SUPERIOR TRADING, LLC, JETSTREAM BUSINESS LIMITED, TAX MATTERS PARTNER, ET AL. v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE
Docket Nos. 20171-07, 20230–07, 20232-07, 20243-07, 20337-07, 20338-07, 20652-07, 20653-07, 20654-07, 20655-07, 20867-07, 20870-07, 20871-07, 20936-07, 19543-08
United States Tax Court
September 1, 2011
137 T.C. 70
WHERRY, Judge
To reflect the foregoing,
Decision will be entered under Rule 155.
SUPERIOR TRADING, LLC, JETSTREAM BUSINESS LIMITED, TAX MATTERS PARTNER, ET AL.,1 PETITIONERS v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, RESPONDENT
Docket Nos. 20171-07, 20230–07, 20232-07, 20243-07, 20337-07, 20338-07, 20652-07, 20653-07, 20654-07, 20655-07, 20867-07, 20870-07, 20871-07, 20936-07, 19543-08. Filed September 1, 2011.
Lawrence C. Letkewicz and Laurie A. Nasky, for respondent.
WHERRY, Judge: Each of these consolidated cases constitutes a partnership-level proceeding under the unified audit and litigation provisions of the Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982, Pub. L. 97-248, sec. 402(a), 96 Stat. 648, commonly referred to as TEFRA. The issues for decision are: (1) Whether a bona fide partnership was formed for Federal tax purposes between a Brazilian retailer and a British Virgin Islands company for purposes of servicing and collecting distressed consumer receivables owed to the retailer; (2) whether this Brazilian retailer made a valid contribution of the consumer receivables to the purported partnership under section 721;2 (3) whether these receivables should receive carryover basis treatment under section 723; (4) whether the Brazilian retailer‘s claimed contribution and subsequent redemption from the purported partnership should be collapsed into a single transaction and recharacterized as a sale of the receivables; and (5) whether the section 6662 accuracy-related penalties apply.
Background
The alphabet soup of tax-motivated structured transactions has acquired yet another flavor—“DAD“. DAD is an acronym for distressed asset/debt, the essential transaction at the core of these consolidated partnership-level proceedings. See the Commissioner‘s “Distressed Asset/Debt Tax Shelters/Coordinated Issue Paper“, LMSB-04-0407-031 (Apr. 18, 2007). It
A Son-of-BOSS transaction seeks to exploit the narrow definition of a partnership liability under
By contrast, a DAD deal is more subtle. Instead of a claimed permanent tax loss manufactured out of whole cloth, a DAD deal synthesizes an evanescent one. The loss is proclaimed under authority of sections 723 and 704(c) from an alleged contribution of a built-in loss asset by a “tax indifferent” party to a purported partnership with a “tax sensitive” one. However, this loss is preordained to be nullified by a matching gain upon the dissolution of the venture. Consequently, the tax benefits sought by the tax sensitive party are, absent other factors, confined to timing gains. Moreover, claiming these benefits requires sufficient “outside basis“, which, in turn, entails an investment of real assets.
Because of a DAD deal‘s comparatively modest grab and highly stylized garb, we can safely address its sought-after tax characterization without resorting to sweeping economic substance arguments. Those arguments have underpinned the judicial resolution of statutory provisions that have protected the public fisc against the attacks of Son-of-BOSS opportunists. See, e.g., Cemco Investors LLC v. United States, 515 F.3d 749, 752 (7th Cir. 2008); New Phoenix Sunrise Corp. & Subs. v. Commissioner, 132 T.C. 161, 185 (2009), affd. 408 Fed. Appx. 908 (6th Cir. 2010); Jade Trading, LLC v. United States,
FINDINGS OF FACT
I. Introduction
All of the consolidated cases involve, directly or indirectly, Warwick Trading, LLC (Warwick), an Illinois limited liability company. Our narrative begins on May 7, 2003, when Warwick entered into a Contribution Agreement (contribution agreement) with Lojas Arapua, S.A. (Arapua), a Brazilian retailer in bankruptcy reorganization.3
Arapua, a public company headquartered in Sao Paulo, Brazil, was at one time the largest retailer of household appliances and consumer electronics in Brazil.4 Arapua‘s growth had been driven, in large part, by its consumer credit program. Arapua had been the first company in Brazil to grant credit directly to its retail customers in order to increase sales.
