G.D. Parker, Inc. v. Comm'r
This text of 2012 T.C. Memo. 327 (G.D. Parker, Inc. v. Comm'r) 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.
Opinion
Decisions will be entered under
HAINES,
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. Those exhibits attached to the stipulations which were found relevant and admissible are incorporated herein by this reference. At the time the petitions were filed, petitioner was a Florida corporation with its principal place of business in Key Biscayne, Florida.
Genaro Delgado Parker is a citizen and resident of the Republic of Peru. On February 5, 1997, Mr. Parker incorporated petitioner under the laws of the State of *330 Florida. Vilanova, S.A. (Vilanova), a corporation organized under *329 the laws of the Republic of Panama, held all of the stock of petitioner. During the years at issue petitioner filed consolidated Federal income tax returns as the common parent of an affiliated group (GD Parker affiliated group). The members of the affiliated group included M. Vanini Investments, Inc. (Vanini), G. D. P. Investments, Inc. (GDP), and Stella-Mar, Inc. (Stella-Mar).
Vanini was a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Florida on May 28, 1996. Petitioner owned all of the stock of Vanini during the years at issue. Vanini owned a home in Key Biscayne, Florida (Key Biscayne home), during the years at issue and in January 2000 purchased a home in Valdemossa, Spain (Valdemossa home).
The Key Biscayne home was a single-family home in Key Biscayne, Florida. The home was a 23-room, luxury three-story house which included a living room, a kitchen, a dining room, a dining area, a utility room, a den, a family room, a patio with a balcony, seven bedrooms, and 7-1/2 bathrooms. It sat on 14,250 square feet of land and included 10,105 square feet of living area abutting a double wide canal with access to Biscayne Bay and the Atlantic Ocean. The *330 *331 ground floor of the home contained a four-car garage, a swimming pool, a built-in spa, and an office.
During 2003, 2004, and 2005 Mr. Parker and his family were given rent-free use of the Key Biscayne home. Lesli M. Loayza, Mr. Parker's daughter, resided at the home throughout 2003, 2004, and 2005 while she attended Florida International University. Jonathan S. Loayza, Mr. Parker's son, resided at the home for least six months during 2003 and five months during 2005. In 2003 Mr. Loayza attended St.
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Decisions will be entered under
HAINES,
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. Those exhibits attached to the stipulations which were found relevant and admissible are incorporated herein by this reference. At the time the petitions were filed, petitioner was a Florida corporation with its principal place of business in Key Biscayne, Florida.
Genaro Delgado Parker is a citizen and resident of the Republic of Peru. On February 5, 1997, Mr. Parker incorporated petitioner under the laws of the State of *330 Florida. Vilanova, S.A. (Vilanova), a corporation organized under *329 the laws of the Republic of Panama, held all of the stock of petitioner. During the years at issue petitioner filed consolidated Federal income tax returns as the common parent of an affiliated group (GD Parker affiliated group). The members of the affiliated group included M. Vanini Investments, Inc. (Vanini), G. D. P. Investments, Inc. (GDP), and Stella-Mar, Inc. (Stella-Mar).
Vanini was a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Florida on May 28, 1996. Petitioner owned all of the stock of Vanini during the years at issue. Vanini owned a home in Key Biscayne, Florida (Key Biscayne home), during the years at issue and in January 2000 purchased a home in Valdemossa, Spain (Valdemossa home).
The Key Biscayne home was a single-family home in Key Biscayne, Florida. The home was a 23-room, luxury three-story house which included a living room, a kitchen, a dining room, a dining area, a utility room, a den, a family room, a patio with a balcony, seven bedrooms, and 7-1/2 bathrooms. It sat on 14,250 square feet of land and included 10,105 square feet of living area abutting a double wide canal with access to Biscayne Bay and the Atlantic Ocean. The *330 *331 ground floor of the home contained a four-car garage, a swimming pool, a built-in spa, and an office.
During 2003, 2004, and 2005 Mr. Parker and his family were given rent-free use of the Key Biscayne home. Lesli M. Loayza, Mr. Parker's daughter, resided at the home throughout 2003, 2004, and 2005 while she attended Florida International University. Jonathan S. Loayza, Mr. Parker's son, resided at the home for least six months during 2003 and five months during 2005. In 2003 Mr. Loayza attended St. Agnes Academy in Key Biscayne, and in 2005 he attended Gulliver Academy in Coral Gables, Florida. Estrella Delgado Parker Vanini, Mr. Parker's daughter, resided at the home for six months during 2003. She also attended St. Agnes Academy in 2003. Marcella Vanini, Mr. Parker's wife, resided at the home whenever she visited Miami, including at least five visits to Miami in April, July, and August 2004, and February and September 2005. Mr. Parker resided at the home whenever he visited Miami, including at least 11 visits to Miami in May, June, September, October, and December 2003; in January, February, June, and September 2004; and in February and September 2005. Mr. Parker reserved a bedroom *331 at the home exclusively for his use. Blanca A. Gonzalez, the Parker family's personal maid, also lived at the Key Biscayne home during 2003, 2004, and 2005.
*332 Ms. Bruce, the administrative assistant for the GD Parker affiliated group, worked out of the Key Biscayne home. She used the office on the ground floor five days a week. The office contained the records and files for the four companies making up the GD Parker affiliated group. Ms. Bruce had exclusive use of the ground floor office as none of Mr. Parker's family members used the office space.
The Valdemossa home was a two-story building on 31,090 square meters of land on top of a mountain on the island of Mallorca, Spain, overlooking the Mediterranean Sea. Mr. Parker used the Valdemossa home during 2003, 2004, and 2005 as a vacation home for approximately one month per year. Mr. Parker used the yacht, the
Stella-Mar was a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Florida on February 6, 1997. Petitioner *332 owned all the stock of Stella-Mar. Stella-Mar purchased a 78-foot Azimut yacht called the
GDP was a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Florida on May 21, 1996. Petitioner owned 80% of the stock of GDP. In turn GDP held an approximately 49% limited partnership interest in Conch Harbor and a 50% limited partnership interest in Miami Beach Marina Associates. Conch Harbor owned the Conch Harbor Marina in Key West, Florida. Miami Beach Marina Associates owned the Miami Beach Marina in Miami Beach, Florida.
The following chart shows the holdings of the various entities.
*334
On December 5, 2003, GDP sold all of its partnership interest in Miami Beach Marina Associates and Conch Harbor (partnership interests) to Robert Christoph for $7 million. Mr. Parker negotiated the price and other terms of the sale on behalf of GDP. The parties entered into an installment sale in which Mr. *335 Christoph paid $1 million to GDP in 2003 and $6 million to GDP in 2004. Petitioner filed Forms 6252, Installment Sale Income, with both its 2003 and 2004 Federal income tax returns. The installment sale resulted in petitioner's reporting capital gains of $3,089,131 for 2003 and *333 $7,722,827 for 2004. 4 Petitioner treated the $1 million GDP received from Mr. Christoph in 2003 as an advance on the $7 million GDP was supposed to receive in sale proceeds in 2004. Consequently, his accountants treated the $1 million as a loan and not income for 2003. Petitioner reported the $1 million received in 2003 and the $6 million received in 2004 as $7 million of capital gain income on its 2004 consolidated Federal income tax return.
