Cabot v. United States

38 Fed. Cl. 682, 80 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 6154, 1997 U.S. Claims LEXIS 177, 1997 WL 531088
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedAugust 25, 1997
DocketNos. 92-315, 92-457T
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 38 Fed. Cl. 682 (Cabot v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Federal Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cabot v. United States, 38 Fed. Cl. 682, 80 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 6154, 1997 U.S. Claims LEXIS 177, 1997 WL 531088 (uscfc 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

LYDON, Senior Judge:

Plaintiffs, Lewis P. Cabot (Cabot) and Daniel J. Quinn (Quinn), bring this suit to recover refunds of payments made by them towards penalties assessed against each of them, pursuant to 26 U.S.C. § 6672(a), for failure to withhold and pay over the federal employment payroll taxes, totaling $167,-529.60, of Rolair Systems, Inc. (Rolair), for the second, third, and fourth quarters of 1984. Defendant counterclaimed for the balance due from plaintiffs on the penalties that had been assessed. The case was tried over a period of four days in Washington, D.C. For the reasons given below, the court finds that Cabot was under a duty to collect and pay over to the Internal Revenue Service the payroll taxes of Rolair and that he willfully failed to do so with respect to the second, third, and part of the fourth quarter of 1984. Thus, the court finds Cabot liable for the penalty assessed against him pursuant to section 6672(a). However, the court further finds that Quinn was not under a duty to collect and pay over said taxes during the second, third, and part of the fourth quarter of 1984 and that, therefore, he was not liable for the penalty provided for in section 6672(a).

BACKGROUND

Rolair was a California corporation that manufactured and sold equipment and technology licensing for air film and air bearings used in materials transport. Rolair was founded in 1968 largely through the efforts of Terry Baker (Baker) and Robert Kieding (Kieding). Cabot is a private investor who had initially acquired a small interest in Rolair in the 1970’s. By 1979, Cabot acquired majority control of Rolair. In August 1980, Cabot was appointed to Rolair’s Board of Directors (Board), and in March 1981, he became Chairman of Rolair’s Board and continued to serve in that position until Rolair ceased operations. As of January 26, 1981, Cabot owned more than 90 percent of Rolair’s stock. During all periods in issue, that is, the second through fourth quarters of [685]*6851984, Cabot owned 97 percent of Rolair’s stock.

In addition to his interest in Rolair, Cabot has been the sole owner, since 1977, of Southworth, Inc. (Southworth), a corporation headquartered in Portland, Maine. Like Rolair, Southworth manufactured materials handling equipment; but Southworth specialized in standard products, such as lift tables and machinery used in paper mills, furniture and electronics manufacturing. Cabot became Chairman of Southworth’s Board of Directors in 1977. Quinn became an employee of Southworth’s in the early 1970s. In early 1983, Quinn became President of Southworth and served in that capacity until he left in 1991. As president Quinn was also a member of Southworth’s Board of Directors. LPC Investments, Inc. (LPC Investments) was a holding company wholly owned by Cabot, formed in March 1983, as a California corporation. Prior to July 1983, Cabot transferred his ownership of Rolair stock to LPC Investments. In late 1982, Cabot had entered into an agreement to acquire majority control of Rolair’s English licensee company, Hovair Ltd. (Hovair), by investing approximately $150,000 in Hovair. Like Rolair, Hovair was in the air film industry. Cabot negotiated the investment terms with Brian H. Wright, Hovair’s President and Chief Executive. Through the acquisition, Cabot obtained 51 percent of Hovair’s stock.

Attorney Robert L. Birnbaum (Birnbaum) and his law firm, Foley, Hoag & Eliot, were Cabot’s personal attorneys and attorneys for Southworth prior to and during the periods in issue. Birnbaum was on Rolair’s Board prior to the periods in issue. Prior to and during the periods in issue, Attorney John S. Poucher (Poucher) was Rolair’s Assistant Secretary. Poucher and his law firm, Hollister and Brace, of Santa Barbara, California, were corporate counsel for Rolair.

Rolair had always had financial problems. During the period Cabot was Rolair’s majority owner, Rolair generally lost money. At trial, Cabot referred to Rolair as his “sick puppy” and to Southworth as his “successful puppy.” Cabot further testified that during the first half of 1984 he spent the majority of his time equally between Southworth and trying to find a fix for Rolair.

In May 1982, Cabot offered Baker the position of President of Rolair,1 replacing Shelby Morley (Morley) who had been terminated by Cabot after approximately one year in office. Baker, like Morley before him, was elected to serve on Rolair’s Board. As Rolair’s president and as a member of its Board, Baker was actively involved in the oversight of Rolair’s finances and its financial performance. As president, Baker and Sigrid Ecker (Ecker), Rolair’s treasurer/secretary, would routinely make decisions on payables. On occasion, however, Cabot would direct Baker to pay a certain creditor over another. At trial, Baker recalled that there were a couple of instances where Cabot directed him to “[g]et them [Foley, Hoag & Eliot] paid.”

When Baker became president of Rolair he found that the previous management had restructured the manufacturing and sales functions so that production costs were vastly increased. As a result, when Baker became president, Rolair’s existing line of credit was exhausted and Baker reported to Cabot that increases in the line of credit would be necessary. Baker testified that if he had gone to the bank and asked for a significantly large draw, even though it was within the lines of credit, that would have, in his opinion, triggered a requirement to “[d]iscuss it with Lewis.”

Rolair’s financial and accounting matters were routinely discussed at its board meetings, in which Cabot took an active role. Ecker was responsible for sending Rolair’s quarterly, and then monthly financial statements to Cabot. When Ecker’s reports were late, Cabot would demand that Baker get the reports to him. Indeed, in late February 1984, Ecker was on Cabot’s “hit list” to be fired if she did not get the monthly reports to him quicker. Cabot would also require supplementary financial reporting when he [686]*686was asked to guarantee additional loans for Rolair.

In a June 1, 1982 letter to Cabot, Baker discussed Rolair’s cash flow requirements. Baker wrote that “[t]here are some hard realities to face here, in that (1) a start must be made to reduce an extensive accounts payable overhang____” Subsequently, Rolair’s Board held a special meeting by telephone conference call on June 11, 1982. During the meeting Baker told the other directors (at that time Cabot, Birnbaum, and Kieding) that Rolair was in need of increased financing in order to meet its cash flow requirements until the end of the fiscal year. A copy of the cash flow projection had been provided to the directors. Further, it was determined that any increase in the line of credit would have to be personally guaranteed by Cabot, which Cabot agreed to do up to a maximum of $185,000. The Board unanimously adopted a resolution allowing Baker and Ecker to borrow from City Commerce Bank on a line of credit previously established which had been personally guaranteed by Cabot. Poucher, Rolair’s Assistant Secretary, and Birnbaum noted that Rolair’s continued survival depended on the bank line of credit, and that the line of credit would not exist without Cabot’s personal guaranty. Hence, Cabot personally assumed the entire financial risk of Rolair without any of the other shareholders bearing any personal risk.

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Bluebook (online)
38 Fed. Cl. 682, 80 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 6154, 1997 U.S. Claims LEXIS 177, 1997 WL 531088, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cabot-v-united-states-uscfc-1997.