Side's operating assets to LXV in order to comply with Fortrend's requirement that West Side have nothing left in it except tax liabilities and cash. The parties adopted as their working assumption that West Side's accrued tax liability resulting from the $65 million PUCO settlement would not be paid. Since West Side at closing was to have only cash and tax liabilities, and since cash has a readily ascertainable value, the major item for negotiation was how to carve up the corporate tax liability thus avoided. The parties referred to this exercise as determining the "Fortrend premium." Petitioner actively participated in the negotiation of this point. Neither Hahn Loeser nor PwC participated in the negotiation of the stock purchase price or the "Fortrend premium." The trial record sheds little light on the early stages of the negotiations, when MidCoast was still involved. During later stages of the negotiations, the dollar amount*227 of the "Fortrend premium" varied, but each iteration of the agreement contained the same formulaic calculation. Fortrend would pay petitioner the amount of cash remaining in West Side at the closing, less 31.875% of West *216 Side's total Federal and State tax liability for 2003. In other words, the "Fortrend premium" equaled 31.875% of West Side's accrued 2003 tax liability. This left petitioner with a premium, above and beyond West Side's closing net asset value, equal to 68.125% of its accrued 2003 tax liability. At two points in his testimony, petitioner stated that he did not understand the "Fortrend premium" to have any correlation to West Side's tax liabilities. The Court did not find this testimony credible. Petitioner testified that he participated in negotiating Fortrend's fee, and numerous spreadsheets prepared by his brother explicitly state that Fortrend's fee was to equal 31.875% of West Side's accrued tax liabilities for 2003. Confronted with this evidence, petitioner became visibly uncomfortable. The Court finds as a fact that petitioner knew at all times that the "Fortrend premium" would be computed as a negotiated percentage of West Side's 2003 corporate tax liability.*228 In preparation for the stock sale, Millennium Recovery Fund, LLC (Millennium), a Fortrend affiliate incorporated in the Cayman Islands, created Nob Hill, Inc. (Nob Hill), a shell company also incorporated in the Cayman Islands. Nob Hill was to be the "intermediary company" that would purchase the West Side stock. John McNabola was the sole officer of Millennium and Nob Hill. *217 The Hahn Loeser lawyers negotiated with Fortrend the technical details of the stock purchase agreement. Nob Hill provided covenants aimed at mitigating the risk that the transaction would be characterized as a "liquidation" of West Side. Nob Hill represented that West Side would remain in existence for at least five years after the closing, would "at all times be engaged in an active trade or business," and would "maintain a net worth of no less than $1 million" during this five-year period. (None of these representations was substantially honored.) Nob Hill also provided purported tax warranties. The agreement represented that Nob Hill would "cause * * * [West Side] to satisfy fully all United States * * * taxes, penalties and interest required to be paid by * * * [West Side] attributable to income earned during*229 the [2003] tax year." The agreement did not specify how Nob Hill would "cause" West Side to satisfy its 2003 tax liabilities or explain the strategy it would use to offset West Side's gain from the $65 million PUCO settlement. Nob Hill agreed to indemnify petitioner in the event of liability arising from breach of its representation to "satisfy fully" West Side's 2003 tax liability. Petitioner's expert, Wayne Purcell, admitted that "there can be problems" enforcing warranties and covenants against offshore entities like Nob Hill that have no assets in the United States. *218 Petitioner's lawyers attempted to include in the stock purchase agreement a provision prohibiting West Side from engaging in a "listed transaction" after Fortrend acquired West Side. Fortrend refused to agree to this provision. Instead, the parties negotiated a statement that Nob Hill "has no intention" of causing West Side to engage in a listed transaction. A letter of intent dated July 22, 2003, set forth the terms on which Nob Hill proposed to acquire petitioner's stock. It stated a tentative purchase price of $34.9 million, subject to fine-tuning based on West Side's final cash*230 position. The letter indicated that West Side would deposit $50,000 in escrow to cover fees should the transaction fail to close. After the transfer of West Side's operating assets to LXV, West Side's balance sheet reflected total assets of $40,577,151, including $39,949,373 in cash, a $577,778 loan receivable from petitioner, and the $50,000 receivable from the escrow agent. West Side's aggregate 2003 tax liabilities were estimated to be $16,853,379. West Side's net asset value as of late July--that is, its assets minus its accrued tax liability--was thus $23,723,772. Nob Hill offered to pay petitioner $34.9 million for his stock--$11.2 million more than West Side was worth--in exchange *219 for a fee (the "Fortrend premium") comfortably in excess of $5 million. Petitioner decided to accept this offer. Petitioner's "due diligence" expert, Mr. Purcell, testified that a seller who receives an all-cash offer for his stock is mainly concerned with making sure he gets paid. Mr. Purcell agreed, however, that a seller in petitioner's position must nevertheless exercise a certain level of due diligence. Hahn Loeser's bankruptcy lawyers advised that petitioner needed to assure himself that Nob Hill*231 and Fortrend would live up to their postclosing obligations. And Mr. Purcell agreed that "due diligence did require * * * [petitioner] and his advisors to investigate Fortrend's plans" for eliminating West Side's 2003 tax liabilities. Neither petitioner nor his advisers performed any due diligence into Fortrend or its track record. Neither petitioner nor his advisers performed any meaningful investigation into the "high basis/low value" scheme that Fortrend suggested for eliminating West Side's accrued 2003 tax liability. Petitioner was evasive when asked how he expected Fortrend to pull off this feat; he testified as to his belief that Fortrend "had some sort of tax reduction process" that would somehow "use bad debt to reduce tax liability." PwC specifically declined to provide assurance that Fortrend's bad debt strategy was "more likely than not" to succeed. The stock purchase transaction was carefully structured to ensure that Fortrend and its affiliates made no real outlay of cash. Fortrend planned to borrow the entire $34.9 million tentative purchase price: $5 million from Moffatt International (Moffatt), a Fortrend affiliate, and $29.9 million from Coöperatieve*232 Centrale Raiffeisen-Boerenleenbank, B.A. (Rabobank), a Dutch bank.