Morrison, Brown, Argiz & Farra, LLP (MBAF), prepared the GD Parker affiliated group's U.S. Federal income tax returns. MBAF also provided tax planning advice to Mr. Parker and the GD Parker affiliated group. Miguel G. Farra is a partner at MBAF, a certified public accountant, and an attorney. On September 1, 2004, Mr. Farra met with Mr. Parker to discuss the GD Parker affiliated group's 2003 and 2004 Federal income tax returns. Mr. Farra informed Mr. Parker that the GD Parker affiliated group *334 would owe Federal income tax on *336 approximately $7 million of gain for 2004 from the sale of the partnership interests. Mr. Parker indicated to Mr. Farra that it was an inopportune time to have to pay so much tax. The two men discussed ways to avoid paying tax on the gain for 2004.
On September 17, 2004, Mr. Farra and Lief Novie, a certified public accountant and an attorney working for MBAF in 2004, wrote a memorandum to Mr. Parker in which MBAF determined that the best way to offset the $7 million of capital gains for 2004 was to have Vilanova, petitioner's parent corporation, contribute to petitioner in a
*337 On October 22, 2004, Congress passed the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004, Pub. L. No. 108-357, sec. 836(a), 118 Stat. at 1418, which added section 362(e) limiting the importation of built-in losses. Section 362(e) is effective for transactions occurring after October 22, 2004.
Mr. Parker also controlled a group of foreign corporations. This group included Vilanova, petitioner's parent corporation. Mr. Parker organized these foreign corporations before organizing petitioner and the GD Parker affiliated group.
In 1990 Mr. Parker organized Telemovil, S.A. (Telemovil), a Peruvian telecommunications company. Mr. Parker also organized a Panamanian corporation, Vicmar, S.A. (Vicmar). Mr. Parker held all the shares of Vicmar. Mr. Parker and Vicmar together owned approximately 73% of the outstanding shares of Telemovil with the general public owning the remaining outstanding shares of stock. On April 11, 1993, Telemovil changed its name to Tele2000, S.A. (Tele2000). 6 Tele2000 was a publicly traded company *336 listed on the Lima Stock *338 Exchange in Lima, Peru, that provided cellular telephone and paging services in Peru. As of July 16, 1996, Mr. Parker owned approximately 33% of Tele2000 and Vicmar owned approximately 39% of Tele2000. Vicmar also owned all of the stock of Vilanova.
The following chart shows the holdings of the various entities.
BellSouth Corp. (BellSouth) is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Georgia. In 1996 BellSouth entered into negotiations with Mr. Parker and Vicmar as part of an effort to acquire a majority interest in Tele2000. BellSouth created BellSouth Peru BVI, Ltd. (BellSouth Peru BVI), a corporation organized under the laws of the *337 British Virgin Islands, to hold the shares of stock it purchased in Tele2000. On December 5, 1996, Mr. Parker, Vicmar, BellSouth Peru BVI, and Tele2000 entered into a stock purchase agreement under which Mr. Parker and Vicmar sold 37.28% of the outstanding shares in Tele2000 to BellSouth Peru BVI for $71,280,000. As of January 7, 1997, BellSouth Peru BVI had acquired from all shareholders, including the public, approximately a 60% majority shareholder interest in Tele2000 while Mr. Parker and Vicmar retained approximately a 40% minority interest.
BellSouth Peru BVI made substantial changes to Tele2000's management structure and its accounting methods. Tele2000 began losing money, which required it to make a capital call of $50 million in 1997 and another $50 million in 1998. In order to maintain its and Mr. Parker's approximately 40% minority position in Tele2000, Vicmar purchased 13,333,333 additional shares for $1.50 per share in 1997 and 20 million shares for $1 per share in 1998.
*340 On March 26, 1999, Mr. Parker, Vicmar, Vilanova, and BellSouth Peru BVI entered into a second stock purchase agreement (second stock purchase agreement) under which BellSouth Peru BVI agreed to purchase *338 all but approximately 2% of Mr. Parker's, Vicmar's, and Vilanova's remaining shares of stock in Tele2000. Mr. Parker, Vicmar, and Vilanova received 50 cents a share in cash and the shares of TeleCable, S.A. (TeleCable), a wholly owned subsidiary of Tele2000. TeleCable is a corporation organized under the laws of the Republic of Peru that provided television cable services in Peru. BellSouth had no interest in the cable business. After the close of the second stock purchase agreement, Mr. Parker, Vicmar and Vilanova were left with 14,643,477 shares of Tele2000 stock and all of the stock of TeleCable, now held as a wholly owned subsidiary of Vicmar.
As of July 18, 2001, BellSouth Peru BVI owned 97.4267% of the total shares of stock in Tele2000. Vicmar held 12,746,730 shares of stock in Tele2000, representing 2.09151% of the total shares of stock in Tele2000 (Tele2000 shares). The Tele2000 shares were valued at $1 per share giving Vicmar a basis of $12,746,730 7 in the shares.
*341 The following chart shows the holdings of the various entities as of July 18, 2001.
*342 On November 29, 2002, Vicmar transferred ownership *339 of the Tele2000 shares to Vilanova. The following chart shows the holdings of the various entities as of November 29, 2002.
*343 In 1999 the Superintendencia Nacional De Administracion Tributaria (SUNAT) 8 began an audit of Tele2000. SUNAT determined that Tele2000 had an unpaid Peruvian tax liability of 165,320,885 Peruvian soles (approximately $50 million) for 1994 through 1996, years in which Mr. Parker and Vicmar controlled the company. In September 2000 Tele2000 settled its Peruvian tax liability through an amnesty program agreeing to pay SUNAT 34,585,372 Peruvian soles (approximately $10 million).
BellSouth Peru BVI and Tele2000 sought indemnification from Mr. Parker and Vicmar for the approximately $10 million paid to SUNAT. They argued that the tax liability was incurred during Mr. Parker and Vicmar's management of Tele2000. Mr. Parker and Vicmar argued that BellSouth Peru BVI was solely responsible for the tax liability because BellSouth Peru BVI had lost Tele2000's 1994, 1995 and 1996 tax records which substantiated the tax positions taken *340 for those years.
During 2001 and 2002 Tele2000, BellSouth Peru BVI, Mr. Parker, and Vicmar engaged in settlement negotiations to resolve their various disputes, including the dispute over the approximately $10 million payment to SUNAT. In *344 September 2001 Mr. Parker and Vicmar proposed contributing $5 million towards Tele2000's $10 million settlement with SUNAT in exchange for BellSouth Peru BVI's purchasing all of Mr. Parker's and Vicmar's stock in Tele2000, including the Tele2000 shares, for $2 a share ($29,286,954 for 14,643,477 shares). BellSouth Peru BVI rejected Mr. Parker and Vicmar's settlement proposal.
In 2002 BellSouth and BellSouth Peru BVI began negotiating with Telefonica Moviles, S.A. (Telefonica), a Spanish media conglomerate, to sell Telefonica its Latin American operations, including Tele2000. Telefonica wanted to acquire 100% of Tele2000, not just BellSouth Peru BVI's interest. Thus, BellSouth Peru BVI resumed negotiations with Mr. Parker and Vicmar. On April 4, 2002, Mr. Parker and Vicmar again offered to sell their shares in Tele2000, including the Tele2000 shares, to BellSouth Peru BVI, this time for 35 cents per share and BellSouth Peru BVI's agreement to drop its *341 claim with regard to the $10 million paid to SUNAT. BellSouth Peru BVI rejected the offer, instead choosing to handle the matter through arbitration.
