DTDV, LLC, Richard G. Vento, Tax Matters Partner v. Commissioner

2018 T.C. Memo. 32
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMarch 20, 2018
Docket741-09
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2018 T.C. Memo. 32 (DTDV, LLC, Richard G. Vento, 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
DTDV, LLC, Richard G. Vento, Tax Matters Partner v. Commissioner, 2018 T.C. Memo. 32 (tax 2018).

Opinion

T.C. Memo. 2018-32

UNITED STATES TAX COURT

DTDV, LLC, RICHARD G. VENTO, TAX MATTERS PARTNER, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent

Docket No. 741-09. Filed March 20, 2018.

P transferred stock in O Corp. to D, a limited liability company, when O was negotiating its possible acquisition by A Corp. On Nov. 24, 2000, O and A executed agreements providing for A's acquisition of O's stock for $17.75 per share. On that same day, P assigned a 36% interest in D to S, a foreign entity formed to hold segregated account investment reserves in support of an insurance policy on P's life. In return, S agreed to make specified annual payments to P beginning after seven years and continuing for so long as P's wife remained alive. P and S valued the assigned interest in D using the $13.50 per-share closing price of O stock on Nov. 24, 2000. When D sold its O stock to A in January 2001, D allocated 36% of its resulting gain to S. R seeks to reallocate to P and his wife the partnership gain that D allocated to S. P claims that, because R did not issue his FPAA until more than three years after D filed its partnership income tax return for 2001, the period of limitations provided in I.R.C. sec. 6229(a) prevents the assessment of tax as a result of the FPAA adjustments. P claims further that, because D made a valid election under I.R.C. sec. 754 with its 2000 return, it properly reduced its -2-

[*2] reported gain from its sale of O stock in 2001 by a sec. 743(b) basis adjustment allocated to S and thus did not omit an amount of gross income sufficient to trigger the six-year limitations period provided in I.R.C. sec. 6229(c)(2). R claims that D's purported sec. 754 election was invalid because P's assignment to S of an interest in D must be disregarded.

Held: Any shift in gain from P to S that might violate the assignment of income doctrine does not justify disregarding altogether S' interest in D.

Held, further, because P's transfer to S of an interest in D must be respected for Federal income tax purposes, D validly made a sec. 754 election in connection with that transfer and, by reason of the resulting sec. 743(b) adjustment, did not omit from its gross income for 2001 an amount in excess of 25% of its reported gross income.

Held, further, R cannot assess tax attributable to the FPAA adjustments. See I.R.C. sec. 6229(a).

Val J. Albright, for petitioner.

John Aletta and Patrick F. Gallagher, for respondent.

MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION

HALPERN, Judge: This case is before us for a review of a notice of final

partnership administrative adjustment (FPAA) issued on October 9, 2008, to

DTDV, LLC (DTDV), a Colorado limited liability company (LLC) classified as a -3-

[*3] partnership for Federal tax purposes. See sec. 301.7701-3(b)(1)(i), Proced. &

Admin. Regs. On October 20, 2002, DTDV filed with the Internal Revenue

Service (IRS) a Form 1065, U.S. Return of Partnership Income, for its 2001

taxable year. On that return, DTDV reported distributions and various items of

income that it allocated among four partners: petitioner, his wife Lana, Square

Leg Ltd. (Square Leg), and the Dick and Lana Charitable Support Organization

(Charitable Support Organization). The principal adjustments in the FPAA

reallocate to petitioner and Lana amounts that DTDV had allocated to the other

partners. The FPAA also determined that the underpayments of tax resulting from

respondent's adjustments of DTDV's partnership items were subject to the

negligence and substantial understatement penalties provided in section 6662.1 In

a petition postmarked January 2, 2009 (and filed by the Court on January 8, 2009),

petitioner assigns error to respondent's adjustments and to his determination of

penalties. The petition also challenges the FPAA's validity on the grounds that

respondent issued it more than three years after DTDV filed the return to which it

relates.

1 All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for 2001, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure, unless otherwise indicated. -4-

[*4] FINDINGS OF FACT

Formation and Governance of DTDV

DTDV was formed in September 2000, when Objective Systems Integrators,

Inc. (OSI), a corporation of which petitioner was a cofounder and shareholder, was

negotiating its possible acquisition by Agilent Technologies, Inc. (Agilent). In

October 2000, petitioner transferred 2,500,000 shares of OSI stock to DTDV.

DTDV's articles of organization appointed petitioner as the entity's

"manager" and vested in him authority to manage the entity. In that capacity,

petitioner could determine the timing of any distributions by the entity. Petitioner

failed to introduce DTDV's operating agreement or any testimony describing its

terms.

Petitioner's Assignment to Square Leg

Petitioner entered into a purchase agreement with Square Leg dated

November 24, 2000, that provided for the assignment by petitioner to Square Leg

of a 36% interest in DTDV in exchange for Square Leg's agreement to make

specified annual payments to petitioner beginning in seven years and continuing

for the remainder of Lana's life. Square Leg was a Cayman Islands subsidiary of

Lighthouse Capital Insurance Co. (Lighthouse), which was also a Cayman Islands

entity. Petitioner testified that he assigned part of his interest in DTDV to Square -5-

[*5] Leg for estate planning purposes and that, when he entered into his purchase

agreement with Square Leg, he expected it to fulfill its obligation to make annuity

payments.

The purchase agreement states the parties' agreement that the assigned

interest had a fair market value of $12,150,000. It also states that the required

annuity payments were "calculated according to actuarial tables published by the

Internal Revenue Service and are intended to represent a present value equal to the

fair market value" of that interest. The $12,150,000 stated purchase price for the

interest in DTDV that petitioner assigned to Square Leg was determined using the

$13.50 per-share price for OSI stock at the close of trading on the NASDAQ

market on November 24, 2000 (2,500,000 OSI shares held by DTDV × $13.50 ×

.36 = $12,150,000).

The purchase agreement includes the following representation and warranty

by petitioner (as "Seller") to Square Leg (as "Purchaser"):

Seller is ready, willing and able to sell, assign, transfer and deliver to Purchaser, and hereby sells, assigns, transfers and delivers or causes to be sold, assigned, transferred or delivered to Purchaser the LLC Interest free and clear of all liens, encumbrances and adverse claims whatsoever; and upon the sale, assignment, transfer and delivery of the LLC Interest to Purchaser in accordance with the provisions hereof there will be vested in Purchaser good and valid title to the LLC Interest, free and clear of all liens, encumbrances and adverse claims whatsoever. -6-

[*6] The agreement defines the LLC Interest as 36% of the membership interests

in DTDV.

Petitioner also executed a separate document entitled "Assignment of

Interest in DTDV L.L.C." The assignment states that petitioner was making his

assignment to Square Leg "[i]n accordance with the approval of all members of

DTDV L.L.C., at the company meeting of DTDV L.L.C. on November 24, 2000".

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