Billy F. Hawk, Jr., GST Non-Exempt Marital Trust v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

924 F.3d 821
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 15, 2019
Docket18-1534
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 924 F.3d 821 (Billy F. Hawk, Jr., GST Non-Exempt Marital Trust v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Billy F. Hawk, Jr., GST Non-Exempt Marital Trust v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 924 F.3d 821 (6th Cir. 2019).

Opinion

SUTTON, Circuit Judge.

After Billy Hawk died in 2000, his wife Nancy Sue decided to sell the family bowling business, Holiday Bowl. With the help of lawyers and accountants, she made a deal with MidCoast, a company that claimed an interest in acquiring companies with corporate tax liabilities that it could set off against its net-operating losses. Holiday Bowl first sold its assets-bowling alleys-to Bowl New England, receiving $ 4.2 million in cash and generating about $ 1 million in federal taxes. After that, Nancy Sue and Billy's estate sold Holiday Bowl to MidCoast for about $ 3.4 million, in essence exchanging one pile of cash for another minus the tax debt MidCoast agreed to pay. But MidCoast never paid the taxes. The United States filed this transferee-liability action against Nancy Sue Hawk and Billy Hawk's estate to recover Holiday Bowl's unpaid taxes. The Tax Court ruled for the government, concluding that the Hawks were transferees of a delinquent taxpayer under federal law and permitting the government to recover the unpaid taxes from the Hawks under Tennessee law. We affirm.

I.

When shareholders sell a privately held corporation, they have a range of options. One is an asset sale, in which the corporation sells its assets (e.g., the bowling alleys), pays a tax on the gain, and distributes what's left to the shareholders. In this setting, the Commissioner taxes the corporation upon the sale of the assets and taxes the shareholders when they receive their distributions.

Another option is a stock sale, in which the shareholders sell their stock to a third party. Because the corporation never sells its assets, the transaction doesn't trigger corporate tax, and the original shareholders pay only their individual income taxes. If the new owners dispose of the corporate assets down the road, however, the corporation will incur taxes then. Buyers in a stock sale often pay less to account for future taxes they must pay.

After Billy Hawk's death in 2000, Nancy Sue owned almost a fifth of the company's stock and her husband's estate owned the remainder. Billy and Nancy Sue's two sons *824 operated the two bowling alleys awhile. But that didn't work. By 2002, she realized she needed to sell Holiday Bowl. She chose an asset sale to Bowl New England. The sale left Holiday Bowl with $ 4.2 million in cash and left the company owing about $ 1 million in federal income taxes and about $ 200,000 in state taxes. Holiday Bowl also owned some real property, a family horse farm that Nancy Sue wanted to keep, valued at $ 777,000.

Trying to lower the corporate taxes triggered by the transaction, the Hawks' broker approached their attorney with information about a company called MidCoast that had "tremendous tax-loss carry-forwards." J.A. 3 at 797. If MidCoast bought Holiday Bowl, the broker advertised, Holiday Bowl would not need to pay corporate taxes on the asset sale. As a result, MidCoast promised to pay the Hawks more than Holiday Bowl's actual value-what would have been its cash on hand minus outstanding taxes. Nancy Sue Hawk and the estate stood to keep an extra $ 200,000 to $ 300,000 by structuring the transaction in this way. MidCoast purported to offer Holiday Bowl a way to realize the best attributes of an asset sale (the higher sale price of the assets) and a stock sale (no corporate-level tax). In closing his recommendation, the broker, warily but not warily enough, said: "[I]f it seems too good to be true, it probably is. But maybe this is the exception." Id. at 798.

The Hawks proceeded to enjoy what looked like a free lunch. Under the purchase agreement, the Hawks sold Holiday Bowl some of their shares in exchange for the company's remaining property, the horse farm. That left Holiday Bowl with nothing but cash. MidCoast paid $ 3.4 million plus expenses for Holiday Bowl's $ 4.2 million. To finance the transaction, MidCoast claimed it would borrow money from a company called Sequoia Capital. According to MidCoast, Holiday Bowl would then enter the debt-collection business, rapidly generating new losses that would offset Holiday Bowl's existing taxes.

After the sale, MidCoast transferred Holiday Bowl to Sequoia in exchange for the cancellation of Sequoia's loan and about $ 320,000 in cash. No one ever paid Holiday Bowl's outstanding taxes, and the one-time bowling company dissolved in 2006.

The Internal Revenue Service investigated MidCoast, uncovering the Holiday Bowl sale and about sixty similar transactions. That did not end well for MidCoast, Sequoia, and a law firm, as a grand jury indicted several individuals associated with each of them. One defendant pleaded guilty. Others fled the country. The government launched a civil collection proceeding against the Hawks in pursuit of Holiday Bowl's unpaid taxes. The Tax Court concluded that Sequoia's loan to MidCoast was a sham and that Holiday Bowl had simply distributed cash to the Hawks, who were liable to the government as Holiday Bowl's fraudulent transferees. This appeal followed.

II.

To prevent delinquent individuals and corporations from evading taxes by transferring their assets to other entities, Congress enacted 26 U.S.C. § 6901 . The statute permits the government to pursue a delinquent taxpayer's transferees in federal court. Once there, the government stands in the position of a private creditor, and state law determines whether the transferee must pay the taxpayer's debts. See Comm'r v. Stern , 357 U.S. 39 , 47, 78 S.Ct. 1047 , 2 L.Ed.2d 1126 (1958).

Two examples illustrate what § 6901 is getting at. Imagine Company A. It has $ 5 million in assets that have a basis (cost) of *825 $ 1 million. Let's say Company A sells its assets (a manufacturing plant) to Company B for cash. At that point, Company A would owe federal taxes on the $ 4 million gain generated by the sale. But suppose that Company A's owners decide not to pay Company A's taxes. They instead pay themselves $ 5 million and simply let Company A go belly-up, leaving Company A's taxes unpaid. That leaves a classic transferee liability for the owners under § 6901.

What happens, however, if the owners try to avoid that liability with an intermediary transaction? The owners sell Company A to a foreign Company C for $ 5 million-the exact amount of money that Company A has in the bank. This leaves the owners with $ 5 million, and Company C with $ 5 million in Company A, and Company A still needing to pay its taxes. Because Company C is outside the United States, the government might not be able to pursue Company C as a transferee when it empties Company A's coffers and no one pays A's taxes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
924 F.3d 821, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/billy-f-hawk-jr-gst-non-exempt-marital-trust-v-commissioner-of-ca6-2019.