On August 1, 2003, BellSouth Peru BVI and Tele2000 filed for arbitration against Mr. Parker and Vicmar seeking $10 million in damages (arbitration) not knowing that the Tele2000 shares had been transferred from Vicmar to Vilanova *345 on November 29, 2002. The arbitration took place in September 2004 in New York City and was titled "BellSouth Peru BVI Limited and BellSouth Peru, S.A. v. Corporacion Vicmar, S.A. and Genaro Delgado Parker". The arbitration panel consisted of three attorneys from the law firm Hughes, Hubbard & Reed, LLP. Petitioner, though not a party to the arbitration, paid the expenses associated with the arbitration including Vicmar's (Vilanova's) attorney's fees.
Mr. Parker in turn sought legal advice about initiating a shareholder derivative suit against BellSouth Peru BVI and Tele2000 in Lima, Peru. Mr. Parker argued that BellSouth Peru BVI's poor management of Tele2000 had caused the minority shareholders (i.e., Mr. Parker and Vilanova) to sustain a substantial economic loss. Mr. Parker's attorney, James Vidalon Orellana, *342 recommended that Vilanova transfer the Tele2000 shares to a U.S. company because Panamanian companies were viewed less favorably by the Peruvian courts. Mr. Orellana recommended that they proceed by filing a complaint in Vilanova's name and later amend the complaint to reflect new ownership of the shares.
On December 10, 2004, Vilanova initiated a shareholder derivative suit against Tele2000 and BellSouth Peru BVI in the 17th Civil Specialized Court of Lima, Peru (shareholder derivative suit).
On August 30, 2004, Pedro Mujica Benavides, Vilanova's Peruvian attorney, wrote a letter to petitioner on behalf of Vilanova proposing to make a capital contribution to petitioner of the Tele2000 shares. The shares were valued at $1 per share for a capital contribution of $12,746,730. On September 2, 2004, at a special meeting of the board of directors of petitioner, Mr. Parker, as the sole director of petitioner, accepted Vilanova's contribution. That same day, Mr. Parker, as president of petitioner, responded to the August 30, 2004, letter accepting Vilanova's capital contribution. Vilanova confirmed receipt of petitioner's September 2, 2004, acceptance *343 and informed petitioner that it was sending a letter of instructions to Sociedad Agente de Bolsa LatinoAmericana, S.A. (LatinoAmericana), 9 as transferor, requesting that it formalize the transfer. On September 20, 2004, Mr. Parker as a representative of petitioner, wrote a letter to LatinoAmericana directing LatinoAmericana to transfer the Tele2000 shares to petitioner in an over-the-counter transaction. That same day, Federico Castro Ramirez, as a representative of Vilanova, also wrote a letter to LatinoAmericana *347 directing it to transfer the Tele2000 shares to petitioner in an over-the-counter transaction.
The physical stock certificate for the Tele2000 shares (Tele2000 stock certificate) was being held in Vilanova's account with Lehman Brothers, Inc. (Lehman), in Miami, Florida. Felix Perez, a senior vice president in the financial services division of Lehman's Miami office handled Vilanova's account. On September 17, 2004, Mr. Quesada, Vilanova's attorney, faxed a letter to Lehman dated September 15, 2004, requesting *344 Lehman to transfer the Tele2000 shares into a Lehman account established for petitioner.
Mr. Perez, though the account manager, was not authorized to make the transfer. Lehman maintained a back office that was responsible for executing all transfers of securities. Mr. Perez requested the back office to take the necessary steps to transfer the stock to petitioner. Lehman's back office at first was unsure how to transfer the Tele2000 shares. Eventually, it determined that the stock was a local security which needed to be transferred in accordance with Peruvian law. Lehman determined that Vilanova had to transfer the stock through the Lima Stock Exchange.
On November 17, 2004, Mr. Parker sent a letter to Lehman on behalf of Vilanova. Mr. Parker requested that Lehman complete the transfer of the *348 Tele2000 shares from Vilanova's account to petitioner's account and notify the Lima Stock Exchange of the transfer. Lehman received the letter, and an employee of Lehman made a handwritten note on the letter to make journal entries moving the Tele2000 shares from Vilanova's account to petitioner's account. Petitioner opened an account with Lehman sometime in November 2004. Lehman issued an account *345 statement to petitioner for the month of December 2004. 10 The December 2004 statement was the first account statement that Lehman issued for petitioner's account. The December statement contained a December 1, 2004, journal entry transferring the Tele2000 shares into petitioner's account. The statement also contained a second journal entry on December 2, 2004, canceling the December 1, 2004, journal entry. As a result, the Tele2000 shares never entered petitioner's account.
On December 17, 2004, Lehman received a signed letter from Mr. Parker on behalf of Vilanova. Mr. Parker requested that Lehman mail the Tele2000 stock certificate to Lima, Peru. That same day, Lehman mailed the Tele2000 stock certificate to Lima in accordance with Vilanova's instructions.
*349 On December 21, 2004, LatinoAmericana received delivery of the Tele2000 stock certificate from Lehman. The fair *346 market value of the Tele2000 shares on December 21, 2004, was $195,418 (12,746,730 shares valued at approximately 1.5 cents per share). On December 21, 2004, petitioner sent a letter to LatinoAmericana confirming petitioner's September 20, 2004, order requesting the transfer of the Tele2000 shares to petitioner. LatinoAmericana took a number of steps on December 21, 2004, to transfer the Tele2000 shares to petitioner: (1) LatinoAmericana executed the transfer in an over-the-counter transaction and issued two transfer documents, one reflecting Vilanova's transfer of the Tele2000 shares and the other reflecting petitioner's receipt of the Tele2000 shares; (2) LatinoAmericana informed Tele2000 of the transfer; (3) Tele2000 canceled the Tele2000 stock certificate and issued a new certificate reflecting petitioner's ownership of the Tele2000 shares; (4) Tele2000 registered the transfer in its stock ledger; and (5) LatinoAmericana notified the Lima Stock Exchange of the transfer and the Lima Stock Exchange reported the transfer in the Lima Stock Exchange Daily Gazette.
In March 2004 BellSouth entered into an agreement with Telefonica to sell its Latin American *347 operations, including its stock in Tele2000 for $5.8 billion.
*350 Telefonica agreed to pay approximately 1.5 cents per share for Tele2000, and BellSouth agreed to indemnify Telefonica for any ongoing litigation with Tele2000's minority shareholders and to ensure that Telefonica would not have to pay more per share to the minority shareholders than it paid to BellSouth Peru BVI for its shares. BellSouth contacted Mr. Parker and informed him of the sale and Telefonica's offer to purchase the Tele2000 shares for approximately 1.5 cents per share. The sale of Bellsouth's Latin American operations to Telefonica was finalized on October 28, 2004.
On December 16, 2004, BellSouth, Tele2000, Telefonica, Mr. Parker, Vicmar, Vilanova, and petitioner entered into a share transfer and settlement agreement (share transfer agreement). Petitioner was made a party to the share transfer agreement at the last minute after Mr. Parker represented to the other parties that petitioner was the owner of the Tele2000 shares. Before Mr. Parker's last-minute representation, BellSouth's attorney, Arthur Hillman, was unaware of petitioner's existence. Petitioner agreed to sell the Tele2000 shares to Telefonica for $195,418 *348 (approximately 1.5 cents per share), and BellSouth Peru BVI and Tele2000 agreed to seek dismissal of the arbitration. Vilanova also agreed to seek dismissal of its shareholder derivative suit. On December 16, 2004, Vilanova filed *351 a motion in the 17th Civil Specialized Court of Lima, Peru, to dismiss its shareholder derivative suit.