Many of Arapua‘s credit customers had become delinquent in their payments, and some of these delinquent accounts, constituting Arapua‘s past due receivables, were the subject of the contribution agreement. Pursuant to this agreement, Arapua purported to contribute to Warwick certain past due consumer receivables in exchange for 99 percent of the membership interests in Warwick. At different times during the latter half of 2003, Warwick, in turn, claims to have contributed varying portions of the Brazilian consumer receivables acquired from Arapua in exchange for a 99-percent member-
Individual U.S. investors acquired membership interests in the various trading companies through yet another set of limited liability companies (holding companies). To accomplish this, Warwick contributed virtually all of its membership interests in each given trading company to the corresponding holding company. During the years at issue, Jetstream Business Limited (Jetstream), then a British Virgin Islands company, was the managing member of Warwick and of each of the trading companies and holding companies. The tax matters or other participating partners of Warwick and the trading companies have brought these consolidated actions on behalf of their respective entities.
All of these entities elected to be treated as partnerships for Federal income tax purposes and claimed a carryover basis in the Brazilian consumer receivables that were the subject of the contribution agreement. During 2003 and 2004, each of the trading companies wrote off almost the entire basis in its share of the Brazilian consumer receivables ostensibly resulting in business bad debt deductions and, in one instance, a capital loss.
Individual U.S. investors holding membership interests in a given trading company, through the corresponding holding company, claimed the benefits of these deductions on their respective Federal income tax returns. Warwick also claimed losses on the sale of membership interests in the holding companies to the individual U.S. investors. Pursuant to TEFRA‘S unified partnership-level audit provisions, respondent issued notices of final partnership administrative adjustment (FPAAS) denying these deductions and attacking the characterization of the transactions engaged in by Warwick and the trading companies on several grounds including lack of economic substance, the partnership antiabuse rules of section 1.701-2, Income Tax Regs., the disguised sale rules of section 707(a)(2)(B), and the transfer pricing rules of section 482.6 Further, the FPAAS adjusted the partnerships’
Petitioners timely petitioned the Court challenging the FPAAS. A trial was conducted the week of October 5, 2009, in Chicago, Illinois.
II. Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood
The common thread that runs through these consolidated cases is a tax lawyer whose credentials and claimed expertise extend beyond tax law. Mr. John E. Rogers (Rogers) has a B.A. in mathematics and physics from the University of Notre Dame, a J.D. from Harvard Law School, and an M.B.A. from the University of Chicago, with a concentration in international finance and econometrics.
Rogers started his professional career in 1969 at the now-dissolved accounting firm Arthur Andersen, where he rose through the ranks to eventually become an equity partner. Rogers left Arthur Andersen in 1991 and went to work for a startup medical device company called Reddy Laboratories. The venture failed after the Food and Drug Administration denied the company‘s application for a license. In 1992 Rogers joined FMC Corp., a $5 billion company with operations in over 100 countries. Rogers served as FMC Corp.‘s director of taxes and assistant treasurer through 1997.
In 1998 Rogers became an equity partner in Altheimer & Gray, a full-service law firm headquartered in Chicago, Illinois, with offices in Eastern Europe. Altheimer & Gray dissolved in 2003, and Rogers joined the Seyfarth Shaw, LLP (Seyfarth Shaw), law firm in July of that year. Rogers began as an income partner at Seyfarth Shaw but had become an equity partner in a little over a year. Rogers left Seyfarth Shaw at the end of May 2008, when he opened his own firm, Rogers & Associates.7
After allegedly researching and testing several different countries, Rogers decided to begin with Brazil in 2003. Rogers attributes this choice to the then-underdeveloped nature of the Brazilian collections industry and the rapidly appreciating Brazilian currency. He settled on Arapua receivables for his initial foray, again after prospecting several large retail chains and their respective accounts receivables of varying vintage. He set up a tiered partnership structure for acquiring the Arapua receivables, consisting largely of postdated checks. Rogers contends that the tiered partnership structure was optimal given his envisaged exit strategy—a “roll up” followed by an initial public offering.
III. DAD‘s Army
The deal began with the formation of Warwick and the transfer of distressed receivables from Arapua to Warwick. At the same time, Rogers formed a set of trading companies and a set of holding companies. As individual U.S. investors were found, Warwick transferred a portion of the receivables it had acquired from Arapua to a trading company, in exchange for a supermajority interest in the trading company. Concurrently, Warwick exchanged most of its interest
After a brief period, the trading companies claimed partially worthless debt deductions (and, in one instance, a capital loss) with respect to the receivables in which they held interests. The trading companies also claimed miscellaneous deductions for amortization and collection expenses. All deductions that the trading companies claimed flowed to the individual investors through the holding companies.8 Warwick itself claimed losses on the sales of interests in the holding companies and deductions for amortization.
