David H. HILLMAN; Suzanne Hillman, Petitioners-Appellees, v. INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, Respondent-Appellant.
No. 00-1915
United States Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit
July 30, 2001
263 F.3d 338
Decided July 30, 2001.
Before WILKINS and WILLIAMS, Circuit Judges, and HAMILTON, Senior Circuit Judge.
Reversed and remanded by published opinion. Senior Judge HAMILTON wrote Parts I and II of the opinion, in which Judge WILKINS and Judge WILLIAMS joined. Judge WILLIAMS wrote Part III of the opinion, in which Judge WILKINS joined. Senior Judge HAMILTON wrote a dissenting opinion with respect to Part III.
OPINION
HAMILTON, Senior Circuit Judge:
I.
In mid-July 1997, David and Suzanne Hillman (the Hillmans) received written notice from the Commissioner of the United States Internal Revenue Service (the Commissioner) that a deficiency existed in the amount of federal income taxes they had paid for taxable years 1993 and 1994. According to the notice, the Hillmans still owed the government $294,556.00 in federal income taxes for taxable year 1993 and $309,696.00 in federal income taxes for taxable year 1994. The Hillmans contested the full amounts of these deficiencies by filing a timely petition for redetermination in the United States Tax Court (the Tax Court). At the time the Hillmans filed their petition, they were residents of Bethesda, Maryland.
The parties submitted this case to the Tax Court on the following stipulated facts. During taxable year 1993, David Hillman was the sole shareholder of Southern Management Corporation (SMC), a corporation taxed under Subchapter S of the Internal Revenue Code (IRC).1 During taxable year 1994, David Hillman owned 94.43 percent of SMC‘s stock.
SMC provided real estate management services to approximately ninety entities, including joint ventures, limited partnerships, and Subchapter S corporations, which were involved in real estate rental activities.2 At all times relevant to the issues in this appeal, David Hillman
During taxable years 1993 and 1994, the Hillmans did not participate in the activities of the Passthrough Entities. The Hillmans did, however, participate in the activities of SMC by performing real estate management services SMC had contracted to perform for the Passthrough Entities. Indeed, David Hillman materially participated in SMC‘s real estate management activity in excess of 500 hours.3
The Hillmans reported as income the compensation paid to them for their real estate management services offered through SMC for taxable years 1993 and 1994. In computing their taxable income for 1993 and 1994, the Hillmans deducted the total amounts of the management fee expenses of the Passthrough Entities for taxable years 1993 and 1994 from the gross income they received during those years through SMC for providing the management services that gave rise to the management fee expenses. The notice of deficiency disallowed this deduction, thus resulting in the claimed tax deficiencies at issue in this appeal.
On April 18, 2000, the Tax Court entered a final decision fully in favor of the Hillmans. The Tax Court accompanied its final decision with a published opinion holding the Hillmans properly deducted the management fee expenses of the Passthrough Entities from their related management fee income for purposes of lowering the amounts of their taxable income for taxable years 1993 and 1994. The Commissioner filed a timely appeal. We have appellate jurisdiction pursuant to
II.
In this appeal, we are presented with the following question of law: May the Hillmans legally deduct their passive management fee expenses from their related nonpassive management fee income for purposes of lowering their taxable income for taxable years 1993 and 1994? We review this question of law de novo. Balkissoon v. Commissioner, 995 F.2d 525, 527 (4th Cir. 1993).
The Commissioner insists this question is easily answered by applying the plain language of
(a) Disallowance.—
(1) In General.—If for any taxable year the taxpayer is described in paragraph (2), neither—
(A) the passive activity loss, nor
(B) the passive activity credit, for the taxable year shall be allowed.
(2) Persons described.—The following are described in this paragraph:
(A) any individual, estate, or trust,
(B) any closely held C corporation, and
(C) any personal service corporation.
The Hillmans do not dispute, nor could they, that straightforward application of the plain language of
Self-charged interest.—A further issue with respect to portfolio income arises where an individual receives interest income on debt of a passthrough entity in which he owns an interest. Under certain circumstances, the interest may essentially be “self-charged,” and thus lack economic significance. For example, assume that a taxpayer charges $100 of interest on a loan to an S corporation in which he is the sole shareholder. In form, the transaction could be viewed as giving rise to offsetting payments of interest income and passthrough interest expense, although in economic substance the taxpayer has paid the interest to himself.
Under these circumstances, it is not appropriate to treat the transaction as giving rise both to portfolio interest income and to passive interest expense. Rather, to the extent that a taxpayer receives interest income with respect to
a loan to a passthrough entity in which he has an ownership interest, such income should be allowed to offset the interest expense passed through to the taxpayer from the activity for the same taxable year. * * *
The conferees anticipate that Treasury regulations will be issued to provide for the above result. Such regulations may also, to the extent appropriate, identify other situations in which netting of the kind described above is appropriate with respect to a payment to a taxpayer by an entity in which he has an ownership interest. Such netting should not, however, permit any passive deductions to offset nonpassive income except to the extent of the taxpayer‘s allocable share of the specific payment at issue.
H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 99-841, at II-146-47 (1986), U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1986, 4075, 4234. The Secretary has promulgated no permanent regulations exempting self-charged items of income and expenses from operation of
We hold
The Hillmans’ argument calling for us to ignore the plain language of
The Hillmans also cannot avail themselves of the second described exception to the Plain Meaning Rule—that literal application of the statutory language at issue produces an absurd result. Literal application of the plain language of
In summary, we hold that
Judge Wilkins and Judge Williams join in this part of the opinion.