The sale was finalized on December 23, 2004. Telefonica paid $122,570 for the shares ($195,418 less brokerage commissions, CONASEV fees, and sales tax). Telefonica made payment to Mr. Parker, not petitioner. Petitioner reported the sale of the Tele2000 shares on its 2004 Federal income tax return. Petitioner reported a sale price of $122,570 and a basis in the Tele2000 shares of $12,746,730 resulting in a capital loss of $12,624,219. Although respondent concedes the sale price of the Tele2000 shares, he challenges petitioner's basis in the Tele2000 shares and the deductibility of the capital loss on the various grounds discussed
On December 28, 2004, BellSouth Peru BVI, Tele2000, Mr. Parker, and Vicmar filed a stipulation of dismissal with the arbitration panel stating that the parties had settled all claims raised in the arbitration. As a result, *349 on January 7, 2005, the arbitration panel dismissed the claims without ruling on the merits of the case.
Petitioner filed a delinquent consolidated Federal income tax return for 2003 on January 4, 2005. Petitioner reported, but did not pay, a tax liability of $636,279. Petitioner also failed to make estimated payments of tax for 2003. On June 7, 2005, respondent filed a notice of Federal tax lien in Dade County, Florida, with respect to petitioner's self-assessed tax liability for 2003. On or about June 14, 2005, respondent mailed petitioner Letter 3172, Notice of Federal Tax Lien Filing & Your Right to a Hearing Under
On September 16, 2009, respondent issued to petitioner a notice of deficiency for 2005 which determined a Federal income tax deficiency of $839,462 and an accuracy-related penalty of $335,785 under
On December 10, 2009, respondent issued petitioner a notice of deficiency which determined Federal income tax deficiencies of $793,692 and $2,888,443 for 2003 and 2004, respectively. Respondent also determined that petitioner was liable for accuracy-related penalties of $158,738 and $1,102,840 for 2003 and 2004, respectively. Respondent determined that petitioner had failed to report $1 million of income during 2003 from the sale *352 of its partnership interests. Respondent alternatively argued that if the $1 million is determined to be a loan, petitioner failed to report income from the discharge of indebtedness in 2004. Respondent also determined that petitioner had failed to substantiate its claimed basis in the Tele2000 shares. Thus, respondent disallowed the capital loss in 2004 and the capital loss carryback claimed for 2003. Respondent, alternatively, determined that the capital loss claimed for 2004 and resulting capital loss carryback claimed for 2003 were disallowed under
On January 26, 2010, respondent issued petitioner a notice of deficiency which determined Federal income tax deficiencies of $87,300, $90,000, and $90,000 for 2003, 2004, and 2005, respectively. Respondent also determined that petitioner was liable for the following additions to tax: $19,643, $20,250, and $20,250 for 2003, 2004, *353 and 2005, respectively, for failure to file withholding tax returns under
A trial was held in Miami, Florida, in January 2011.
As a general rule the taxpayer bears the burden of proving that the Commissioner's determinations are erroneous.
Respondent claims that petitioner should be denied the capital loss deduction claimed on its 2004 Federal income tax return under the step transaction doctrine. Respondent argues that Vilanova always intended to sell the Tele2000 shares to Telefonica and that it simply *354 interjected petitioner into the transaction to obtain a U.S. Federal income tax benefit. Petitioner claims that each step in its transaction had independent significance and a business purpose.
"Under the step transaction doctrine, a particular step in a transaction is disregarded for tax purposes if the taxpayer could have achieved its objective more directly, but instead included the step for no other purpose than to avoid U.S. taxes."
*357 Courts have applied three alternative tests in deciding whether the step transaction doctrine should be invoked in a particular situation; namely, (1) if at the time the first step was entered into, there was a binding commitment to undertake the later step (binding commitment test), (2) if separate steps constitute prearranged parts of a single transaction intended to reach an end result (end-result test), or (3) if separate steps are so interdependent that the legal *355 relations created by one step would have been fruitless without a completion of the series of steps (interdependence test).
We first consider application of the end-result test. The end-result test combines into a single transaction separate events that appear to be components of something undertaken to reach a particular result.
The end-result test focuses upon the actual intent of the parties at the time of the transaction. It is flexible and bases tax consequences on the substance of the transaction, not on the formalisms chosen by the participants. "The intent we focus on under the end-result test is not whether the taxpayer intended to avoid taxes. * * * Instead, the end-result test focuses on whether the taxpayer intended to reach a particular result by structuring a series of transactions in a certain way."
Under the end-result test, there is no independent tax recognition of the individual steps unless the taxpayer shows that at the time the parties engaged in the individual step, *357 its result was the intended end result in and of itself.
That, from the outset, a sale of the Tele2000 shares was the end result intended by Mr. Parker and Vilanova is shown by several key pieces of evidence. Mr. Parker was actively trying to sell the Tele2000 shares on behalf of Vilanova before transferring the shares to petitioner. Mr. Lacasa, Mr. Parker's attorney, testified that as early as 2001 Mr. Parker was trying to sell the Tele2000 shares. Mr. Parker engaged in negotiations with BellSouth in 2001 to sell BellSouth Peru BVI the Tele2000 shares for $2 per share. The parties could not agree to terms, and the negotiations ended. In 2002 BellSouth entered into negotiations with Telefonica to sell Telefonica BellSouth's Latin American operations, including Tele2000. Mr. Parker was made aware of the negotiations and of Telefonica's desire to purchase 100% of the shares of stock of Tele2000. Telefonica intended to delist Tele2000 from the Lima stock exchange and make it a private company, essentially making the Tele2000 shares worthless. Mr. Parker, *358 with this new-found knowledge, once again engaged BellSouth Peru BVI in negotiations to sell the Tele2000 shares at 35 cents per share. BellSouth Peru BVI once again rejected Mr. Parker and Vilanova's offer.
*360 In March 2004 BellSouth and Telefonica finalized the sale of BellSouth's Latin American operations, including Tele2000. Telefonica purchased BellSouth Peru BVI's interest in Tele2000 for approximately 1.5 cents per share. As part of the terms of the sale, BellSouth, agreed to indemnify Telefonica for any ongoing litigation relating to the Tele2000 shares. BellSouth also agreed that Telefonica would not have to pay more per share to Tele2000's minority shareholders than they paid to BellSouth Peru BVI. BellSouth contacted Mr. Parker and informed him of the terms of the sale. The sale essentially put a ceiling on the price of the Tele2000 shares.
Mr. Parker was informed on September 1, 2004, by his accountants that petitioner would owe income tax on approximately $7 million of long-term capital gain for 2004 from the sale of the partnership interests. His accountants informed him he could avoid payment of the tax on the sale of the partnership interests by transferring the Tele2000 *359 shares to petitioner, thus allowing petitioner to use the long-term capital loss from the sale of the shares to Telefonica. At the time of the transfer of the Tele2000 shares to petitioner, a sale of the shares to Telefonica was a foregone conclusion. The parties had negotiated terms and several drafts of an agreement before petitioner's involvement in the sale. Mr. Hillman testified that *361 he was unaware of petitioner's involvement in the sale of the Tele2000 shares until the very last minute, when petitioner was added to the final agreement. On December 16, 2004, BellSouth, Tele2000, Telefonica, Mr. Parker, Vicmar, Vilanova, and petitioner entered into the share transfer agreement. On December 23, 2004, Telefonica paid $195,418, minus fees, for the Tele2000 shares. The payment was made to Mr. Parker individually, not petitioner.