*221 to be essentially zero. The risk rating shown on Nob Hill's credit application was "N/A, or based on collateral: R-1 (cash)." Rabobank uses the R-1 risk rating to denote a loan that is fully cash collateralized. On August*233 21, 2003, petitioner received instructions to open at Rabobank an account for West Side with account number ending in 1577, to which West Side's cash would eventually be transferred. To receive the cash proceeds from the stock sale, petitioner opened an individual Rabobank account with account number ending in 1595. To shuttle cash at the closing, Nob Hill opened a Rabobank account with account number ending in 1568. In connection with the Rabobank financing, Mr. McNabola planned to execute two sets of documents at the closing. He would sign the first set on behalf of Nob Hill as its president. He would sign the second set on behalf of West Side as its postclosing president-to-be. The Nob Hill documents to be executed by Mr. McNabola included a promissory note for $29.9 million, a security agreement, and a pledge agreement. Pursuant to the security agreement, Nob Hill granted Rabobank a first priority security interest in West Side's Rabobank account to secure Nob Hill's repayment obligation. Pursuant to the pledge agreement, Nob Hill granted Rabobank a first *222 priority security interest in the West Side stock and the stock sale proceeds as collateral securing Nob Hill's repayment obligation.*234 The West Side documents to be executed by Mr. McNabola included security and guaranty agreements in favor of Rabobank and a "control agreement." West Side unconditionally guaranteed payment of Nob Hill's obligations to Rabobank, and the security agreement granted Rabobank a first priority security interest in the West Side Rabobank account. The "control agreement" gave Rabobank control over West Side's account--including all "cash, instruments, and other financial assets contained therein from time to time, and all security entitlements with respect thereto"--to ensure that West Side did not default on its commitments. As petitioner's UCC expert, Barkley Clark, correctly noted, Mr. McNabola as Nob Hill's president could not grant Rabobank a perfected security interest in West Side's assets until Nob Hill acquired West Side's stock. And Mr. McNabola as West Side's president could not grant Rabobank a perfected security interest in West Side's assets until he became West Side's president. At the closing, however, all of these documents were to become effective simultaneously with the funding of the Rabobank loan, the payment of the stock purchase price, and the resignation of West Side's*235 former officers and directors. These agreements effectively gave Rabobank a "springing lien" on West Side's cash at the moment it *223 funded the loan. For all practical purposes, therefore, the Rabobank loan was fully collateralized with the cash in West Side's Rabobank account, consistently with the R-1 risk rating that Rabobank assigned to that loan. The closing was scheduled for September 9, 2003. The final stock purchase price was to be $34,621,594 in cash plus a $577,778 check payable to petitioner to zero out his shareholder loan. On September 8, Fortrend deposited the $5 million "loan proceeds" from Moffatt into Nob Hill's Rabobank account. Also on September 8, petitioner deposited West Side's $39,949,373 ending cash balance into West Side's Rabobank account. The funds in these accounts earned overnight interest of $135 and $1,076, respectively. On September 9, 2003, the following events occurred. Nob Hill's Rabobank account was credited with the $29.9 million Rabobank loan proceeds and $35 million in cash from West Side's Rabobank account. From this account, Nob Hill transferred $34,621,594 into petitioner's Rabobank account; transferred $29.9 million to repay the Rabobank*236 loan (which bore no interest); transferred $5 million to repay the Moffatt loan (which bore no interest); transferred $150,000 to cover Rabobank's fees; and transferred $150,000 to West Side's Rabobank account. Petitioner immediately withdrew the entire balance of his Rabobank account and *224 deposited it into a personal account at Pershing Bank. When the dust settled at the end of the day, petitioner's Rabobank account had a balance of zero; petitioner's Pershing Bank account had a balance of $34,621,594; West Side's Rabobank account had a balance of $5,100,450; and Nob Hill's Rabobank account had a balance of $78,541. The next day, Nob Hill merged into West Side with West Side surviving. The $5,100,450 remaining in West Side's Rabobank account and the $78,541 remaining in Nob Hill's Rabobank account were later transferred into a West Side account at the Business Bank of California. West Side eventually transferred $4,766,000 out of that account to Fortrend affiliates and various promoters, including MidCoast, which on September 14, 2003, received the promised $1,180,000 for stepping away from the transaction. By late 2004, West Side's bank accounts had been drained of funds and were*237 closed. The background of Fortrend's strategy for eliminating West Side's 2003 tax liability begins in 2001. On March 7, 2001, United Finance