David B. Greenberg v. Commissioner

2018 T.C. Memo. 74
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMay 31, 2018
Docket1143-05, 1144-05, 1145-05, 1334-06, 1335-06, 1504-06, 20673-09, 20674-09, 20675-09, 20676-09, 20677-09, 20678-09, 20679-09, 20680-09, 20681-09
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2018 T.C. Memo. 74 (David B. Greenberg 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
David B. Greenberg v. Commissioner, 2018 T.C. Memo. 74 (tax 2018).

Opinion

T.C. Memo. 2018-74

UNITED STATES TAX COURT

DAVID B. GREENBERG, ET AL.,1 Petitioners v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent

Docket Nos. 1143-05, 1144-05, Filed May 31, 2018. 1145-05, 1334-06, 1335-06, 1504-06, 20673-09, 20674-09, 20675-09, 20676-09, 20677-09, 20678-09, 20679-09, 20680-09, 20681-09.

Bradley A. Patterson, for petitioners.

Paul Colleran and David A. Lee, for respondent.

1 We consolidated the cases of David Greenberg, docket numbers 1143-05, 1335-06, 20676-09, 20677-09, 20678-09; Michelle E. Goddard, docket numbers 1144-05, 1334-06, 20679-09, 20680-09, 20681-09; and William A. Goddard, docket numbers 1145-05, 1504-06, 20673-09, 20674-09, 20675-09, for trial, briefing, and opinion. -2-

[*2] MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION

HOLMES, Judge: These cases are about a lawyer and a tax accountant who

used a series of complex option spreads to generate millions in tax savings for

themselves and their clients. The Commissioner says these transactions look too

much like Son-of-BOSS deals--a type of deal this Court has consistently said

doesn’t work.2 He argues that the taxpayers made a fortune selling tax shelters

and tried to shelter their shelter income with the same kind of shelter. He also

takes issue with a large tax loss that the taxpayers say was generated when they

abandoned their interest in a mysterious partnership--even though there is no

paperwork to prove any such abandonment.

2 Son-of-BOSS is a variation of a slightly older alleged tax shelter known as BOSS, an acronym for “bond and options sales strategy.” There are a number of different types of Son-of-BOSS transactions, but what they all have in common is the transfer of assets encumbered by significant liabilities to a partnership with the goal of increasing basis in that partnership or the assets themselves. The liabilities are usually obligations to buy securities, and are typically not completely fixed at the time of transfer. This may let the partnership treat the liabilities as uncertain, which may let the partnership ignore them in computing basis. If so, the result is that the partners will have a basis in the partnership or the assets themselves so great as to provide for large--but not out-of-pocket--losses on their individual tax returns. We have never found a Son-of-BOSS deal that works. See, e.g., CNT Inv’rs, LLC v. Commissioner, 144 T.C. 161, 169 n.7 (2015); BCP Trading & Invs., LLC v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2017-151, at *2 n.2. -3-

[*3] The Commissioner issued two rounds of notices of deficiency. The first

disallowed losses from option spreads claimed through the taxpayers’ partnership,

GG Capital, as well as the abandonment loss. The second disallowed losses the

Commissioner says the taxpayers claimed from another partnership--AD Global--

through the same type of transaction. The taxpayers say they never claimed these

losses. They also say the Commissioner got the procedure wrong--he should have

issued notices of final partnership administrative adjustment (FPAAs), not notices

of deficiency--and that he missed the statute of limitations. If those arguments

fail, they say these transactions were legitimate investments, not Son-of-BOSS

deals. The Commissioner thinks this sounds too good to be true.

FINDINGS OF FACT

I. Greenberg and Goddard

Son-of-BOSS deals are usually complex, and often intentionally so. This

one was devised by two men who knew their way around the Code--David

Greenberg and William Goddard. Greenberg graduated from Boston University in

1981 with a degree in business and finance and earned a master’s in accounting in

1984 from Bentley College. He was a certified public accountant and worked at

Arthur Andersen, KPMG, and Deloitte as a tax accountant. Goddard graduated

from UCLA in 1981 and from UC Hastings College of the Law three years later. -4-

[*4] After law school he went to work for Arthur Andersen doing tax analysis for

corporate and international transactions. That’s where he met Greenberg.

Goddard worked for Arthur Andersen for two years before moving to a law firm.