Consequently, under the end-result formulation of the step transaction doctrine, it is clear from the record that, from the start, the acquisition of the Tele2000 shares by petitioner and the subsequent sale to Telefonica were really steps of a single transaction intended to be taken for the purpose of reaching the ultimate result. Those steps constituted part *360 of a prearranged plan to have Telefonica obtain the Tele2000 shares while having the capital loss shifted to petitioner. Had Telefonica acquired the shares directly from Vilanova, this shift in the capital loss would not have occurred, and petitioner would have been obligated to report a capital gain rather than a capital loss that it could carry back to prior years. Petitioner may not avoid this result by employing mere formalisms thinly disguised to mask its true intentions.
Petitioner argues that there was a legitimate business purpose for transferring the shares to petitioner. Specifically, petitioner argues that it needed money to build a 4G cellular network in TeleCable and obtaining the Tele2000 shares would provide such funding. However, petitioner's argument does not account *361 for the fact that TeleCable was not part of the GD Parker affiliated group. TeleCable was a Peruvian corporation, wholly owned by Vicmar, a Panamanian corporation. Moreover, there is no evidence in the record of a joint venture between petitioner and TeleCable or any agreement at all regarding the development of a 4G cellular network. In fact, Ms. Bruce testified that the expenses incurred in the development of the 4G cellular network were TeleCable's expenses and were categorized as such on the bank reconciliation reports created by Ms. Bruce.
Petitioner also argues that as an American company it was in a better position to maximize the value of the Tele2000 shares in the ongoing disputes with BellSouth and BellSouth Peru BVI. The value of the Tele2000 shares was *363 fixed by Telefonica. The identity of the seller of the Tele2000 shares was irrelevant to a determination of price.
Moreover, the existence of business purposes and economic effects relating to the individual steps in a complex series of transactions does not preclude application of the step transaction doctrine. To ratify a step transaction that exalts form over substance merely because the taxpayer *362 can either (1) articulate some business purpose allegedly motivating the indirect nature of the transaction or (2) point to an economic effect resulting from the series of steps, would frequently defeat the purpose of the substance over form principle. Events such as the actual payment of money, legal transfer of property, adjustment of company books, and execution of a contract all produce economic effects and accompany almost any business dealing. Thus, we do not rely on the occurrence of these events alone to determine whether the step transaction doctrine applies. Likewise, a taxpayer may proffer some non-tax business purpose for engaging in a series of transactional steps to accomplish a result he could have achieved by more direct means, but that business purpose by itself does not preclude application of the step transaction doctrine. * * *
Under the end-result test, there is no independent tax recognition of the individual steps unless the taxpayer shows that at the time the parties engaged in the individual step, its result was the intended end result in and of itself. If this is not what was intended, then we collapse the series of steps and give tax consideration *363 only to the intended end result. Transferring the Tele2000 shares to *364 petitioner was never the end result. Even if we were to believe petitioner's business purpose, it in and of itself contemplates the sale of the Tele2000 shares as the end result, one which could be accomplished without the additional step. Petitioner's arguments do not disturb our application of the step transaction doctrine. The intermediate step is ignored, and petitioner is denied its claimed capital loss deduction from the sale of the Tele2000 shares in 2004 and consequently the carryback to 2003 and carryover to 2005.
Having found the end-result test applicable, we need not discuss the application of the binding commitment and interdependence tests to the facts of these cases.
Respondent alternatively argues that the transfer of the Tele2000 shares falls under
If a taxpayer requests a hearing in a lien case, the hearing is to be conducted by the Commissioner's Appeals Office.
If a taxpayer's underlying liability is properly at issue, the Court reviews any determination regarding the underlying liability de novo.
Petitioner argues that respondent's Appeals Office incorrectly sustained respondent's filing of a notice of Federal tax lien because it ignored the fact that petitioner's 2003 Federal income tax liability had been eliminated by a capital loss *367 carryback derived from the sale of the Tele2000 shares in 2004. Petitioner was entitled to dispute its self-assessed 2003 Federal income tax liability because it had not received a notice of deficiency or otherwise had an opportunity to dispute the tax.
GDP sold its partnership interests for $10,811,958, receiving $7 million in cash. 11 GDP reported $10,811,958 of income on its 2003 and 2004 Federal income tax returns. One million dollars of the sale proceeds was paid to GDP in 2003, and the remaining $6 million was paid to GDP in 2004. Petitioner treated the sale as an installment sale and reported a capital gain of $3,089,131 in 2003 *368 and a capital gain of $7,722,827 in 2004. The capital gain of $3,089,131 did not include the $1 million GDP received in 2003. Respondent argues that petitioner should have reported the $1 million received in 2003 as long-term capital gain for 2003 and thus understated its long-term capital gain for taxable year 2003 by $1 million. We agree.
Mr. Parker has taken inconsistent positions regarding the receipt of this $1 million. He admits that the $1 million was part of the proceeds from the sale of the partnership interests but claims the $1 million *368 was a loan, telling his accountants to treat the $1 million as a loan. Petitioner has failed to provide any evidence supporting the existence of a loan. Therefore, we find that the $1 million GDP received in 2003 was not a loan, but rather payment in part for the sale of the partnership interests. Thus, the $1 million was part of the installment sale and should be treated as long-term capital gain on petitioner's 2003 Federal income tax return. Because petitioner has to report the $1 million on its 2003 return, petitioner may reduce its long-term capital gain on its 2004 return by $1 million.
Deductions are a matter of legislative grace, and the taxpayer must prove he or she is entitled to the deductions claimed.
Respondent disallowed the following deductions related to the Valdemossa home, the yacht, and the Key Biscayne home:
| Repair and maintenance expenses | $123,242 | $50,000 | $9,623 |
| Depreciation | 104,650 | 85,610 | 84,089 |
Respondent argues that these expenses were not ordinary and necessary trade or business expenses and that even if they were, petitioner has failed to substantiate them. In order to determine whether these expenses were ordinary and necessary *370 trade or business expenses, we must first consider whether the ownership and maintenance of the Valdemossa home, the yacht, and the Key Biscayne home related primarily to personal or business purposes.
In general, where the acquisition and maintenance *370 of property such as a yacht or a residence are primarily associated with profit-motivated purposes and personal use can be said to be distinctly secondary and incidental, a deduction for maintenance expenses and depreciation will be permitted.
The above principles apply to corporate as well as individual taxpayers. In the former case, since the corporation cannot itself make personal use of the property, the character of an expenditure is determined by reference to the benefit conferred upon shareholders, officers, or other individuals in control of corporate affairs.