Rogers and petitioners describe the venture as one in which Arapua partnered with the following for servicing and collection of its “distressed” but “semi-performing” receivables. In the first instance, Arapua ostensibly partnered with Warwick; and through Warwick, with the trading companies; and subsequently, through the trading companies, with the respective holding companies; and through the holding companies, with the ultimate individual U.S. taxpayers.
As a consequence of this tiered partnership arrangement, Rogers and petitioners argue that pursuant to section 723, Arapua‘s tax basis in its receivables carried over to Warwick. Rogers and petitioners claim this basis equals the receivables’ face amount without any downward adjustment to account for their “distressed” quality. At some point, shortly after transferring its receivables, Arapua was redeemed out of its purported partnership with Warwick. However, because Warwick had not made a
Soon thereafter, Warwick contributed the distressed receivables to various trading companies.9 Under section 723, Warwick claimed a basis in its partnership interest in each trading company in the amount of Warwick‘s basis in the contributed receivables. This, in turn, equaled the receiv-
Finally, the various trading companies sold, exchanged, or otherwise liquidated the distressed receivables through an “accommodating” party for the receivables’ fair market value. The resulting loss, equal to the spread between the face amount and the fair market value of the receivables, allegedly tiered up, and was allocated proportionately to the individual U.S. taxpayers holding membership interests in the holding companies under authority of section 704(c) and section 1.704-3(a)(7), Income Tax Regs.
For a U.S. taxpayer to be able to report his allocable share of the loss on his individual tax return, he must have had, pursuant to section 704(d), adequate adjusted outside basis in his partnership interest in his or her holding company. Therefore, the individual U.S. taxpayers were required to contribute a substantial amount of cash or other significant assets, such as an investment portfolio, to the holding companies to generate the required outside bases for section 704(d) purposes. Each individual U.S. taxpayer‘s outside basis was subsequently reduced in the amount of the allowed loss from the sale or exchange of the distressed receivables. Consequently, the individual U.S. taxpayer was, absent actual unintended and unsought partnership economic losses, destined to later have gain upon the redemption of his partnership interest. Thus, any tax savings afforded by Rogers’ tax strategy would be limited to deferral benefits. Nonetheless, these timing gains can be substantial and build quickly.
OPINION
I. Shutting the Barn Door
As noted, the DAD deal delineated above entails a tax indifferent party purportedly contributing a built-in loss asset to a partnership, followed by a recognition of the built-in loss and its allocation to one or more tax sensitive parties. Without commenting upon whether the sought-after tax characterization of this deal could ever have materialized under prior law, we note that “Recent legislation has limited the ability to transfer losses among partners.” Santa Monica Pictures, LLC v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2005-104 n.81.
Because the transactions that are the subject of these consolidated cases took place before October 22, 2004, none of the changes made by the AJCA to sections 704, 734, and 743 apply to them. Our discussion, therefore, will be based upon the prior state of the law.
II. Competing Characterizations
Petitioners contend that “In 1954, congress [sic] enacted
Petitioners cite “Two seminal cases, Crane v. Commissioner, 331 U.S. 1 (1947), and Commissioner v. Tufts, 461 U.S. 300 (1983), [to] establish the fundamental proposition that taxpayers get basis in assets purchased with borrowed money and may claim depreciation deductions—tax losses—on that basis.” Consequently, petitioners find nothing illogical or unnatural in a result where tax losses exceed a taxpayer‘s economic losses.
Petitioners refer us to ”Frank Lyon Co. v. United States, 435 U.S. 561, 583-84 (1978), [where] the Supreme Court approved depreciation deductions for a taxpayer who borrowed virtually the entire purchase price to acquire a building“. Petitioners assert that the Supreme Court approved an outcome in which the taxpayer “leased the building back to its original owner for virtually its entire life, leading to deductions—also known as tax losses—that vastly exceeded the taxpayer‘s cash investment.”
Respondent counters that the “deductions and losses, claimed in the years 2003 and 2004, should be disallowed for * * * [several] reasons.” Among the grounds that respondent advances is the argument that “The transactions engaged in by the trading companies had no independent economic substance.”