Co. Ltd. (United Finance) purportedly contributed a portfolio of charged-off Japanese debt (Japanese debt portfolio) to Millennium in exchange for Millennium class B shares. (Millennium eventually became Nob Hill's, and then West Side's, parent.) The Japanese *225 debt portfolio was valued at $137,109. Two days later, United Finance sold the Millennium class B shares it had just acquired to Barka Limited, another Cayman Islands entity, for $137,000. Although Millennium had acquired the Japanese debt portfolio with property worth only $137,000, it claimed that its tax basis in that Portfolio was $314,704,037 as of June 30, 2003. On November 6, 2003, Millennium contributed to West Side a subset of the Japanese debt portfolio, consisting of two defaulted loans (Aoyama loans). The Aoyama loans had a purported tax basis of $43,323,069. Between November 6 and December 31, 2003, West Side wrote off the Aoyama loans as worthless. On its Form 1120, U.S. Corporation Income Tax Return, for 2003, West Side claimed a bad debt deduction of $42,480,622*238 on account of that writeoff. There is no evidence that West Side conducted meaningful business operations after September 10, 2003. It had no employees after that date. It reported no gross receipts, income, or business expenses relating to its supposed "debt collection" business. There is no evidence that it made any effort to collect the Aoyama loans or contracted with any third party to do so. Although Nob Hill had represented that West Side would "maintain a net worth of no less than $1 million" during the five-year period following the closing, West Side did not do so. The following table shows West Side's asset balances as reported to the IRS: Petitioner offered no evidence to show that the actual value of West Side's assets corresponded to these reported amounts. Given Fortrend's track record, we do not take these reported amounts at face value. West Side's Form 1120 for 2003 described it as incorporated in the Cayman Islands, doing business in Ireland, and having its address in Las Vegas, Nevada. It described its parent, Millennium, as incorporated in the*239 Cayman Islands and doing business in Ireland. West Side reported for 2003 total income of $66,116,708 and total deductions of $67,840,521. The deductions included salaries and wages of $8,315,605, other deductions of $16,542,448, and bad debt losses of $42,480,622. On January 9, 2006, West Side filed Form 1120X, Amended U.S. Corporation Income Tax Return, for 2003. Apart from correcting minor errors and listing a new address in Reno, Nevada, the amended return did not differ materially from the original. Both returns were prepared using the accrual method of accounting. *227 The IRS examined West Side's 2003 return. During the examination, the IRS was unable to find any assets or current sources of income for West Side; a March 28, 2008, memorandum details the steps the IRS took in search thereof. At the conclusion of the audit, the IRS disallowed the $42,480,622 bad debt deduction and $1,651,752 of the deduction claimed for legal and professional fees, on the ground that these fees were incurred in connection with a transaction entered into solely for tax avoidance. West Side's authorized representative executed successive Forms 872, Consent to Extend the Time to Assess Tax, that extended*240 to December 31, 2009, the time for assessing West Side's 2003 tax liability. On February 25, 2009, the IRS mailed a timely notice of deficiency to West Side determining a deficiency of $15,186,570 and penalties of $61,851 and $5,950,926 under Petitioner and Barbara Tricarichi jointly filed Form 1040, U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, for 2003 showing a Nevada address. This return reported a *228 tax liability of $5,303,886, resulting chiefly from gain on the sale of petitioner's West Side stock. On Schedule D, Capital Gains and Losses, petitioner reported the proceeds from this sale as $35,199,357, reflecting both the cash he received and the $577,778 check, resulting in a long-term capital gain of $35,170,793. The IRS did not audit petitioner's Form 1040, but it did open a transferee-liability examination concerning West Side's 2003 tax liabilities. Upon completion of that examination,*241 the IRS sent petitioner a Letter 902-T, Notice of Liability. This notice of liability was timely mailed to petitioner on June 25, 2012.*229 Petitioner timely petitioned this Court for review of the notice of liability.*242 Petitioner resided in Nevada when he filed his petition. The parties have stipulated that any appeal of this case will lie to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. Under Once the transferor's own tax liability is established, the Commissioner may assess that liability against a transferee under The Commissioner bears the burden of proving that a person is liable as a transferee. The burden of proof on factual issues may be shifted to the Commissioner if the taxpayer introduces "credible evidence" with respect thereto and satisfies other requirements. In the notice of deficiency to West Side, the IRS disallowed a deduction of $1,651,752 for legal and professional fees and a deduction of $42,480,622 for bad *233 debts. The notice also determined an accuracy-related penalty of $61,851 and a penalty of $5,950,926 for a "gross valuation misstatement" under The deduction for legal and professional fees was disallowed on the ground that these fees were incurred in connection with a tax-avoidance transaction. We conclude below that the transaction by which Nob Hill acquired petitioner's West Side stock was indeed entered into for the sole purpose of tax avoidance. Petitioner provided no evidence to establish that any of the disallowed professional fees were incurred in connection with some other, legitimate, transaction.*246 Petitioner has thus failed to carry his burden of proving that any portion of these fees constituted deductible business expenses of West Side under West Side's claimed $42,480,622 bad debt loss was based on the assertion that the two Aoyama loans had a tax basis of $43,323,069. That assertion is preposterous because those loans were a subset of a larger portfolio of loans that had *234 a tax basis of approximately $137,000. Petitioner introduced no credible evidence to substantiate the basis claimed.