Gss Holdings (Liberty) Inc. v. United States

CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedJuly 26, 2021
Docket19-728
StatusPublished

This text of Gss Holdings (Liberty) Inc. v. United States (Gss Holdings (Liberty) Inc. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Federal Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gss Holdings (Liberty) Inc. v. United States, (uscfc 2021).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Federal Claims No. 19-728T (Filed: July 26, 2021)

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GSS HOLDINGS (LIBERTY) INC., Tax refund suit; I.RC. § Plaintiff, 707(b)(1); I.R.C. § 165; Related party transaction; Substance v. over form; Step transaction doctrine; Danielson rule. THE UNITED STATES,

Defendant.

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Brian W. Kittle, New York, NY, with whom was James B. Kelly, for plaintiff.

Dara B. Oliphant, Trial Attorney, United States Department of Justice, Tax Division, Washington, DC, with whom were David A. Hubbert, Acting Assistant Attorney General, David I. Pincus, Section Chief, G. Robson Stewart, Assistant Chief, Joseph A. Sergi, Senior Litigation Counsel, Patrick Phippen, Trial Attorney, and Jeremy A. Rill, Trial Attorney, for defendant.

OPINION

BRUGGINK, Judge.

This tax refund action, brought by GSS Holdings (“GSS”), is a petition for allowance of a claimed loss deduction arising under 26 U.S.C. § 165.1 At issue is a deduction claimed in the tax year ended December 31, 2011, and carried back to the tax year ended December 31, 2009. Plaintiff contends that the disallowance by the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) was

1 All subsequent references to the United States Code and sections within the code are to Title 26 and the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 as amended (“the Code”) unless otherwise noted. inappropriate. The case is before us on cross motions for summary judgment. Oral argument was held on July 14, 2021.

The IRS invoked the step transaction doctrine to characterize the events that resulted in the claimed deduction as a single sale transaction. The result is that the loss was treated as a single event—loss on sale of business assets. Because the transaction was with a related party, § 707(b)(1) applied and the IRS disallowed a deduction. If the loss, as plaintiff asserts, is not characterized as part of the sale of business assets, it would be allowed and be deductible under § 165(a) as an ordinary loss. We disagree with plaintiff and agree with the government that the loss stems from the sale of a capital asset. Thus, as further explained below, we deny plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment and grant defendant’s.

BACKGROUND2

Liberty Street Funding LLC (“Liberty”) is a commercial paper conduit3 and wholly owned subsidiary of GSS.4 For tax purposes Liberty Street is a flow through partnership, in which GSS is a partner. In 2011, Liberty filed an IRS 1065 Partnership Tax Return that included the sale of financial assets on IRS Form 4797, reflecting a loss of $22,549,612. That loss stemmed from a payment made to the Bank of Nova Scotia (“BNS”) out of a Liberty-held account in conjunction with a sale of a package of assets to BNS by Liberty, discussed in further detail below. BNS was also the parent

2 The facts are drawn from the attachments to the parties’ briefs and are not materially disputed. 3 As explained in his deposition by Mr. Peter Gartland, Director of Global Securitization at BNS, a commercial paper conduit is a financial vehicle that makes investments funded by the issuance of short-term notes (commercial paper). It reinvests the proceeds in longer term investments. The conduit profits off the spread, or the rate of return on its investments that are in excess of the interest rate paid on the commercial paper that it issues. 4 As explained by plaintiff, GSS is the legal owner of Liberty Street. GSS’s equity is “nominal,” totaling only $25,000; so it requires additional financial support to operate. The “legal shareholder does not have any decision- making ability, nor is it required to absorb any expected losses or receive any expected residual returns.” Pl.’s Ex. 1 at 2-3. As discussed in the depositions, Bank of Nova Scotia, as administrator, controls the operations of Liberty Street.

2 of GSS’s 1065 Liberty Street Tax Partner, Scotiabank (Ireland) Limited (“Scotiabank”). The IRS disallowed a deduction for the loss on the transaction as a sale to a related party. GSS asserts that the loss was an ordinary business loss deductible under I.R.C. §165 and that the related entity rule should not apply.

The relevant transactions occurred on December 29 and 30, 2011. The first was the exercise by Liberty of a Liquidity Asset Purchase Agreement5 (“LAPA”) which required BNS to purchase distressed financial assets (in this instance known as “Aaardvark”)6 from Liberty at a preset (“par”) value equal to Liberty’s basis in the assets.7 In conjunction with the sale of these assets to BNS, Liberty was also required, under the terms of a separately executed First Loss Note, further explained below, to transfer $24,000,000 to BNS. Liberty simultaneously received approximately $1.45 million in insurance proceeds from this event. The $24,000,000 cash transfer

5 As discussed by Mr. Gartland in his deposition, to mitigate or hedge against liquidity risk inherent in the business model, commercial paper conduits create Liquidity Asset Purchase Agreements (“LAPAs”) for every package of longer-term investments the conduit purchases. The LAPA ensures liquidity by giving the conduit the ability to put the investment package to a counterparty at a preset price, regardless of the investments market value. For this protection Liberty pays a liquidity fee to the counterparty. Plaintiff represents that Liberty has created a LAPA for every investment it has entered since inception in 1997. Plaintiff also notes that BNS was the counterparty to over 95% of Liberty’s LAPAs. As mentioned, BNS was also the administrator of Liberty. 6 Mr. Gartland further explained that these assets were an investment known as “Aaardvark IV.” Aaardvark IV was an Oppenheimer Funds special purpose investment vehicle referred to as a “warehouse facility.” The fund held mortgage-backed securities and other financial assets. Like all investments Liberty enters, it set up a corresponding LAPA agreement, which was renewed annually. 7 For example, if Liberty purchased an investment for $100, and subsequently the market value of the investment declined to $80, the LAPA allowed Liberty to force the counterparty to pay a preset (“par”) value for the investment. If Bank X had agreed to be the counterparty to the LAPA, and the preset price was $100, Bank X would be required to pay $100 to Liberty for the investment assets. This essentially shifts the risk of investment decline to the counterparty.

3 netted with the $1.45 million insurance proceeds result in the disputed $22,549,612 loss.

The $24,000,000 payment was from a Liberty bank account called the First Loss Note Reserve Account. As explained in several depositions cited by plaintiff, the funds in this account were loaned to Liberty and held for the benefit of, and to be paid to, the first party to suffer a loss upon a LAPA agreement being invoked. The creditor on the Note at the time of the transactions at issue was BNS subsidiary Scotiabank. As creditor on the note, Scotiabank was also Liberty’s partner for federal tax purposes.

As of December 29, 2011, Scotiabank had just become the creditor one day prior to the LAPA transaction. It acquired the First Loss Note from an independent third-party entity, Reconnaissance Investors, LLC.8 We accept plaintiff’s assertion that the reason for Scotiabank’s acquisition of the Note was to internalize the high interest expense9 and because the original purpose of the note no longer existed under new accounting standards.10

As a result of Scotiabank acquiring the First Loss Note, the Liberty- Reconnaissance tax partnership was terminated on December 29. Liberty therefore filed a second 2011 short year tax return with its new tax partner, Scotiabank, for the final 3 days in 2011.

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