We agree with petitioners that the mere fact that tax losses from a transaction exceed the accompanying economic losses does not render the transaction devoid of economic substance. Respondent contends at length that “Even assuming the most optimistic of revenue projections advanced by petitioners, the evidence is clear that the trading companies had no chance, let alone a realistic chance, of earning a single dollar of pre-tax profit.” We are not so easily convinced. Petitioners introduced considerable evidence at trial, some of it quite credible, that servicing of distressed Brazilian consumer receivables was attracting the interest and investment dollars of legitimate and sophisticated U.S. investors during 2003 and 2004. Moreover, the actual receivables that the purported partnerships acquired had, in fact, generated nontrivial revenues,11 though it was
However, we need not resolve these fact-intensive issues in order to rule on Warwick‘s and the trading companies’ claimed losses and decide these cases.
III. Validity of Contribution
Two necessary conditions for the allocation of the built-in losses, in the Arapua receivables, away from Arapua and to the holding companies are: that Arapua be deemed to have formed a partnership with Jetstream; and that Arapua made a contribution, rather than a sale of the receivables, to that partnership.
Whether a valid partnership exists for purposes of Federal tax law is governed by Federal law. See Commissioner v. Culbertson, 337 U.S. 733, 737 (1949); Commissioner v. Tower, 327 U.S. 280, 287-288 (1946); Frazell v. Commissioner, 88 T.C. 1405, 1412 (1987). Labels applied to a transaction for purposes of local law are not binding for purposes of Federal tax law. See Commissioner v. Estate of Bosch, 387 U.S. 456, 457 (1967).
For Warwick to have constituted a partnership between Arapua and Jetstream for Federal tax law purposes at the time that Arapua transferred its receivables, Arapua and Jetstream should have had a common intention to collectively pursue a joint economic outcome. The so-called check-the-box regulation, section 301.7701-3(a), Proced. & Admin. Regs., certainly allows “An eligible entity with at least two members * * * [to] elect to be classified as * * * a partnership“. However, we remain far from persuaded that Arapua and Jetstream ever came together to constitute an “entity” for this purpose.
“Respondent contends that * * * Jetstream and Arapua did not intend to join together as partners in the conduct of
Along the same lines, and for similar reasons, we are unconvinced that Arapua ever made a bona fide contribution of the receivables. Under
The objective evidence regarding the stark divergence in the respective interests of Arapua and Jetstream with respect to the transfer of the receivables undermines petitioners’ cause. Even more troubling is petitioners’ failure to definitively account for Arapua‘s so-called redemption from the purported partnership. Petitioners failed to establish exactly when and how Arapua was paid to give up its claimed partnership interest in Warwick.12 While insisting that “Arapua did not sell the receivables to Warwick“, petitioners nonetheless acknowledge that “Arapua received cash
Under
We may conclude from petitioners’ failure to rebut this presumption that Arapua sold its receivables to Warwick rather than contributed them for a partnership interest. Consequently, the receivables’ basis in Warwick‘s hands was their fair market value on the date of transfer instead of their historical basis in Arapua‘s hands. With a fair market value basis on the date of transfer, the receivables could yield few or no losses that Warwick or any of the trading companies may claim.
In addition to these foundational concerns that go to the very substance of whether a partnership was ever formed and whether a contribution was ever made, there remain questions regarding whether even the requirements of form were properly satisfied.
IV. Foot Faults
Respondent introduced credible evidence at trial challenging compliance with numerous requirements of Brazilian law, such as obtaining the approval of the trustee and the judge overseeing Arapua‘s bankruptcy proceeding, having the Contribution Agreement, with a complete list of receivables, translated into Portuguese and registered with a Public Registry of Deeds, and notifying the debtors of the assignments of their debts.
Petitioners countered with expert testimony of their own questioning the applicability of some of these requirements and suggesting that customary business practice in Brazil often diverges from formal requirements of the letter of the law.