*247 or before August 17, 2006, a "gross valuation misstatement" exists where the basis claimed equals or exceeds 400% of the correct amount. In deciding matters of State law, we are generally guided by the decisions of the State's highest court. If there is no relevant precedent from the State's highest court, but there is relevant precedent from an intermediate appellate court, "the federal court must follow the state intermediate appellate court decision unless the federal court finds convincing evidence that the state's supreme court likely would not follow it." In 1990 Ohio enacted the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer*249 Act of 1984 (UFTA) as chapter 1336 of its Commercial Transactions Code. When interpreting Ohio statutes derived from uniform or model laws, the Ohio Supreme Court has regularly consulted opinions from sister State courts interpreting parallel provisions of their own statutes. *238 The Ohio Supreme Court has emphasized that the OUFTA is a remedial statute that should be liberally construed to protect creditors. OUFTA Two of the constructive fraud provisions apply in the case of a creditor "whose claim arose before the transfer was made." The third constructive fraud provision applies whether the creditor's claim arose "before or after the transfer was made." OUFTA Under all four OUFTA provisions, a "transfer" of some kind must have been made from West Side as tax debtor to petitioner as transferee. This issue is the focus of the parties' dispute and its resolution affects analysis of the other OUFTA tests. We may thus conveniently discuss it first. Petitioner insists that he was not literally a transferee of West Side's cash. According to petitioner, the cash he got came from Nob Hill, and the sources of that cash were the "loans" from Rabobank and Moffat. Nob Hill supposedly did not get West Side's cash, which it used to repay those "loans," until later that same day. For this*253 reason, petitioner contends that he received no West Side assets that could subject him to liability as a fraudulent transferee under Ohio law. Respondent contends that Ohio law would treat petitioner in substance as the transferee of West Side's cash. We agree with respondent for at least two reasons, each of which constitutes an alternative ground for sustaining his position. First, the "loans" from Rabobank and Moffat were shams, and West Side was the true source of the cash petitioner received. Second, the stock sale transaction would be *241 recharacterized under Ohio law as a de facto liquidation of West Side, with petitioner receiving in exchange for his stock a $35.2 million liquidating distribution.*254 In order to "finance" the purchase of West Side's stock from petitioner, Nob Hill "borrowed" $29.9 million from Rabobank and $5 million from Moffatt, a For-trend affiliate. Ohio courts have consistently allowed finders of fact, in appropriate circumstances, to disregard*255 transactions as shams. The Rabobank "loan" should be disregarded as a sham for at least three reasons. First, this "loan" was extended and repaid the same business day, literally moments after Nob Hill received the alleged loan proceeds. The essence of a loan is an extension of credit. It is obvious that the parties to this transaction did not desire to receive from Rabobank, and that Nob Hill did not in fact receive, a true extension of credit. *243 Second, the "loan" by its terms did*256 not bear interest. Instead, Rabobank received a "fee" of $150,000. This fee cannot represent interest: Since the "loan" was outstanding for less than a day, this fee would translate to annual interest of $54,750,000, almost twice the magnitude of the "loan." What Rabobank received was not interest on a loan but a fee for facilitating a tax shelter transaction. Rabobank was presumably able to charge such an outlandish fee because (1) from its vantage point, it was incurring reputational or business risks by accommodating a questionable transaction and (2) from petitioner's vantage point, the fee was being paid by the U.S. Treasury and not by him. Third, the Rabobank "loan" was fully collateralized by the cash in West Side's Rabobank account. Nob Hill's credit application described the risk rating on this loan as "N/A, or based on collateral." ("N/A" presumably means "not applicable.") Rabobank gave the loan an R-1 risk rating, which denotes a loan that is fully cash collateralized. The documents executed at the closing gave Rabobank control over West Side's Rabobank account and a "springing lien" on West Side's cash the moment it funded the loan. Cash is fungible, and the consideration*257 used to pay petitioner for his stock came in substance from West Side. For essentially the same reasons, the $5 million "loan" extended by Moffat must also be disregarded as a sham. Like the Rabobank loan, it bore no interest; *244 instead, Fortrend received a $5 million fee for assembling the entire tax shelter package. This "loan" did not represent a true extension of credit. It was simply an overnight shuffling of funds between two Fortrend entities designed to facilitate a tax-avoidance transaction. We conclude that an Ohio court would apply the sham transaction doctrine to these loans, and we find that both loans were in fact shams. The totality of the circumstances shows that the nominal lenders provided these funds, not as bona fide extenders of credit, but simply as accommodation parties recruited by Fortrend to conceal the true nature of what was happening. What actually happened is that Rabobank electronically transferred cash from West Side's Rabobank account through Nob Hill's Rabobank account into petitioner's Rabobank account; the "loans" were utterly unnecessary and had no purpose except obfuscation. Since both loans were shams, Rabobank's transfer of funds from West