WILLIAMS, Circuit Judge:
III.
Accordingly, we reverse the decision of the Tax Court and remand for the Tax Court to consider the alternative argument raised below by the Hillmans.6
Judge WILKINS joins in this part of the opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Remand of this case in order for the Tax Court to address the Hillmans’ alternative argument is inappropriate. Accordingly, I dissent from Part III of the court‘s opinion.
Because of our conclusion that petitioners are entitled to self-charged treatment with respect to the management fees, we find it unnecessary to address their alternative argument that the partnerships properly reported two activities to petitioner (or to the upper tier partnerships or S Corporations). Hillman v. Commissioner, 114 T.C. 103, 115 n. 9 (2000).
If, as the dissent suggests, the Hillmans had failed to raise a substantive legal argument in their briefs and, instead, waited to raise it until oral argument, I might agree that the argument is waived. Instead, however, the issue is one of relief—whether the Hillmans have lost the opportunity to have the district court address the argument that was specifically preserved by the Tax Court when it ruled in their favor on one of the bases they presented at trial.
Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 28(a)(10) requires that the appellant‘s brief contain “a short conclusion stating the precise relief sought.” Rule 28(b) requires the appellee‘s brief to “conform to the requirements of Rule 28(a)(1)-(9) and (11)” but patently omits the requirement that the appellee‘s brief conform with Rule 28(a)(10). Charles Alan Wright et al., Federal Practice and Procedure § 3974.2 (1999) (“[A]ppellate Rule 28(b) provides that it shall conform to the requirements of paragraphs (1) to (9) and (11) of Rule 28(a) for the brief of the appellant.... The one conspicuous omission from the listing in Rule 28(b) is the paragraph that requires an appellant‘s brief to contain a short conclusion stating the precise relief sought.” (internal quotation marks omitted)). Therefore, it was the Commissioner‘s burden and not the Hillmans’ to request the appropriate relief. As a result, the Hillmans should not now be penalized for that which they were not required to do in the first instance.
Moreover, the dissent conflates the Hillmans’ failure to request relief with failure to raise a substantive legal argument. As the dissent notes, this Court normally considers Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 28(b) provides, inter alia, that an appellee‘s brief must conform to the requirements of Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 28(a)(5) and (a)(9)(A). Thus, an appellee‘s brief must contain a statement of all issues presented for review, Fed. R.App. P. 28(a)(5), and argument with rearguments not raised in the appellant‘s opening brief to be waived. See Edwards v. City of Goldsboro, 178 F.3d 231, 241 n. 6 (4th Cir. 1999) (“Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 28(a)(9)(A) requires that the argument section of an appellant‘s opening brief must contain the appellant‘s contentions and the reasons for them, with citations to the authorities and parts of the record on which the appellant relies.... Failure to comply with the specific dictates of this rule with respect to a particular claim triggers abandonment of that claim on appeal.” (internal citations and quotation marks omitted)). Likewise, Rule 28(b) requires Rule 28(a)(9) compliance by appellees at the risk of abandonment of an argument. Here, however, the Hillmans did not fail to raise a substantive legal argument; instead, at oral argument, the Hillmans informed this Court of the appropriate relief should their argument on the merits fail. Specifically, the Hillmans asked that the case be remanded for resolution of an argument raised before the Tax Court upon which the Tax Court had reserved ruling. The Hillmans’ request for alternative relief does not constitute a substantive legal argument. Further, granting the Hillmans’ request for a remand does not countenance “sandbagging” this Court or the Commissioner. Neither does it require this Court or the Commissioner to consider complex legal issues requiring detailed analysis without proper notice. Accordingly, we conclude that the Hillmans’ failure to specify in their briefs the alternative relief they desired does not prevent us from granting such relief. Cf. Hernandez v. Starbuck, 69 F.3d 1089, 1093 (10th Cir. 1995) (“Because the appellant comes to the court of appeals as the challenger, he bears the burden of demonstrating the alleged error and the precise relief sought.... Though Fed. R.App. P. 28(b) requires the appellee‘s brief to contain arguments addressing the issues raised by the appellant, we have never characterized the appellee‘s obligation in terms of a categorical imperative.“).
Here, the Hillmans, as appellees, did not include their alternative argument in the “Issues Presented” section of their appellate brief; nor did they address the argument in the “Argument” section of their appellate brief. Rather, they merely requested, for the first time at oral argument, that in the event the panel rejected the legal basis upon which the Tax Court ruled in their favor, the panel remand the case for the Tax Court to consider their alternative argument that they made below, but which the Tax Court expressly did not reach. Under Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 28(b) and Edwards, 178 F.3d at 241 n. 6, such a belated request is insufficient to preserve the Hillmans’ alternative argument for appellate review, and, a fortiori, remand. As for the substantive legal argument/relief distinction made by the majority, common sense dictates that if the Hillmans waived their right to have this court consider their alternative argument on appeal, they have also waived their right to have the district court now, following resolution of the appeal, consider it in the first instance.
For these reasons, I would reverse the Tax Court‘s decision without honoring the Hillmans’ unpreserved request for a remand.