We need not, and therefore do not, parse such conflicting testimony to decide definitively whether each applicable requirement of Brazilian law governing a transfer of title in the Arapua receivables was satisfied. It suffices for our purposes to note that petitioners carry the burden of establishing by a preponderance of the evidence that Arapua made a valid contribution of the receivables to a partnership within the meaning of
V. Arapua‘s Financial Reporting
Finally, even assuming arguendo that Arapua validly contributed the receivables to a bona fide partnership so that Warwick would inherit Arapua‘s basis in the receivables, we are not convinced that that basis would equal the receivables’ face amount. In fact, respondent offered compelling and unrebutted evidence suggesting that even a carryover basis for the receivables would be closer to zero than to their face amount. Respondent showed that “the receivables which Arapua transferred to Warwick had previously been contributed to, and returned by, another limited liability company, MPATRN, LLC” in 2002, before the purported contribution of the same receivables to Warwick.15 Moreover, as respondent argues, after the receivables were returned to Arapua, “Arapua removed the receivables from its balance sheet,
Petitioners counter by arguing that a zeroing out of the receivables from Arapua‘s accounting statements prepared for financial reporting purposes is not determinative of their proper tax treatment for Federal tax purposes.16 We acknowledge
the vastly different objectives that financial and tax accounting have. The primary goal of financial accounting is to provide useful information to management, shareholders, creditors, and others properly interested; the major responsibility of the accountant is to protect these parties from being misled. * * * Consistently with its goals and responsibilities, financial accounting has as its foundation the principle of conservatism. * * * [Thor Power Tool Co. v. Commissioner, 439 U.S. 522, 542 (1979).]
Regardless, we shall not simply ignore the fact that Arapua‘s management believed, albeit conservatively, that the receivables were close to worthless. “The primary goal of the income tax system * * * is the equitable collection of revenue; the major responsibility of the Internal Revenue Service is to protect the public fisc.” Id. In pursuit of that goal, we may properly consider Arapua‘s internal assessment of the receivables’ intrinsic value, and its implied unrecovered cost of the assets, in imputing a basis to the receivables for
Since the Arapua receivables were never within the purview of Federal taxation before their transfer to Warwick, we see no reason why, at least in this instance, we may not derive these receivables’ proper Federal tax basis from their reported value on Arapua‘s financial statements at the time
The grounds we have discussed thus far, viz, failure to establish a bona fide partnership and a valid contribution, and contravention of applicable local law requirements, are sufficient to sustain respondent‘s FPAAs and deny Warwick and the trading companies the claimed losses. Yet we choose not to stop here. We persevere for two related reasons. First, we wish to underscore that petitioners’ failings are not merely those that could have been remedied with proper execution of the contemplated transaction. The transaction here is inherently flawed and will not deliver the sought-after tax consequences. Rogers’ knowledge of tax law and experience with tax practice should have put him on notice of this obvious flaw. His failure to take such notice and the issues analyzed above support the application of the
VI. Stepping Stones
Rogers arranged for a sequence of convoluted and interrelated steps to proceed with the acquisition and servicing of the Arapua receivables. Other than the tax outcome he sought, there was no logical reason for the many intermediate exercises. Arapua‘s purported membership in Warwick was engineered solely to obtain a carryover basis for the receivables and retain their built-in loss. Further, Arapua‘s subsequent redemption was apparently contrived to complete a disguised purchase of the receivables and remove Arapua
Are we at liberty to collapse or step together the transaction‘s intermediate points and, in effect, trace a direct path? In answering this question, we begin with the general proposition that a transaction‘s true substance rather than its nominal form governs its Federal tax treatment. See generally Commissioner v. Court Holding Co., 324 U.S. 331 (1945); Gregory v. Helvering, 293 U.S. 465 (1935).
Before we can recast this or any transaction in a manner that makes its underlying substance obvious and relegates its overt form to the background, we subject the transaction‘s many twists and turns to “a searching analysis of the facts to see whether the true substance of the transaction is different from its form or whether the form reflects what actually happened.” Harris v. Commissioner, 61 T.C. 770, 783 (1974); see also Gordon v. Commissioner, 85 T.C. 309, 324 (1985) (holding that “formally separate steps in an integrated and interdependent series that is focused on a particular end result will not be afforded independent significance in situations in which an isolated examination of the steps will not lead to a determination reflecting the actual overall result of the series of steps“); Smith v. Commissioner, 78 T.C. 350, 389 (1982) (applying the step transaction doctrine “in cases where a taxpayer seeks to get from point A to point D and does so stopping in between at points B and C. * * * In such a situation, courts are not bound by the twisted path taken by the taxpayer, and the intervening stops may be disregarded or rearranged.“).
Courts generally apply one of three alternative tests in deciding whether to invoke the step transaction doctrine and disregard a transaction‘s intervening steps. These tests, in increasing degrees of permissiveness are: The binding commitment test, the end result test, and the interdependence test.