Side's*258 account into petitioner's account constituted a "direct or indirect * * * method of disposing of or parting with an asset." Respondent alternatively contends that the transfers among West Side, Nob Hill, and petitioner should be collapsed and recharacterized under Ohio law as a *245 partial or complete liquidation of West Side, with petitioner receiving in exchange for his shares a $35.2 million liquidating distribution ($34.6 million of cash plus a check for $577,778). Although the Ohio courts have not addressed this precise scenario, judicial interpretations of fraudulent transfer provisions similar to Ohio's establish that such transactions may be "collapsed" if the ultimate transferee had constructive knowledge that the debtor's debts would not be paid. The Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit recently addressed the application of New York's fraudulent transfer provisions to a Midco transaction resembling that here. It concluded that multiple transfers could be collapsed under State law if the conduct of the ultimate transferees "show[ed] that they had constructive knowledge of the*259 fraudulent scheme." The Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, addressing the application of North Carolina's UFTA provisions to another Midco transaction, similarly ruled that multiple transfers can be collapsed if the ultimate transferee has constructive *246 knowledge that the debtor's tax liabilities will not be paid. If the ultimate transferees are on "inquiry notice" and fail to conduct a sufficiently diligent investigation, "they are charged with the knowledge they would have acquired had they undertaken the reasonably diligent inquiry required by the known circumstances." The Ohio courts have regularly consulted and followed the decisions of sister courts when interpreting the provisions of model laws, including the OUFTA's predecessor. Constructive knowledge also includes "inquiry knowledge." "Inquiry knowledge" exists where the transferee was "aware of circumstances that should have led * * * [him] to inquire further into the circumstances of the transaction, but * * * [he] failed to make such inquiry." Petitioner's "due diligence" expert, Mr. Purcell, testified that a seller who receives an all-cash offer for his stock is mainly concerned with ensuring that he *248 gets paid. But he agreed that a seller in petitioner's position must nevertheless exercise a certain level of due diligence. Specifically, echoing the contemporaneous advice of Hahn Loeser's bankruptcy lawyers, Mr. Purcell testified that "due diligence did require [petitioner] and his advisors to investigate Fortrend's plans" for eliminating West Side's*262 2003 tax liabilities. Neither petitioner nor his advisers performed any due diligence into Fortrend or its track record. Neither petitioner nor his advisers performed any meaningful investigation into the "high basis/low value" scheme that Fortrend suggested for eliminating West Side's accrued 2003 tax liabilities. Petitioner and his advisers were clearly suspicious about Fortrend's scheme. But instead of digging deeper, they engaged in willful blindness and actively avoided learning the truth. Petitioner and his advisers knew that the transaction Fortrend was proposing was likely a "reportable" or "listed transaction." Before meeting with Fortrend, Hahn Loeser lawyers spent several days researching Though alerted by these warning signs, petitioner and his advisers failed to conduct a diligent inquiry into the "high basis/low value" debt strategy that Fortrend proposed for eliminating West Side's tax liabilities. PwC had advised that this appeared to be "a very aggressive*264 tax-motivated strategy" that was "subject to IRS challenge." PwC specifically declined to give "more likely than not" assurance on this point. Petitioner turned his back on this red flag. He testified that *250 Fortrend's tax-elimination strategy was of no concern to him because "that was their business." Mr. Purcell testified that petitioner could not have sought an opinion from PwC concerning Fortrend's bad debt strategy because, as of the closing date, Fortrend had put no specific high-basis/low-value plan on the table. The Court did not find this testimony persuasive. If ordinary diligence required petitioner and his advisers to investigate Fortrend's plan, as Mr. Purcell admitted, ordinary diligence required them to dig more deeply into what Fortrend's bad-debt strategy was. Fortrend obviously had to know, as of September 9, 2003, how it envisioned eliminating a $16.9 million corporate tax liability in fewer than 12 weeks. Reasonable diligence required petitioner and his advisers to insist that Fortrend explain its debt reduction strategy in sufficient detail to enable PwC to evaluate it. Numerous other features of Fortrend's proposal raised red flags that demanded further inquiry.*265 Fortrend offered to pay petitioner $11.2 million more than the net book value of West Side--representing a premium of 47%--while insisting that West Side's assets be reduced to cash. Petitioner was a sophisticated entrepreneur who had built a company and knew how to value a business. It should have provoked tremendous skepticism to discover that Fortrend was *251 willing to pay a 47% premium to acquire cash, which by definition cannot be worth more than its face value. The business purpose alleged for the transaction, moreover, made absolutely no sense. Petitioner and his advisers were told that Fortrend intended to put West Side into the "distressed debt" business. "[T]he business purpose for the acquisition," according to PwC's memo, was "based on the new business' need for cash to purchase the charged-off credit card debt as commercial financing for such purposes is apparently difficult." This explanation demanded further inquiry from any reasonably diligent person. In order to purchase West Side's stock, Fortrend needed to have cash or be able to borrow cash. If Fortrend had cash or could easily borrow cash, why would it want to acquire West Side in order to get cash? Moreover, as PwC