Respondent argues that petitioner did not use the Valdemossa home in its trade or business and therefore cannot deduct repair and maintenance expenses and depreciation. Petitioner argues that the Valdemossa home was purchased as an investment and therefore the costs associated with maintaining the home should be deductible. Petitioner was not in the business of buying and selling real estate. Rather, petitioner claims it was in the business of attempting to develop the infrastructure to bring a 4G cellular network through TeleCable to Peru. We do not see how the purchase of the Valdemossa home aided in, or was used in, petitioner's trade or business. Mr. Parker testified that he and his family used the Valdemossa home as a vacation home for one month a year during 2003, 2004, and 2005. There is no proof of business use in the record. The home was never rented to third parties or used to generate any profits. As a result, we agree with respondent that the *372 Valdemossa home was not used in petitioner's trade or business and therefore all repair and maintenance expense and depreciation *372 deductions claimed on petitioner's 2003, 2004, and 2005 Federal income tax returns associated with that home are disallowed.
Much like the Valdemossa home, the yacht was used exclusively for personal purposes by Mr. Parker and his family. Petitioner has failed to introduce any evidence indicating that the yacht was used in its trade or business or purchased with a profit motive. Therefore, we hold that all repair and maintenance expenses and depreciation associated with the yacht and claimed on petitioner's 2003, 2004, and 2005 Federal income tax returns are disallowed.
Respondent argues that petitioner did not use the Key Biscayne home in its trade or business and therefore cannot deduct repair and maintenance expenses and depreciation associated with the Key Biscayne home. Specifically, respondent argues that Mr. Parker and his family used the Key Biscayne home as a personal residence during 2003, 2004, and 2005. Therefore, respondent argues that the expenses associated with the home were personal and nondeductible under
Mr. *373 Parker and his family used the home as their residence while in Miami. Lesli M. Loayza, Mr. Parker's daughter, resided at the Key Biscayne home*373 throughout 2003, 2004, and 2005 while she attended Florida International University. Jonathan S. Loayza, Mr. Parker's son, resided at the home for at least six months during 2003 and five months during 2005 while he attended high school in Miami. Estralla Delgado Parker Vanini, Mr. Parker's daughter, resided at the home for six months in 2003 while she attended high school in Miami. Mr. Parker and his wife used the home as their residence throughout 2003, 2004 and 2005 when they came to Miami. Finally, Blanca A. Gonzalez, the family's personal maid, resided at the home throughout 2003, 2004, and 2005. Mr. Parker and his family as well as Ms. Gonzalez were given full access to and use of the premises for personal purposes. The only area of the home that Mr. Parker's family did not have use of was the office on the ground floor where Ms. Bruce worked and where petitioner's records and books were kept.
Expenses associated with the ground floor office are the only expenses which may be deducted under
Respondent disallowed the following other deductions from petitioner's Federal income tax returns:
| Bank charges | $783 | $1,506 | $14,675 |
| Contract labor | 49,445 | 44,927 | 40,225 |
| Miscellaneous expenses | 4,025 | — | 58 |
| Office expenses | — | 7,069 | 3,734 |
| Legal fees | 630,000 | — | — |
| Other rent and royalty expenses | 76,379 | 172,630 | 80,001 |
| Professional fees | 242,806 | 166,025 | |
| Other deductions from Conch Harbor | 279,355 | — | — |
| Telephone expenses | 25 | — | — |
| Travel expenses | 66,485 | ||
| Total other expenses | 1,106,497 | 468,938 | 304,718 |
If the trial record provides sufficient evidence that the taxpayer has incurred a deductible expense but the taxpayer is unable to substantiate adequately the precise amount of the deduction to which he or she is otherwise entitled, the Court may estimate the amount of the deductible expense and allow the deduction to that extent *375 (
Petitioner has failed to substantiate most of its other expenses. Petitioner introduced a number of documents into evidence, including tax returns, work papers from its accountant, bank statements, and canceled checks. However, petitioner failed to explain to the Court, in brief or at trial, which of these documents and more specifically which of the thousands of pages before us substantiate its claimed expenses. *376 On the basis of our analysis of the evidence, we find that petitioner is entitled to a contract labor deduction of only $15,000 for 2004. This expense was for payment to Ms. Bruce, petitioner's administrative assistant. The payments are substantiated by two canceled checks in the amounts of $9,000 on January 28 and $6,000 on September 3, 2004. All of petitioner's *376 other deductions are either unsubstantiated or unrelated to petitioner's trade or business and thus are denied.
Petitioner failed to substantiate its bank charges; therefore, those deductions are denied. Petitioner failed to provide us a breakdown of its contract labor expense. As mentioned above, all we could determine was that Ms. Bruce's salary was included in this amount and only $15,000 for 2004 was substantiated. Petitioner failed to provide any detail with regard to its miscellaneous expenses, let alone substantiate those expenses. With regard to petitioner's office expenses, we have a reply to an information document request in which petitioner's accountants provide a breakdown of the office expense for 2004. However, a simple chart of expenses paid without documentation of the actual payments is not enough to substantiate *377 the expenses. Therefore, petitioner is denied all deductions related to its office expenses.
Petitioner claimed legal fees paid to attorneys in relation to the arbitration and the shareholder derivative suit. These legal fees were ordinary and necessary trade or business expenses because petitioner was the owner of the Tele2000 shares at the time of the arbitration and shareholder derivative suits. However, petitioner has failed to substantiate most of the claimed legal fees. Though petitioner provided a ledger, we are unable to rely on the information in it without *377 further support. The only support petitioner provided to the Court was two checks. The first check was made out to Hughes, Hubbard & Reed for $50,000 on December 8, 2003. The second check was made out to Lydia Quesada for $5,000 on December 4, 2003. Without additional proof of payment of the claimed legal fees, we can award petitioner only a $55,000 deduction relating to the legal fees for taxable year 2003.
Petitioner also claimed deductions for other rent and royalty expenses. Once again petitioner failed to provide a breakdown of this category of expenses and failed to provide the Court with evidence to substantiate any *378 such expenses. Petitioner claimed expense deductions for professional fees paid to independent contractors hired to assist petitioner with the 4G cellular network. Similar to every other expense deduction petitioner claimed, the amounts reported on petitioner's tax returns do not correlate with any of the information introduced into evidence. Regardless, we deny these deductions as petitioner has failed to prove it was in the trade or business of developing a 4G cellular network; thus any expenses associated with the development of such a network are not ordinary and necessary trade or business expenses. Furthermore, it is unclear whether these independent contractors performed services for petitioner or TeleCable. TeleCable is a Peruvian corporation independent of petitioner. Mr. Parker as the indirect owner *378 of both TeleCable and petitioner may not simply pay the expenses of his Peruvian corporation with funds from his Florida corporation and then reap the benefits of a U.S. Federal income tax deduction.
Petitioner failed to provide a breakdown of the other deductions from Conch Harbor or provide any information regarding these deductions, let alone provide substantiating information. *379 These deductions are denied. Finally petitioner's claimed telephone expenses and travel expense deductions are denied. Petitioner failed to introduce any evidence of when or where the travel took place or who was traveling.
Respondent contends that Mr. Parker and his family's rent-free use of the Key Biscayne and Valdemossa homes is a constructive dividend paid from Vanini to Mr. Parker through the chain of petitioner, Vilanova, and Vicmar.
We held above that Mr. Parker and his family's use of the Valdemossa home was a personal use of the home and that there was no corporate business purpose to the use. Likewise we held that Mr. Parker and his family's use of the Key Biscayne home, except for the office on the ground floor, was primarily for personal use. The only evidence petitioner offered establishing the use of the Key Biscayne home for a business purpose was Mr. Parker's self-serving testimony that he used the upper levels of the Key Biscayne home as a facility to host meetings and as an office to conduct petitioner's business. We need not accept *381 *380 Mr. Parker's self-serving statements if they are questionable, improbable, or unreasonable.
