Dept. of Revenue v. U-Haul Co. of Oregon, Tc 4799 (or.tax 10-26-2010)

CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedOctober 26, 2010
DocketTC 4799.
StatusPublished

This text of Dept. of Revenue v. U-Haul Co. of Oregon, Tc 4799 (or.tax 10-26-2010) (Dept. of Revenue v. U-Haul Co. of Oregon, Tc 4799 (or.tax 10-26-2010)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dept. of Revenue v. U-Haul Co. of Oregon, Tc 4799 (or.tax 10-26-2010), (Or. Super. Ct. 2010).

Opinion

ORDER GRANTING PLAINTIFF'S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT AND DENYING DEFENDANT'S CROSS-MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
I. INTRODUCTION
This matter is before the court on the motion of Plaintiff (department) for summary judgment and the cross-motion of Defendant (taxpayer) for summary judgment. The parties have submitted a Stipulation of Facts and have stipulated to numerous exhibits. In the Magistrate Division taxpayer obtained a decision in its favor as to whether certain payments by taxpayer were business or nonbusiness deductions. The department raises additional issues in this appeal.

II. FACTS
The years at issue are the 2001 and 2002 tax years of taxpayer. In those years the tax liability of taxpayer in Oregon is affected by net operating loss carryover amounts that depend upon the treatment afforded certain payments made in the tax years 1996 and 1997.

The payments in question arose as follows. Certain members of the family controlling taxpayer sought to achieve greater liquidity in respect of their ownership interest in taxpayer *Page 2 (these persons are referred to as the Share Case Plaintiffs). Certain other members of the family and other unrelated individuals were directors of taxpayer and resisted the efforts of the Share Case Plaintiffs (these persons are referred to as the Director Defendants).

Beginning in 1988 the Director Defendants engaged in a number of transactions and actions designed to frustrate the goals of the Share Case Plaintiffs. In addition to classic anti-takeover moves, the Director Defendants also acted to issue a controlling stock interest to themselves and to cause a sale of certain stock of taxpayer to a newly formed employee stock ownership plan (the ESOP). In that transaction in 1988 the ESOP paid the amount of $6.80 per share for the stock it purchased.1

Viewing the actions of the Defendant Directors as wrongful, the Share Case Plaintiffs filed suit in Arizona (the Share Case) against the Director Defendants and taxpayer, alleging breach of fiduciary duty, wrongful exclusion from the board of directors of taxpayer, breach of contract and breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing. The record indicates, and taxpayer acknowledged at the hearing on this matter, that the Share Case Plaintiffs did not make other claims unrelated to their ownership interest in taxpayer. By the time the case went to trial, taxpayer was no longer a defendant in the case.

The Share Case Plaintiffs alleged that the actions of the Director Defendants had impaired the value of their stock in taxpayer so as to render it essentially worthless. The Director Defendants argued, and the trial court agreed, that this position required the Share Case Plaintiffs to relinquish their stock to the Director Defendants if they wished to receive a money damages award. Accordingly, after evidence was in but before the case went to the jury, the Share Case Plaintiffs elected to surrender their stock and receive damages. (Stip Ex 3 at 20.) *Page 3

The jury in the Share Case proceeding returned a verdict finding that the value of the stock of the Share Case Plaintiffs had been reduced from its value in 1988 by an aggregate amount of $1.48 billion as a result of the actions of the Director Defendants. (Stip Ex E.) The verdict of the jury required the Director Defendants to pay that amount to the Share Case Plaintiffs. The liability was joint and several. The jury also reached a verdict that one of the directors, Edward J. Schoen (Schoen), was liable for punitive damages in the amount of $70 million.

The Share Case trial court entertained and granted a motion of the Director Defendants and Schoen for remittitur of the damage awards. (Stip Ex F.) As to the award for diminution in value of stock, the opinion of the trial court examined the evidence from the trial with respect to the value of the shares of the Share Case Plaintiffs in 1988. The court concluded that the evidence the jury had apparently relied upon, opinion testimony of the founder of the company, was not reliable when compared to a valuation, as of 1988, done by an investment bank. The court concluded that the diminution in value of the stock interest of the Share Case Plaintiffs was $461,838,000, with the value of the stock at the time of the judgment on remittitur being zero after giving effect to the wrongful acts of the Director Defendants. The court also reduced the amount of the punitive damages award to $7 million. The Share Case Plaintiffs accepted the reduced damage amounts in lieu of having to retry the case on the issue of damages.

In the face of the damage award against them, the Director Defendants filed appeals from the judgment and filed individual bankruptcy petitions. In the bankruptcy court proceedings the obligations of the Director Defendants under the Share Case judgment were claims. The rights of the Director Defendants to receive the stock of the Share Case Plaintiffs upon payment of the judgment were assets. *Page 4

The Director Defendants also made demands on taxpayer to be held harmless in respect of the Share Case judgment. These claims were made pursuant to indemnification provisions in taxpayer's bylaws and indemnification agreements between taxpayer and the Director Defendants. These demands caused great concern to taxpayer because, if the demands of the Director Defendants matured, the resulting contingent liability would cause defaults under critical debt agreements that limited liabilities of taxpayer. (Stip Ex G at 4-5.)

An independent committee of taxpayer's board of directors, consisting of directors who were not defendants in the Share Case, considered the situation and authorized participation of taxpayer in a settlement agreement (the Settlement Agreement) calling for the payment of the judgment amounts in exchange for a release by the Defendant Directors of any claims against the company, assignment to taxpayer of the right to receive from the Share Case Plaintiffs the stock owned by them in taxpayer and certain other matters. (Stip Ex J.) Separately from that right to acquire the stock, taxpayer had certain first-refusal rights. Those rights would have entitled taxpayer to purchase the stock being transferred by the Share Case Plaintiffs in connection with the court judgment for an amount equal to the damage award. (Stip Ex 49 at 16.)2

Under the plans ultimately approved in the bankruptcy proceedings of the Director Defendants, completion of the Settlement Agreement was authorized. Taxpayer was to fund the payment of the state court judgment (the Share Case judgment) and was to receive the stock owned by the Share Case Plaintiffs. (Stip Ex 12.) *Page 5

The transaction described above was completed. Taxpayer acquired the stock owned by the Share Case Plaintiffs.3 Taxpayer recorded the transaction, for financial accounting purposes, as an acquisition of treasury stock in the total amount of payments made by the company.4 At the same time, in filings made under federal securities law, taxpayer described the payments as having been for stock to the extent of $6.80 per share, with the remaining payment being described as "damages funded." (Stip Ex 28 at 54.)

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Related

§ 317.010
Oregon § 317.010(10)

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Bluebook (online)
Dept. of Revenue v. U-Haul Co. of Oregon, Tc 4799 (or.tax 10-26-2010), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dept-of-revenue-v-u-haul-co-of-oregon-tc-4799-ortax-10-26-2010-ortc-2010.