noted*266 in a parenthetical, "most of the $40,000,000 cash in Westside will be distributed out of Westside and used by * * * [Fortrend] to pay back the cash borrowed to purchase * * * [petitioner's] Westside stock." Since there was going to be precious little cash left in West Side after the deal closed, the "business purpose" alleged for the transaction did not pass the straight-face test. The icing on the cake was the manner in which the purchase price was determined. Numerous spreadsheets prepared by petitioner's brother explicitly *252 state that the purchase price would equal West Side's closing cash balance plus 68.125% of its accrued tax liabilities. A sophisticated businessman like petitioner should have been curious as to why the purchase price for his company was being computed as a percentage of its tax liabilities, and why this was the only number that Fortrend seemed to care about. In effect, Fortrend was offering to assume a $16.9 million tax liability in exchange for a $5 million fee. Because the economics of the deal made it obvious that Fortrend was not going to pay West Side's tax liabilities, this fact alone put petitioner on "inquiry knowledge."*267 Petitioner testified that he had no contemporaneous understanding that the "Fortrend premium" was correlated to West Side's accrued*268 tax liabilities. The Court did not find this testimony credible. Petitioner actively participated in negotiating *253 Fortrend's fee. When confronted with his brother's spreadsheets that invariably compute Fortrend's fee as 31.875% of West Side's tax liabilities, petitioner became visibly uncomfortable. Petitioner's evasive testimony is further evidence that he had at least constructive knowledge that Fortrend planned to use a tax-avoidance scheme to eliminate West Side's tax liability. To conclude that the totality of these circumstances did not give rise to constructive knowledge on petitioner's part "would do away with the distinction between actual and constructive knowledge." In any event, we find as a fact that West Side was in substance completely liquidated. There is no evidence that West Side conducted any bona fide business operations after September 10, 2003. It had no employees after that date. It reported no gross receipts, income, or business expenses relating to its supposed *255 "debt collection" business. There is no evidence that it made any effort to collect the Aoyama loans or contracted with any third party to do so. Those loans were not operational assets of a business; they were simply tools for implementing a sham tax-avoidance scheme. In reality, West Side was nothing but a shell company immediately after the Midco deal closed. At the insistence of petitioner's lawyers, West Side was kept in formal existence for several years.*271 It filed tax returns; it cut checks to Fortrend affiliates; and it maintained a nominal cash balance. But keeping West Side in notional existence was simply a charade designed to create a defense to the precise argument the IRS is advancing here, an argument that petitioner and his attorneys knew the IRS would advance if this Midco transaction came to its attention. Such lawyerly stratagems cannot hide the fact that West Side had been liquidated in substance. It continued as a Potemkin village intended to deceive the IRS, just as the original was designed to fool Catherine the Great. In sum, we find that petitioner had constructive knowledge of Fortrend's tax-avoidance scheme; that the multiple steps of the Midco transaction must be collapsed; and that collapsing these steps yields a partial or complete liquidation of West Side from which petitioner received in exchange for his stock a $35.2 million liquidating distribution. OUFTA During April and May 2003, West Side received proceeds of $65 million from the PUCO settlement. This yielded a large gain that generated a tax liability of approximately $16.9 million. West Side thus had an accrued tax liability of *257 approximately $16.9 million before*273 September 9, 2003, the day the Midco deal closed. The OUFTA defines the term "claim" expansively to mean "a right to payment." Petitioner does not seriously dispute that the IRS had a "claim" against West Side before the stock sale. Rather, he argues that the IRS had no claim against West Side's Federal tax liability had accrued by late May 2003. The IRS had a claim against West Side at that time. The transfer of West Side's assets to petitioner occurred on September 9, 2003. Respondent's claim thus "arose before the transfer was made." OUFTA OUFTA On September 9, 2003, West Side consisted of nothing but cash and tax liabilities. The value of petitioner's stock thus equaled West Side's net asset value, which was about $23.7 million (cash equivalents of $40.6 million minus accrued tax liabilities of $16.9 million). West Side transferred $35.2 million to petitioner in exchange for his shares. Since his shares were worth only $23.7 million, West *259 Side*275 did not receive "a reasonably equivalent value in exchange for the transfer." OUFTA The only other thing West Side got at the closing was a representation from Nob Hill that it would "cause" West Side to pay its 2003 tax liabilities in full. As we have found previously, this representation was not worth the paper it was printed on. Nob Hill was a shell company, incorporated offshore, with no assets in the United States (or anywhere else). Nob Hill's parent, Millennium, was also a Cayman Islands company with no assets in the United States. Both were affiliates of a tax shelter promoter. The value of Nob Hill's promise was zero. OUFTA As with petitioner's argument about when the IRS claim arose, the precise timing of the back-to-back cash transfers*276 is immaterial under our analysis. We have found that the various transactions must be collapsed for purposes of determining *260 the OUFTA's proper application. Because collapsing the transactions yields a transfer of cash from West Side to petitioner, West Side's solvency must be judged on that basis. Under OUFTA In sum, we find that the IRS claim arose