Respondent argues that the rent-free use of the Valdemossa and Key Biscayne homes is a distribution from Vanini to petitioner, from petitioner to Vilanova, and so on up the chain of corporations to Mr. Parker. Petitioner contends that Mr. Parker paid rent for the use of the two homes and therefore there is no distribution for the rent-free use of the homes. Petitioner reported rental income from the Key Biscayne home on its Federal income tax returns of $12,000, $30,000, and $30,000 for taxable years 2003, 2004, and 2005, respectively. Petitioner also reported rental income from the Valdemossa home on its Federal income tax returns of $15,000, $24,000, and $24,000 for taxable years 2003, 2004, and 2005, respectively. Petitioner argues that Mr. Parker paid this rent through the reduction of a loan he had made to petitioner.
We found no evidence of a loan *382 to petitioner in the record, and petitioner submitted no evidence of a reduction of said loan as payment for rent. Additionally, Vanini, not petitioner, owned the Key Biscayne and Valdemossa *381 homes; thus rent should have been paid to Vanini, not petitioner. On the evidence in the record, we do not believe Mr. Parker ever intended to pay rent for his use of the two homes. Rental income was included in petitioner's Federal income tax returns only at the behest of Mr. Parker's accountants. We find that Mr. Parker's rent-free use of the home was a distribution from Vanini to petitioner, followed by a distribution from petitioner to Vilanova, and so on up the chain of corporations to Mr. Parker. Though the transaction took place in a single step (i.e., Mr. Parker directly gaining a personal benefit from Vanini), given the corporate structure, we find that the benefit and thus the distribution traveled up the chain of corporations.
In
This Court found that the withdrawals were not loans but were in effect dividends from Tollefsen Bros. to Mr. Tollefsen. In so finding, the Court stated: It is clear that [Mr.] Tollefsen exercised complete control over Tollefsen Manufacturing through the ownership of all the stock in its parent company Tollefsen *384 Bros. He was able to siphon off the assets of Tollefsen Manufacturing only because * * * [he] owned 100 percent of the stock of Tollefsen Bros. and the latter owned 100 percent of the stock of Tollefsen Manufacturing. In every real sense the funds in question came to him through Tollefsen Bros., notwithstanding that two steps (a transfer from Tollefsen Manufacturing to its parent, followed by a transfer from the parent to Tollefsen) were compressed into a single step, the transfer of funds directly to [Mr.] Tollefsen. We find, therefore, that the withdrawals in issue were in substance distributions to Tollefsen Bros. from its subsidiary Tollefsen Manufacturing, with a resulting constructive dividend to petitioners, the sole shareholders of Tollefsen Bros. * * *
*383 Similarly, Mr. Parker exercised complete control over Vanini through his ownership of the intervening corporations, Vicmar, Vilanova, and petitioner. Mr. Parker and his family were able to use the two homes without paying rent because he owned 100% of Vicmar, which owned 100% of Vilanova, which owned 100% of petitioner, which owned 100% of Vanini. Much as in
The amount of the distribution to Mr. Parker is the fair rental value for one month's use of the Valdemossa home in each of 2003, 2004, and 2005 and the fair rental value for the full-year use of the Key Biscayne home in 2003, 2004, and 2005, taking into account that the office on the ground floor was used solely for business purposes. Respondent concedes that the fair rental values for the Valdemossa home were $15,000, $24,000, and $24,000 for taxable years 2003, *384 2004, and 2005, respectively. Both petitioner and respondent offered expert reports and testimony as to the fair rental value of the Key Biscayne home.
Petitioner submitted the testimony of Cecilia Samaja. Ms. Samaja is a real estate broker and sales associate in Florida. Ms. *386 Samaja is not a licensed real estate appraiser. Having reviewed Ms. Samaja's report and her testimony, we do not find that her report is credible and therefore reject in whole her opinion.
Respondent relies on the expert report of Edward N. Ames13 to determine the fair rental value of the Key Biscayne home in 2003, 2004, and 2005. Mr. Ames' report finds fair rental values of $21,000, $23,000, and $23,000 per month for 2003, 2004, and 2005, respectively. These rent amounts were for full use of the home including the office on the ground floor. Mr. Ames is a licensed appraiser. His expert report was thorough. He listed and described comparables and explained his methodology to the Court. We find the fair rental values determined by Mr. Ames to be fair measures of the rent that should have been charged for use of the Key Biscayne home during 2003, 2004, and 2005. However, these fair rental amounts did not take into account the exclusive *385 business use of the first floor office and therefore must be adjusted. For purposes of entering decisions in these cases, we will order the parties to prepare the requisite computation under
In order to determine the amounts of the constructive dividends distributed from petitioner to Vilanova, we will order the parties to compute as part of their computations under
Except as provided in
Respondent determined that petitioner is liable for accuracy-related penalties under
An underpayment is due to a taxpayer's negligence where the taxpayer fails to make a reasonable attempt to comply with the provisions of the Code.
The Commissioner bears the burden of production with respect to the taxpayer's liability for the
For 2003 respondent adjusted petitioner's taxable income to include an additional $1 million of capital gain net income and disallowed $1,134,389 of repair and maintenance expenses, depreciation, and other deductions. The result, as set out in the notice of deficiency, was a deficiency in tax of $793,692. Respondent determined petitioner was liable for an accuracy-related penalty of $158,738 under
For 2004 respondent adjusted petitioner's taxable income to include an additional $7,722,822 of capital gain net income and an additional $1 million of other income 16 and disallowed $604,548 of repair and maintenance expenses, *391 depreciation, and other deductions. The result, as set out in the notice of deficiency, was a deficiency in tax of $2,888,443. Respondent determined petitioner was liable for an accuracy-related penalty of $52,536 under section *389 6662(a) attributable to (1) negligence or disregard of rules or regulations under
For 2005 respondent adjusted petitioner's taxable income to include an additional $2,660,177 of capital gain net income and disallowed $398,430 of repair and maintenance expenses, depreciation, and other deductions. The result, as set out in the notice of deficiency, was a deficiency in tax of $839,462. Respondent determined that the underpayment of tax was attributable to *392 a gross valuation misstatement under
Respondent argues that petitioner's underpayments of tax resulting from petitioner's claimed repair and maintenance expenses, depreciation, and other deductions for 2003, 2004, and 2005 are the result of petitioner's negligence and thus subject to the accuracy-related penalty under
However, petitioner was able to substantiate some repair and maintenance expenses *393 and depreciation associated with the Key Biscayne home, certain legal fees, and a small portion of salary it paid to Ms. Bruce. Accordingly, we find that petitioner is subject to the accuracy-related penalties with respect to all claimed deductions except those few deductions mentioned above that were substantiated.
Absent stipulation otherwise, these cases are appealable to the Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit. That Court of Appeals in
*392 In
In
*393 In affirming the Tax Court, the Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit specifically rejected the reasoning of the Court of Appeals for the Fifth and Ninth Circuits, applied *396 the gross valuation misstatement penalty, and held that the "rule rests upon the fact that the abusive tax shelter is built upon the basis misstatement, and the transaction's lack of economic substance is directly attributable to that misstatement."