His firm merged into Baker McKenzie just a few months later, and he continued to

practice tax law there. After Baker McKenzie, Goddard worked for another law

firm before starting his own firm in 1998 called Lee Goddard and Duffy (LGD).

II. GG Capital and Inflated Basis

In January 1997 Greenberg and Goddard formed a partnership called GG

Capital. Goddard’s law partner, Raymond Lee, became a GG Capital partner a

short time later. A Panamanian investment company called Solatium was also

briefly a partner, but it left the partnership by 1998.3 Greenberg and Goddard

claim GG Capital ran an active investment business in digital-option spreads for

itself and its clients, completely unrelated to generating tax losses. There aren’t

many facts to support their claim.

3 Solatium is a mystery. Greenberg admitted at trial that he didn’t know the principals behind Solatium. Goddard testified that he didn’t know Solatium’s main business, when it was formed, or whether it filed a U.S. return. Solatium itself is an interesting word, and in Latin means roughly “solace”. But in legal English, it is defined as “[c]ompensation; esp., damages allowed for hurt feelings or grief, as distinguished from damages for physical injury.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1607 (10th ed. 2014). There may well be some haunting or obscure relevance here, but nothing in the record. -5-

[*5] What’s clear is that Greenberg and Goddard assigned large amounts of

income from their day jobs to GG Capital. Greenberg’s income came from KPMG

and Deloitte, and Goddard’s from LGD. Together they assigned millions to GG

Capital. GG Capital reported on its return ordinary income from each partner of:

Partner 1999 2000 2001 Greenberg $617,000 $898,000 $851,000 Goddard 634,0004 743,000 1,125,000

The Commissioner vigorously argues that this was merely a complicated attempt

to offset ordinary income with the artificial losses GG Capital was about to

generate.

Greenberg and Goddard also claim that GG Capital took part in a strange

series of complex transactions that created an abandonment loss. According to

them, in October 1997 GG Capital acquired a 20% interest in a company called

4 GG Capital’s 1999 return reported a single assignment from LGD of $1.27 million. Goddard’s 1999 return showed $634,000 in income from LGD, suggesting that the remainder of the assignment was from Lee. GG Capital’s 2000 and 2001 returns each show two assignments from LGD, and on each of those returns one of the assignments matches the amount of LGD income on Goddard’s return for the same year, meaning that in 2000 GG Capital started reporting Goddard’s and Lee’s assignments separately. -6-

[*6] DBI Acquisitions II (DBI) and was credited with a $4 million capital

account.5 Milestone Acquisitions, which owned the other 80%, was an entity

controlled by a client of Goddard’s law firm. Next, Solatium borrowed 70 million

Dutch guilders and GG Capital, Solatium, and an entity called Pacific Coin6

formed a company called Connect Coin, LLC (Connect Coin). Goddard claimed

that the three Connect Coin partners made the following capital contributions:

• Pacific Coin agreed to pay fees and costs for Connect Coin worth around $250,000;

• GG Capital agreed to have its partners provide legal and accounting services to Connect Coin; and

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Commissioner v. Tower
327 U.S. 280 (Supreme Court, 1946)
Commissioner v. Culbertson
337 U.S. 733 (Supreme Court, 1949)
Indopco, Inc. v. Commissioner
503 U.S. 79 (Supreme Court, 1992)
Boca Investerings Partnership v. United States
314 F.3d 625 (D.C. Circuit, 2003)
United States v. Edward M. Zolla
724 F.2d 808 (Ninth Circuit, 1984)
The Brook, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue
799 F.2d 833 (Second Circuit, 1986)
Crst, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue
909 F.2d 1146 (Eighth Circuit, 1990)
Lizzie W. Calloway v. Commissioner of IRS
691 F.3d 1315 (Eleventh Circuit, 2012)
Neal Crispin v. Commissioner of Internal Reven
708 F.3d 507 (Third Circuit, 2013)
Kerman v. Commissioner
713 F.3d 849 (Sixth Circuit, 2013)
Hunter v. Comm'r
2014 T.C. Memo. 132 (U.S. Tax Court, 2014)
Superior Trading, LLC v. Commissioner
728 F.3d 676 (Seventh Circuit, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2018 T.C. Memo. 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/david-b-greenberg-v-commissioner-tax-2018.