before West Side's assets were transferred to petitioner; that West Side made this transfer without having received "a reasonably equivalent value in exchange"; and that this transfer caused West Side to become insolvent. Petitioner is thus liable for West Side's tax debts under OUFTA Even if he can be held liable for West Side's unpaid tax, petitioner contends that the penalties assessed against West Side cannot be collected from him as its "transferee" under Ohio*278 law. According to petitioner, "the distressed debt transaction giving rise to those penalties was not entered into until after petitioner sold his stock and petitioner had nothing whatsoever to do with that transaction." In support of this proposition he relies on In We find the Finally, the OUFTA provides that a transfer may be held fraudulent as to future as well as present creditors. Liability as to future creditors exists if the transfer was made without the debtor's receiving "a reasonably equivalent value in exchange" and the debtor "intended to incur, or believed or reasonably should have believed that he would incur, debts beyond his ability to pay as they became *263 due." OUFTA For these reasons, we conclude that petitioner is liable under Ohio law as a transferee both with respect to West Side's unpaid tax deficiency*280 and with respect to the penalties properly assessed against it. We have reached the same conclusion concerning transferee liability for penalties under the fraudulent transfer laws of other States. Whether a person is a "transferee" within the meaning of In determining "transferee" status for Federal law purposes, the Ninth Circuit has recently held that a court must consider whether to disregard the form of the transaction by which the transfer occurred. [W]hen the Commissioner claims a taxpayer was "the shareholder of a dissolved corporation" for purposes of In performing this "substance over form" inquiry, the Ninth Circuit does not engage in a rigid two-step analysis. Rather, it focuses "holistically on whether the transaction had any practical economic effects other than the creation of income tax losses." For the reasons discussed previously, we find that the transaction by which Nob Hill "purchased" petitioner's West Side stock relied on sham transactions, had no economic substance, had no bona fide business purpose, and was entered into solely to evade West Side's Federal and Ohio tax liabilities. In certain circumstances the IRS may be required to show that it exhausted all reasonable efforts to collect the tax liability from the transferor before proceeding against the transferee. In 2008, during the course of its examination of West Side, the IRS searched for any existing West Side assets upon which to levy. Unsurprisingly, it *267 found none. In 2008, as in late September 2003, West Side had no meaningful assets. What little cash it had post closing was quickly dissipated by payments to Fortrend, MidCoast, and their tax shelter promoter affiliates. Millennium, West Side's postclosing parent,*284 was likewise immune from IRS collection efforts because it was a Cayman Islands company with no assets in the United States. We find that the IRS acted completely reasonably in declining to take further, useless, steps to collect this liability from West Side. Petitioner also argues that the IRS failed to make collection efforts against Moffatt, whose $5 million "loan" was allegedly repaid with some of West Side's cash. We have already determined that the Moffatt loan was a sham. In substance, West Side's cash went directly to petitioner, and the Moffatt "loan" was simply an overnight shuffling of funds between two Fortrend affiliates. Under these circumstances, it is not certain that Moffatt was a transferee of West Side. Even if Moffatt were thought to be a transferee of West Side, collection efforts against it would almost certainly have been futile. As far as the trial revealed, Moffatt was a shadowy entity that appeared and quickly disappeared. There is no evidence in the record about what assets Moffatt had or where they were. It is a fair assumption that Fortrend established this affiliate, like Nob Hill, *268 Millennium, and its other affiliates, in a manner that effectively immunized*285 them from the reach of U.S. tax authorities. In any event, the IRS is not required to pursue collection efforts against Transferee A before seeking to collect from Transferee B. "Transferee liability is several" under We accordingly conclude (1) that petitioner is liable under Ohio law for the full amount of West Side's 2003 tax deficiency and the penalties and interest in connection therewith and (2) that the IRS may collect this aggregate liability from petitioner as a "transferee" under To reflect the foregoing,Tax year Asset balance as of 12/31 2003 $1,829,395 2004 313,300 2005 1,171,609 2006 942,589 2007 -0- Deficiency Penalty Penalty $15,186,570 $61,851 $5,950,926
1. For Fortrend, see
2. Unless otherwise noted, all statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code as in effect at all relevant times, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. We round all dollar amounts to the nearest dollar.↩
3. Petitioner's effort to strike this language from the engagement letter was ultimately unsuccessful. Mr. Stovsky insisted on retaining this language and, after further negotiations, petitioner acquiesced.↩
4. West Side's balance sheet at the relevant time listed $302,357 in assets (less $227,793 in accumulated depreciation) and accounts receivable of $50,936 and $116,004. The assets consisted of computers, software, furniture/fixtures, office equipment, shop equipment, and leasehold improvements. LXV did not assume any of the liabilities reflected on West Side's balance sheet.↩
5. The $29.9 million loan was provided through a Rabobank subsidiary, Utrecht-America Finance Co. For simplicity, we will refer to these entities collectively as Rabobank. Rabobank frequently partnered with Fortrend in executing Midco deals. It has been involved in numerous transactions previously considered by this Court.