The least permissive of the three tests, the binding commitment test, considers whether, at the time of taking the first step, there was a binding commitment to undertake
Though there has been no specific finding of fact on this issue, we observe that in the absence of any such redemption of Arapua‘s so-called partnership interest, the tax losses would have remained Arapua‘s and could not have been allocated to the holding companies. Thus, the very design of the transaction contemplated a subsequent redemption of Arapua from Warwick. However, the binding commitment test “is seldom used and is applicable only where a substantial period of time has passed between the steps that are subject to scrutiny.” Andantech LLC v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2002-97, affd. in part and remanded in part 331 F.3d 972 (D.C. Cir. 2003).
Less than a year elapsed between Arapua‘s entering into the contribution agreement and its claimed redemption from Warwick.18 It is unclear whether the binding commitment test is appropriate in these circumstances. See id.; see also Associated Wholesale Grocers, Inc. v. United States, 927 F.2d 1517, 1522 n.6 (10th Cir. 1991) (declining to apply the binding commitment test because the case did not involve a series of transactions spanning several years).
The end result test focuses on the parties’ subjective intent at the time of structuring the transaction. See True v. United States, 190 F.3d 1165, 1175 (10th Cir. 1999) (holding that what matters is not whether the parties intended to avoid taxes but if they intended “to reach a particular result by structuring a series of transactions in a certain way“). The test examines whether the formally separate steps are prearranged components of a composite transaction intended from the outset to arrive at a specific end result. We have no hesitation in concluding that under the end result test, we can safely invoke the step transaction doctrine here. By petitioners’ own admission, the tax benefits were a legitimate inducement for individual U.S. investors to invest in the ven-
The third, and least rigorous, of the tests is the interdependence test. This test analyzes whether the intervening steps are so interdependent that the legal relations created by one step would have been fruitless without completion of the later series of steps. See Penrod v. Commissioner, 88 T.C. 1415, 1428-1430 (1987). If, however, intermediate steps accomplished valid and independent economic or business purposes, courts respect their independent significance. See Greene v. United States, 13 F.3d 577, 584 (2d Cir. 1994); Sec. Indus. Ins. Co. v. United States, 702 F.2d 1234, 1246-1247 (5th Cir. 1983).
In applying the interdependence test, we ask whether any economic or business purpose was served by Arapua‘s entry to, and exit from, Warwick. Alternatively, we question whether an outright sale of the Arapua receivables would have been just as effective in transferring title and facilitating their subsequent servicing. In either formulation, the test is satisfied and we are free to invoke the step transaction doctrine and collapse the formal steps into a single transaction.
Note that the three tests we outline above are not mutually exclusive. Arguably the requirements of all, and certainly of two of the three tests, have been met here. Moreover, a transaction need only satisfy one of the tests to allow for the step transaction doctrine to be invoked. See Associated Wholesale Grocers, Inc. v. United States, supra at 1527-1528 (finding the end result test inappropriate but applying the step transaction doctrine using the interdependence test).
We conclude that the various intermediate steps of the transaction structured and put into operation by Rogers are properly collapsed into a single transaction. This transaction consisted of Arapua‘s selling its receivables to Warwick for the amount of cash payments that were eventually made to Arapua by and on behalf of Warwick. Consequently, Warwick‘s basis in the Arapua receivables was no higher than the sum of these payments—but petitioners have failed to
VII. Accuracy-Related Penalty
Respondent determined that “there is a gross valuation misstatement within the meaning of
Respondent contends that the correct basis of the receivables in the hands of both Warwick and the trading companies is zero.20 Because petitioners have failed to substantiate the amount of payments Warwick made to Arapua for the receivables, and more importantly that they were contributed, we agree with respondent. Therefore, we conclude that there are gross valuation misstatements on the respective returns of Warwick and the trading companies. Consequently, the applicable accuracy-related penalty is 40 percent in each of the consolidated cases.
Under
There has been no showing of reasonable cause or good faith on Rogers’ part in conceptualizing, designing, and executing the transactions. To the contrary, as we have detailed above, Rogers’ knowledge and experience should have put him on notice that the tax benefits sought by the form of the transactions would not be forthcoming and that these transactions would be recharacterized and stepped together to reveal their true substance.
VIII. Conclusion
We uphold respondent‘s FPAAS. We conclude that the Arapua receivables had zero basis in Warwick‘s hands. We further sustain respondent‘s determination regarding the section 6662(h) accuracy-related penalty. We find that petitioners have failed to establish reasonable cause or good faith under section 6664(c).
We have considered all the other arguments made by petitioners, and to the extent not discussed above, we conclude those arguments are irrelevant, moot, or without merit.
To reflect the foregoing,
Decisions will be entered for respondent.
