Carrino v. Comm'r

2014 T.C. Memo. 34, 107 T.C.M. 1184, 2014 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 34
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 2014
DocketDocket Nos. 27376-09, 17711-10
StatusUnpublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2014 T.C. Memo. 34 (Carrino v. Comm'r) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carrino v. Comm'r, 2014 T.C. Memo. 34, 107 T.C.M. 1184, 2014 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 34 (tax 2014).

Opinion

ANN S. CARRINO, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
CR TRADERS PARTNERS, LP, ANN S. CARRINO, A PARTNER OTHER THAN THE TAX MATTERS PARTNER, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Carrino v. Comm'r
Docket Nos. 27376-09, 17711-10 1
United States Tax Court
T.C. Memo 2014-34; 2014 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 34; 107 T.C.M. (CCH) 1184;
February 25, 2014, Filed
*34

Decision will be entered under Rule 155 in docket No. 27376-09. Decision will be entered for petitioner in docket No. 17711-10.

John M. Youngquist, for petitioner.
Jon D. Feldhammer and Rebecca S. Duewer-Grenville, for respondent.
HOLMES, Judge.

HOLMES
*35 MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION

HOLMES, Judge: Ann and Vince Carrino legally separated in June 2002. Shortly thereafter, Vince used community property to fund a partnership that operated a wildly successful hedge fund. That partnership's original 2003 return didn't name Ann as a partner or report any distributions to her. A few years later—in November 2006—a state court approved the couple's agreement that 72.5% of the then-current value of Vince's investment in the partnership was community property. In response, Vince filed an amended 2003 partnership return that identified Ann as a partner. The Commissioner says that Ann owes tax on the income attributable to her share of the partnership in which she didn't know she was a partner. Ann disagrees with this perplexing assertion.

FINDINGS OF FACT

In April 1990 Ann married Vince Carrino in California. He was, and remains, an exceptionally skilled financial manager who has operated a number *35 of volatile hedge funds. Managing those funds between 1989 and 2003 was, according to Vince, "kind of like riding a roller coaster blindfolded and naked through a nuclear power plant; [it was] not a pleasant experience." The stress built up, and the marriage deteriorated. In June 2002, Vince petitioned to dissolve the *36 marriage. While he and Ann legally separated four days later, the divorce action dragged on for more than four years.

I. CR Traders

Vince started a new hedge fund the same year he separated from Ann. In January 2002, he had formed a limited liability company called CR Traders, LLC (CR LLC), and named himself the managing member.2 That entity served as general partner to a partnership that Vince (in his capacity as manager of CR LLC) created on June 6, 2002—CR Traders Partners, L.P. (CR LP). Although Vince made capital contributions to CR LLC (about $850,000) sometime in 2002—which CR LLC then contributed to CR LP—neither of those contributions occurred before he and Ann legally separated in June 2002. CR LP began operating as a hedge fund in September 2002, and Vince managed it through CR LLC. Even though they were still married (but legally separated) at the time,3 Vince *36 apparently made this investment without notifying Ann—much less obtaining her consent.

*37 CR LP was successful from the start. CR LLC's own share in the fund earned about $4 million on an initial investment of about $850,000 during 2003 alone. (CR LLC then contributed over $9 million more in capital during 2003 and ended up with a year-end capital account of over $14 million.) According to its original 2003 partnership return, CR LP issued Schedules K-1, Partner's Share of Income, Deductions, Credits, etc., to 26 other partners; Ann, however, was not listed as one of them. Nor was she listed as a member on CR LLC's own 2003 partnership return. Ann did not report any income from either CR LLC or CR LP on her 2003 Form 1040.4*37

At some point after CR LP was up and running—the record is unclear exactly when—Ann learned of Vince's investment in CR LLC and CR LP. In the state-court dissolution proceedings, Ann asserted that all of the funds Vince used after their legal separation for that investment were community property because *38 they were traceable to money from another hedge fund that Vince had founded and operated during their marriage—and that his investment in that earlier fund consisted entirely of community property.

Vince disagreed, and protracted litigation ensued. *38 Finally, in November 2006, a state family court judge presided over a settlement conference between counsel for both Vince and Ann. During that conference, counsel signed a court-approved settlement agreement stating that 72.5% of Vince's current interest in CR LLC was traceable to community property, while the remaining 27.5%—traceable to Vince's performance fees—was Vince's separate property. The agreement also provided that Ann's 50% community-property share in that interest would be promptly liquidated and paid to her. Vince acted quickly, and by the end of November CR LP distributed nearly $6.5 million to Ann.5 About another month later, on December 26, 2006, Vince and Ann's marriage ended when the Superior Court of California granted their divorce.

*39 II. The *39 Amended Returns

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Bluebook (online)
2014 T.C. Memo. 34, 107 T.C.M. 1184, 2014 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carrino-v-commr-tax-2014.