6. In his petition, petitioner challenged the timeliness of the notice of liability. The Commissioner generally must assess transferee liability within one year after expiration of the period of limitations on the transferor, but the applicable period of limitations may be extended by agreement.
7. In addition to the amounts listed in the notice of liability, petitioner proposed as a finding of fact (to which respondent did not object) that respondent determined "assessed interest" of $8,475,655 as well as "accrued interest and penalties" of $12,362,425. In their posttrial briefs the parties have not addressed the proper computation of interest or the existence of penalties other than those determined by respondent under
8. Whether the burden has shifted matters only in the case of an evidentiary tie.
9. Petitioner argues that a memorandum solicited by Millennium from the Seyfarth Shaw law firm was sufficient to substantiate the bad-debt deduction. We give no weight to that memorandum. It was based on assumed facts provided by Mr. McNabola; those assumed facts are contradicted by the record evidence in this case; and the memorandum explicitly states that no one but Millennium can rely upon it. Seyfarth Shaw gained notoriety for issuing bogus tax-shelter opinions, and this document seems par for the course.
10. Petitioner disputes his liability for the penalties principally on the ground that the penalties for which West Side is liable cannot be collected from him as its transferee. We address this argument
11. Ohio Supreme Court opinions considering the treatment of uniform acts by courts of other States include
12. Respondent advances the "economic substance" and "substance over form" doctrines as additional theories to support his position, contending that the Ohio courts would disregard the form of the Midco transaction because it was not a true multiparty transaction, had no business purpose, and was engineered for the sole purpose of avoiding West Side's Federal and Ohio tax liabilities. The Ohio courts have recognized and employed both doctrines.
13. Petitioner argues that Ohio law does not permit transactions to be collapsed, citing
14. Under regulations in effect during 2003, "[a] position * * * [was] considered to have a realistic possibility of being sustained on its merits" if a well-informed tax professional would conclude that it had "approximately a one in three, or greater, likelihood of being sustained on its merits."
15. In the stock purchase agreement, Nob Hill represented that it would "cause * * * [West Side] to satisfy fully all United States * * * taxes, penalties and interest required to be paid by * * * [West Side]." This representation was not worth the paper it was printed on. Petitioner and his advisers knew that Nob Hill was a shell corporation, that West Side would have virtually no assets left after the closing, and that neither would have the wherewithal to pay a $16.9 million tax liability. And because Nob Hill and Millennium (its parent) were offshore companies with no U.S. assets, this representation was completely unenforceable. The language in the stock purchase agreement allocating West Side's 2003 tax obligation to Nob Hill did not relieve petitioner of his duty to inquire.
16. As the Second Circuit explained in
17.
18. Respondent advances the alternative contention that Nob Hill was a direct transferee of West Side and that petitioner has transferee-of-transferee liability as a subsequent transferee of Nob Hill.
19. The result would be the same if the IRS' claim were thought to have arisen after West Side's assets were transferred to petitioner. OUFTA
20. In
21. At least two other Circuits have previously ruled similarly.
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Jean A. Stanko v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 209 F.3d 1082 ( 2000 )
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Stuart v. Commissioner , 144 T.C. 235 ( 2015 )
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Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors of Grand Eagle ... , 313 B.R. 219 ( 2004 )
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Ryman v. Sears, Roebuck and Co. , 505 F.3d 993 ( 2007 )
Estelle Benante, as Surviving Wife of Carl Benante, ... , 477 F.2d 553 ( 1973 )
Humana Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 881 F.2d 247 ( 1989 )
Sterling Trading, LLC v. United States , 553 F. Supp. 2d 1152 ( 2008 )