Crop Associates-1986, Frederick H. Behrens, Tax Matters Partner v. Commissioner

2000 T.C. Memo. 216
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJuly 17, 2000
Docket12532-90
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2000 T.C. Memo. 216 (Crop Associates-1986, Frederick H. Behrens, Tax Matters Partner v. Commissioner) 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
Crop Associates-1986, Frederick H. Behrens, Tax Matters Partner v. Commissioner, 2000 T.C. Memo. 216 (tax 2000).

Opinion

T.C. Memo. 2000-216

UNITED STATES TAX COURT

CROP ASSOCIATES-1986, FREDERICK H. BEHRENS, TAX MATTERS PARTNER, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent

Docket No. 12532-90. Filed July 17, 2000.

P has moved for dismissal or alternative relief based on respondent’s misconduct. Petitioner’s principal complaints are: 1. A civil investigation was carried out in the guise of a criminal investigation. 2. Conversations subject to the attorney-client privilege were unlawfully monitored. 3. Documents were unlawfully seized pursuant to a defective search warrant. Petitioner requests that the case be dismissed, or alternatively, that the Court shift the burden of going forward with the evidence, and/or suppress evidence illegally and improperly obtained by R. Held: Petitioner has failed to prove his claims of misconduct. The motion will be denied. - 2 -

Steven Mather and Kenneth Barish, for petitioner.

William H. Quealy, Jr., Henry T. Schafer, Alan Summers,

Alcie M. Harbutte, Guy H. Glaser, Zachary King, and Ronald L.

Buch, Jr., for respondent.

MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION

HALPERN, Judge: This case is presently before the Court on

petitioner’s motion for dismissal or alternative relief based on

respondent’s misconduct (the motion), filed July 2, 1999.1

Respondent objects. For the reasons stated, we shall deny the

motion.

Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to

the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the year in issue, and

all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and

Procedure.

FINDINGS OF FACT

The Partnership

This case originates with a petition for the readjustment of

certain partnership items of Crop Associates-1986, a limited

partnership with its principal place of business in Coachella,

California, at the time the petition was filed (the partnership).

1 A prior report in this case appears at Crop Associates- 1986 v. Commissioner, 113 T.C. 198 (1999). Since that report, we have substituted Frederick H. Behrens, Tax Matters Partner, for W. Keith Oehlschlager, A Partner Other Than the Tax Matters Partner, as petitioner. - 3 -

Partnership’s Return; FPAA; Petition; Participating Partners

The partnership timely made a return of income for its 1986

taxable (calendar) year (the 1986 partnership return). By notice

of final partnership administrative adjustment, dated March 14,

1990 (the FPAA), respondent made adjustments to the 1986

partnership return. The petition was filed on June 13, 1990, by

George P. and Ann T. Ballas, two partners other than the tax

matters partner (the petitioning partners). The petitioning

partners are no longer parties to this case, having entered into

settlement agreements with respondent on April 28, 1997, with

respect to the partnership items in question. Following the

elimination of the petitioning partners from the case, the case

was carried on by respondent and certain other partners who had

elected to participate in the case. On June 28, 1999, petitioner

intervened. Petitioner is a general partner of the partnership,

and he has been the tax matters partner (TMP) since at least

June 13, 1990. Petitioner is, now, the only participating

partner.

FPAA Adjustments and Issues Raised in the Petition

By the FPAA, respondent notified the TMP that he was

disallowing Schedule F, Profit or Loss From Farming, deductions

of the partnership (the Schedule F deductions) in the amount of

$10,104,861. Respondent explained his disallowance of the - 4 -

Schedule F deductions as follows: (1) The partnership activities

constituted a series of sham transactions lacking economic

substance; (2) the partnership did not actively engage in the

trade or business of farming; and (3) the partnership did not pay

or incur any bona fide trade or business expenses during the

taxable period, or, if the partnership did pay or incur expenses,

the partnership did not establish that these were ordinary and

necessary trade or business expenses currently deductible under

section 162.

In the FPAA, respondent set forth alternative positions

based on his determination that the partners were not entitled to

deduct their proportionate shares of the partnership’s losses

because they were not “at risk”, within the meaning of section

465, or did not have sufficient adjusted basis in their

partnership interests. See sec. 704(d). Respondent also reduced

the partnership’s tax preference items by disallowing qualified

investment expenses of $9,973,739.

In the petition, the petitioning partners assigned error to

all of respondent’s adjustments and, with respect to the

disallowance of the Schedule F deductions, averred the following:

(1) The partnership incurred and paid ordinary and necessary

expenses in the conduct of its trade or business of farming, in

an amount not less than the amount claimed by the partnership,

(2) the partnership engaged in a bona fide farming activity, - 5 -

which had economic substance and constituted a trade or business

for all purposes of the Internal Revenue laws, and (3) the

partnership engaged in the trade or business of farming primarily

for the purpose of earning profits.

Additional History of the Case

On July 30, 1990, respondent moved to extend the time within

which to move or answer the petition from July 30, 1990, to

August 27, 1990. We granted that motion on August 2, 1990.

On August 13, 1990, respondent moved to stay the proceedings

prior to answer for a period of 1 year (the motion to stay). In

support of the motion to stay, respondent claimed that petitioner

and certain others were under criminal investigation for their

activities in connection with the partnership and other

partnerships sponsored by Amcor Capital, Inc., formerly American

Agri-Corp. (without distinction, AMCOR). Although petitioner was

not, then, a participating partner, see Rule 247(b), and

respondent claimed that none of the participating partners were

under criminal investigation for their activities in connection

with any AMCOR-related partnership, respondent believed that a

stay was required to avoid conflicts and difficulties arising

from the ongoing criminal investigation of petitioner and certain

others. The petitioning partners objected to the motion to stay,

arguing, among other things, that not only were none of the

participating partners under any related criminal investigation - 6 -

but neither were any of the 1500 other limited partners affected

by any AMCOR-related cases then before the Court. Following a

hearing on the motion to stay, we granted the motion to stay and

the proceedings were stayed until April 3, 1991 (the stay).

Upon a motion by respondent on April 1, 1991, the stay was

extended to October 3, 1991 (the extension). The stay was

lifted, however, upon the motion of the petitioning partners,

filed April 9, 1991, requesting that we reconsider the extension.

The petitioning partners argued on behalf of themselves and the

other limited partners of the partnership (together, the limited

partners). They argued that, although petitioner was technically

a party to this case, see section 6226(c)(1) and Rule 247(a), he

was not a participating partner, and the real parties in interest

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