Complex Media, Inc.

CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMarch 31, 2021
Docket19898-17
StatusUnpublished

This text of Complex Media, Inc. (Complex Media, Inc.) 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
Complex Media, Inc., (tax 2021).

Opinion

REVISED

T.C. Memo. 2021-14

UNITED STATES TAX COURT

COMPLEX MEDIA, INC., Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent

Docket Nos. 13368-15, 19898-17.1 Filed March 31, 2021.

P, a corporation, acquired the assets of a business previously conducted by partnership PS. In exchange for the transferred assets, P issued 4,999,000 shares of its common stock. Immediately thereafter, in accordance with a prior obligation, P redeemed 1,875,000 of the common shares held by PS in exchange for $2.7 million in cash and P's obligation to make an additional payment of $300,000 a little over a year later. PS paid the cash and assigned its right to the additional payment to SG, one of its partners, in redemption of SG's interest in PS. P claimed an increased basis of $3 million in intangible assets it acquired from PS and amortized that additional basis under I.R.C. sec. 197(a). R disallowed P's claimed amortization deductions.

1 We consolidated the cases at docket Nos. 13368-15 and 19898-17 for trial, briefing, and opinion.

Served 03/31/21 -2-

[*2] Held: A taxpayer's ability to identify an alternative path to a given end result that provides more favorable tax consequences than the path actually taken is not enough to entitle the taxpayer to the desired tax treatment. Commissioner v. Nat'l Alfalfa Dehydrating & Milling Co., 417 U.S. 134 (1974).

Held, further, because any tax planning involved in structuring the transactions in issue was focused on insulating PS' continuing partners from the consequences of the redemption of SG's interest and not on the achievement of a tax benefit inconsistent with allowing P increased bases in the assets it acquired from PS, P is not precluded from seeking to disavow the form of its transactions.

Held, further, P's issuance and immediate redemption of 1,875,000 common shares had no economic substance and thus are disregarded under the step transaction doctrine, with the cash and deferred payment right treated as additional consideration for the assets P acquired from PS.

Held, further, accepting the parties' agreement that I.R.C. sec. 351 applied to PS' transfer of assets to P, PS recognized gain in the transaction, as recharacterized, to the extent of the $2.7 million cash it received and the fair market value of its right to the additional $300,000 payment. See I.R.C. sec. 351(b). PS' recognized gain increases P's bases in the transferred assets. See I.R.C. sec. 362(a).

Held, further, when assets transferred in an I.R.C. sec. 351 exchange with taxable "boot" constitute a trade or business, the residual method of allocation prescribed by I.R.C. sec. 1060 can appropriately be used to allocate the boot among the transferred assets. Consequently, PS' gain in amortizable section 197 intangibles, and the corresponding increase in asset bases allowed to P, is determined by subtracting from the agreed total asset value the estimated values of those assets other than amortizable section 197 intangibles. -3-

[*3] Richard J. Sapinski and Robert A. Stern, for petitioner.

Lisa M. Rodriguez, Shawna A. Early, and Lyle B. Press, for respondent.

MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION

HALPERN, Judge: In a notice issued in February 2015, respondent advised

Complex Media, Inc. (petitioner or CMI), that he had determined deficiencies in

its Federal income tax for calendar years 2010, 2011, and 2012. The deficiency

for each of 2010 and 2012 was $69,635; the deficiency for 2011 was $1 less. By a

separate notice, issued in June 2017, respondent advised petitioner that he had

determined a deficiency of $77,730 in its Federal income tax for calendar year

2013. The deficiencies arose from respondent's disallowance of petitioner's

deduction, for each of the years in issue, of $204,808 of amortization in respect of

intangible assets it acquired from a partnership, Complex Media Holdings, LLC

(CMH). Respondent now concedes that $4,808 of the deduction claimed for each

year is allowable, leaving $200,000 of amortization in issue for each year. In

determining whether petitioner is entitled to deduct more than the $4,808 of

amortization that respondent would allow for each year in respect of the assets

petitioner acquired from CMH, we must decide: (1) whether the tax consequences -4-

[*4] to petitioner of its acquisition of the assets of CMH's magazine and internet

media business (transferred business) must be determined in accordance with the

form of that transaction, as delineated in a Contribution, Merger, and Joint

Venture Agreement (CM & JV Agreement) that required petitioner to issue

4,999,000 shares of its common stock in exchange for those assets; (2) if not,

whether, by application of the step transaction doctrine, the transaction should be

recharacterized to include in the consideration that petitioner paid for the assets

the $2.7 million in cash and the right to an additional future payment of $300,000

that petitioner distributed to CMH in immediate redemption of 1,875,000 of those

4,999,000 shares; and (3) if the transaction should be so recharacterized, the

portion of the resulting gain recognized by CMH in the exchange that is allocable

to amortizable section 197 intangibles, entitling petitioner to increase its tax bases

in those assets and allowing it annual amortization deductions beyond those

attributable to the bases of those assets in CMH's hands.

All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the

years in issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and

Procedure, unless otherwise indicated. We round all dollar amounts to the nearest

dollar. -5-

[*5] FINDINGS OF FACT

Petitioner was organized or incorporated in May 2009 to participate in the

transactions described below. When petitioner filed its petitions in the present

cases, it maintained its principal place of business in New York, New York.

Background

The periodical that served as the foundation of the transferred business

began publication, in print form, in May 2002. Richard Antoniello was hired to

run the magazine and later acquired an equity interest in the business. At the end

of 2006, Mr. Antoniello began developing the online portion of the business.

CMH was organized in January 2008 to serve as a holding company for two

limited liability companies that, between them, had previously conducted the

transferred business.

The transactions at issue resulted from a search for financing to fund further

development of the business. Eventually, CMH identified OnNetworks, Inc.

(OnNetworks or ONI), as a potential investor. OnNetworks had raised about $19

million through the issuance of common and preferred stock but had lost most of

its initial funding in pursuit of an unsuccessful business venture. By early 2009,

OnNetworks had about $6.3 million in cash left--less than the amount its preferred -6-

[*6] shareholders were entitled to receive upon a liquidation of the corporation

(liquidation preference).

During negotiations over a business combination involving CMH and

OnNetworks, friction developed between OnNetworks preferred shareholders and

Seth Gerszberg, one of CMH's partners. The other partners urged Mr. Gerszberg

to withdraw from the business to allow the intended transaction to go forward, but

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