The cases at bar do not involve a sham transaction. Unlike the
In contrast to the transactions in
We have applied the step transaction doctrine to disregard Vilanova's contribution of the Tele2000 shares to petitioner for U.S. Federal income tax purposes. Consequently, for U.S. Federal income tax purposes, we have disallowed petitioner's claimed capital loss for 2004 and claimed capital loss carryover for 2005. Thus, we find that petitioner's underpayments of tax are not "attributable to" a valuation misstatement because the amount of basis petitioner claimed in the Tele2000 shares did not affect our application of the step transaction doctrine.
Petitioner's underpayment for 2005 was also attributable to the disallowance of deductions for repair and maintenance expenses, depreciation, and other deductions. Because the repair and maintenance expenses, depreciation, and other deductions claimed for 2005 did not depend on disputed valuation or basis statements, any underpayments of tax resulting from their disallowance cannot be based on gross valuation misstatements.
*395 On the basis of the foregoing, we find that petitioner is not liable for the 40% accuracy-related penalty for a gross valuation misstatement for 2004 and 2005.
We *399 find that petitioner has not acted with reasonable cause and in good faith with respect to the various trade or business expense deductions claimed.
*396 Petitioner deducted business expenses which it has been unable to substantiate and has not attempted to substantiate. Petitioner caused its various U.S. entities to purchase assets for the personal use of its shareholder, Mr. Parker, and his family without any regard for the fact that corporate funds were being used. Petitioner then attempted to obtain a tax break from the use of these funds. Given the circumstances, we find that petitioner has not acted with reasonable cause and in good faith with respect to these deductions and is therefore liable for the accuracy-related penalty as to these deductions under
However, we find that petitioner has acted with reasonable cause and in good faith with respect to the capital loss denied for 2004 and the capital loss carryback and carryover disallowed for 2003 and 2005, respectively. A taxpayer may meet his burden of establishing that he acted with reasonable cause and in good faith by showing that he reasonably relied in good faith *400 on the advice of an independent professional, such as a tax adviser, lawyer, or accountant, as to the transaction's tax treatment.
The professional advice must meet several requirements. First, the taxpayer must show that the advice was based on "all pertinent facts and circumstances and *397 the law as it relates to those facts and circumstances."
Petitioner relied on the advice of its accountants and attorneys in preparing its 2003, 2004, and 2005 returns claiming the capital loss and *401 the capital loss carryback and carryover and put forth an argument that Vilanova had indeed transferred the Tele2000 shares to petitioner in September 2004 and thus incurred a capital loss for 2004. Petitioner's accountants wrote a memorandum of law to petitioner in which it advised petitioner that Vilanova could transfer the Tele2000 shares to petitioner before the enactment of
In reaching our holdings herein, we have considered all arguments made, and, to the extent not mentioned above, we conclude they are moot, irrelevant, or without merit.
*399 To reflect the foregoing,
Footnotes
1. These cases were consolidated for purposes of trial, briefing, and opinion.↩
2. Respondent concedes that petitioner established that Vilanova, S.A., had a basis of $12,746,730 in the BellSouth Peru, S.A. stock immediately before petitioner allegedly acquired the stock from Vilanova, S.A., on December 21, 2004. Respondent also concedes that petitioner reported its receipt of $7 million from the sale of partnership interests in Miami Beach Marina Associates, Ltd., and Conch Harbor Marina Associates, Ltd., including the $1 million it received during 2003, on its Federal income tax return for the taxable year 2004. Respondent concedes that the amount of petitioner's withholding tax liability for constructive dividends in 2003 is $80,100, not $87,300. Finally, respondent concedes that petitioner is not liable for the additions to tax under
secs. 6651(a)(1) and(2) and6656↩ relating to unreported dividends.3. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code (Code), as amended and in effect for the years at issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. Amounts are rounded to the nearest dollar.↩
4. The difference between the capital gains reported on petitioner's 2003 and 2004 Federal income tax returns and the cash received is due to petitioner's claiming deductions for partnership losses which should have been carried forward or otherwise limited.↩
5. Discussed
infra↩ .6. In 1999 Tele2000 changed its name to BellSouth Peru, N.A. (BellSouth Peru). During November 2004 BellSouth Peru changed its name to Comunicaciones Moviles del Peru, S.A. (Comunicaciones Moviles). On June 1, 2005, Comunicaciones Moviles changed its name to Telefonica Moviles, S.A. (Telefonica Moviles Peru). Unless otherwise indicated, for purposes of this opinion we refer to Telemovil, Tele2000, BellSouth Peru, Communicaciones Moviles, and Telefonica Moviles Peru as "Tele2000 ".↩
7. The parties stipulated the basis attributable to the remaining Tele2000 shares.↩
8. SUNAT is an agency of the Peruvian Government responsible for enforcing the Peruvian tax laws, similar to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).↩
9. LatinoAmericana, a corporation organized under the laws of the Republic of Peru, is a brokerage firm licensed to trade securities listed on the Lima Stock Exchange.↩
10. The exact date petitioner opened its account with Lehman is unknown. The first financial statement available for petitioner's account with Lehman is the December 2004 statement. Mr. Perez testified that the first statement for an account becomes available in the month following the month in which the account is opened.↩
11.
See supra↩ note 4.12.
Sec. 280A imposes additional rules on individuals and S corporations with respect to home office deductions. Petitioner and Vanini are both C corporations; thereforesec. 280A↩ is inapplicable in the cases at hand.13. Edward N. Ames was employed by respondent as a field specialist. He is licensed in Florida as a certified general real estate appraiser, a registered real estate broker, and a licensed mortgage broker. He also is an MAI member of the Appraisal Institute.↩
14.
Sec. 881(c)↩ is not relevant to these cases.15. A "foreign corporation" is a corporation that is not organized in the United States or under the law of the United States or of any State.
Sec. 7701(a)(4) and(5)↩ . Vilanova is a corporation organized under the law of the Republic of Panama, and petitioner is a corporation organized under the law of Florida.16. This other income is a determination of cancellation of indebtedness income argued in the alternative by respondent. We have found there was no cancellation of indebtedness income for 2004.↩
17.
See ;Alpha I, L.P., ex rel. Sands v. United States , 682 F.3d 1009, 1026-1031 (Fed. Cir. 2012) ;Fid. Int'l Currency Advisor A Fund v. United States , 661 F.3d 667, 671-675 (1st Cir. 2011) ,Merino v. Commissioner , 196 F.3d 147, 157-159 (3d Cir. 1999)aff'g T.C. Memo. 1997-385 ; ,Zfass v. Commissioner , 118 F.3d 184, 190-191 (4th Cir. 1997)aff'g T.C. Memo. 1996-167 ; ,Illes v. Commissioner , 982 F.2d 163, 167 (6th Cir. 1992)aff'g T.C. Memo. 1991-449 ; ,Gilman v. Commissioner , 933 F.2d 143, 151 (2d Cir. 1991)aff'g T.C. Memo. 1989-684 ; ,Massengill v. Commissioner , 876 F.2d 616, 619-620 (8th Cir. 1989)aff'g T.C. Memo. 1988-427↩ .18. For a detailed description of the contours of a prototypical CARDS transaction, see
.Kerman v. Commissioner , T.C. Memo. 2011-54↩19. We note that we have not ruled on the issue of whether petitioner received the Tele2000 shares from Vilanova before the enactment of
sec. 362(e)↩ because the issue is irrelevant when the end-result step transaction doctrine is applied.
Related
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