Hawkins v. Franchise Tax Board (In Re Hawkins)

430 B.R. 225
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. California
DecidedApril 23, 2010
Docket14-43446
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 430 B.R. 225 (Hawkins v. Franchise Tax Board (In Re Hawkins)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hawkins v. Franchise Tax Board (In Re Hawkins), 430 B.R. 225 (Cal. 2010).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION

THOMAS E. CARLSON, Bankruptcy Judge.

In this action, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and the California Franchise Tax Board (FTB) seek to have unpaid income tax liabilities excepted from the discharge that Debtors Trip and Lisa Hawkins received in their chapter 11 case. The IRS and the FTB (collectively the Government) assert that the tax liabilities should not be discharged, because Debtors filed fraudulent returns, and because Debtors attempted to evade collection of tax. It is unnecessary to determine *228 whether Trip Hawkins filed fraudulent returns, because I determine that he attempted to evade collection of tax by dissipating his assets on unnecessary and unreasonable expenditures while he knew he owed taxes and knew he was insolvent. 1 I determine that Lisa Hawkins neither filed fraudulent returns nor attempted in any way to evade tax.

BACKGROUND

A. The Debtors

William M. “Trip” Hawkins (Trip) is a very sophisticated businessman. He received an undergraduate degree in Strategy and Applied Game Theory from Harvard College, and an M.B.A. from Stanford University. He was an early employee of Apple Computer, where he rose to director of marketing. In 1982, he left Apple and became one of the founders of Electronic Arts, Inc. (EA), which became the largest supplier of computer entertainment software in the world. By 1996, Trip had a net worth of approximately $100 million, primarily from his holdings of EA shares.

Lisa Hawkins (Lisa) married Trip in 1996. She received a B.A. in communications from Notre Dame de Namur University. Prior to her marriage, she worked as a leasing agent for a car dealership and prepared her own tax returns. After her marriage, she worked in the home and cared for the two children she had with Trip and the two children Trip had from his first marriage.

B. The Tax Shelters

In 1990, EA created a wholly owned subsidiary, 3DO, for the purpose of developing and marketing the devices on which computer games are played. Trip Hawkins left EA to run 3DO. 3DO went public in 1993. In 1994, Trip began to sell large amounts of his EA common stock to invest heavily in 3DO.

In 1996, KPMG, the accounting firm that prepared Debtors’ tax returns, advised Trip that Debtors would recognize very large capital gains upon the sale of the EA shares, and suggested an investment that would create capital losses that Debtors could use to offset those capital gains. Pursuant to this advice, Debtors invested in a transaction called FLIP (Foreign Leveraged Investment Portfolio) in 1996, and invested in a transaction called OPIS (Offshore Portfolio Investment Strategy) in 1998.

FLIP worked in the following way. In September 1996, Trip purchased 1,551 shares of the United Bank of Switzerland (UBS) for $1.5 million. He also purchased an option to acquire shares of Harbour-towne, Inc. (Harbourtowne), a Cayman Islands corporation. At the same time, Har-bourtowne contracted to purchase 30,750 shares of UBS treasury stock from UBS for $30 million. UBS received an option to repurchase those shares before the sale closed. UBS exercised that option, and the UBS shares were never transferred to Harbourtowne. Trip received an opinion letter from KPMG stating that Trip could add to the tax basis of his UBS shares the $30 million Harbourtowne had contracted to pay for its UBS shares. The KPMG opinion letter stated that it was more likely than not that UBS’s repurchase of its shares would be considered a distribution to Harbourtowne (which was not taxable because Harbourtowne is a foreign corporation), and that an appropriate treatment of this transaction would be to transfer Harbourtowne’s basis in its UBS shares to Trip’s basis in his UBS shares.

*229 OPIS worked in a similar way. In October 1998, Trip purchased 9,200 shares of UBS for $1.99 million. He also purchased an option to acquire an interest in Hogue, Investors LP (Hogue), a Cayman Islands limited partnership. Hogue contracted to purchase 145,760 shares of UBS treasury stock for $40 million. Pursuant to a call option, UBS repurchased those shares before the shares were transferred to Hogue. Trip received opinion letters from KPMG and Brown & Wood stating that he could add to the tax basis of his UBS shares the $40 million Hogue had contracted to pay for its UBS shares.

Debtors claimed losses from the FLIP and OPIS shelters on their 1996-2000 tax returns. In December 1996, Trip sold 310 shares of UBS stock, and Debtors claimed resulting losses of $6,027,306. In December 1997, Trip sold the remaining 1,241 UBS shares involved in the FLIP transaction, and Debtors claimed resulting losses of $23,396,798. In December 1998, Trip sold 5,900 of the UBS shares involved in the OPIS transaction, and Debtors claimed resulting losses of $20,570,283. In December 1999, Trip sold an additional 1,000 UBS shares acquired in the OPIS transaction, and Debtors claimed resulting losses of $3,566,297. In December 2000, Trip sold the remaining 2,300 UBS shares acquired in the OPIS transaction, and Debtors claimed resulting losses of $8,244,602.

In July 2001, the IRS challenged the validity of basis-shifting tax shelters, such as FLIP and OPIS. In Notice 2001-45, the IRS rejected the central concept upon which those tax shelters are based. The IRS Notice states in substance that when a U.S. taxpayer owns shares of a foreign corporation, and also owns an interest in an offshore entity that holds shares of the foreign corporation, the U.S. taxpayer’s basis in his shares should not be increased to include the offshore entity’s basis in its shares of the foreign corporation when the offshore entity’s shares are redeemed by the foreign corporation.

In July 2001, the IRS also commenced an audit of Debtors’ 1997 tax return, focusing its inquiry upon the losses claimed from their transactions in UBS stock. 2 The audit was later expanded to include Debtors’ 1998, 1999, and 2000 tax returns. Debtors immediately retained Hochman, Salkin, Rettig, Toscher & Perez, P.C. (Hochman), a law firm specializing in tax litigation, to represent them in the audit. Hochman responded to several IRS requests for information regarding the FLIP and OPIS transactions.

In July 2002, the IRS Revenue Agent performing the audit of Debtors’ returns sent Debtors’ counsel a letter stating that the losses from the FLIP and OPIS transactions should be disallowed.

[T]he Service has concluded that it has a strong case regarding this issue. It is the position of the IRS that the claimed benefits from this transaction are not allowable. The question of application of additions to tax, sometimes called penalties, is also being actively considered.

In October 2002, the IRS issued Announcement 2002-97, in which it described the terms upon which it would settle cases involving basis-shifting tax shelters, such as FLIP and OPIS. The Announcement stated that settling taxpayers would be required to concede 80 percent of the claimed losses, would be permitted to claim 20 percent of the claimed losses, and *230

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Related

Vaughn v. United States (In re Vaughn)
463 B.R. 531 (D. Colorado, 2011)
Hawkins v. Franchise Tax Board
447 B.R. 291 (N.D. California, 2011)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
430 B.R. 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawkins-v-franchise-tax-board-in-re-hawkins-canb-2010.