In Re Ford

194 B.R. 583, 77 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 685, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20095, 1995 WL 822634
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedDecember 26, 1995
DocketC2-94-322
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 194 B.R. 583 (In Re Ford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Ford, 194 B.R. 583, 77 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 685, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20095, 1995 WL 822634 (S.D. Ohio 1995).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

HOLSCHUH, District Judge.

This appeal arises out of the collection and payment of trust fund taxes by a corporation, Village Junction Restaurant, Inc., formerly owned by Jon Ford. Mr. Ford, the sole shareholder, was responsible for collecting and remitting the trust fund taxes to the Internal Revenue Service. Believing that these taxes had not been paid in full following the sale of the corporation in August 1986, the IRS assessed a penalty against Mr. Ford in March 1988 1 and later, in January 1993, filed a proof of claim in the Ford’s chapter 11 bankruptcy proceeding listing the penalty and interest on that penalty as claims.

The Fords objected to the proof of claim. After a hearing on the matter, the bankruptcy court issued an order disallowing the IRS’s claim to the extent it related to the penalty and interest assessed against Mr. Ford. A disallowed claim “may not share in the distribution of the debtor’s assets in bankruptcy.” Hawxhurst v. Pettibone Corp., 40 F.3d 175, 179 (7th Cir.1994). The IRS appeals the bankruptcy court’s decision.

I. Facts

Village Junction Restaurant, Inc., located at 39 E. Main St., Columbus, Ohio, began operation in 1981. (Transcript of hearing, p. 19-20.) Mr. Ford was not always timely in filing the returns for the employment taxes that were due; he estimated that as a result he had paid approximately $71,000.00 in penalties and interest to the IRS as of the date of the hearing. (Id. at 32-33.) Because of a lack of business, Mr. Ford closed the restaurant in June 1986 and sold the property two months later to Wendy’s International, Inc. (Id. at 20-21.) The closing on the sale was held August 6, 1986. (Id. at 21.)

Mr. Ford’s belief was that all the outstanding tax liabilities of Village Junction Restaurant, Inc. would be fully paid from the pro *585 ceeds from the sale of the property. (Id. at 22.) He testified that Bank One had a lien on everything he owned but had agreed to allow the IRS to be paid so that he “wouldn’t have that battle to fight.” (Id.) He further testified that a representative from the IRS, a man named John Leyshon, was present at the closing and that Mr. Leyshon (after placing a telephone call to Cincinnati to “make sure he knew all the numbers”) left that day with a cheek for $30,469.09. (Id.) The closing statement itself, admitted into evidence at the hearing, shows a payment to the IRS in the amount of $30,469.09.

The IRS apparently did not believe that the proceeds from the sale of Village Junction Restaurant, Inc. were sufficient to cover all its outstanding tax liabilities. Shortly after the closing, a representative from the IRS told Mr. Ford that his automobile was going to be repossessed unless he paid approximately $8,600.00 to the IRS. (Id. at 24). Mr. Ford paid the amount due and wrote the IRS asking for an accounting. (Id.) The IRS sent him thirty-two pages of computer printouts (but no explanation, particularly with respect to the $30,469.09 payment it had previously received) and later sent him additional bills for interest on the taxes the IRS contended were still due. (Id. at 24-25.) Thereafter, Mr. Ford struggled to pay his prior and current 2 tax liabilities. (Id. at 26.)

On March 21, 1988, the IRS assessed a penalty against Mr. Ford in the amount of $28,392.50, contending that he was responsible for the trust fund taxes collected by Village Junction Restaurant, Inc. Mr. Ford made payments of $11,839.09 in 1989 and $101.39 in 1990 but was never able to fully satisfy the penalty assessed against him. (Id. at 57-58; Government’s Exhibit 2). On July 11, 1991, the Fords filed a petition for relief under chapter 11 of the bankruptcy code. The IRS filed an amended proof of claim for $58,732.90, an amount comprised of a number of items. 3 Included within the total amount was a claim for the unpaid balance of the penalty assessed against Mr. Ford (the balance, according to the proof of claim, was $16,457.02) and a claim for interest on the unpaid balance of the penalty (the interest, according to the proof of claim, was $8,612.18).

The Fords objected to the inclusion of a number of items on the IRS’s proof of claim and to the exclusion of others. However, only one item — the claim for $8,612.18 in interest on the penalty assessed against Mr. Ford — is at issue in this appeal. 4 The Fords conceded that penalty itself was correct, stating that “[t]he principal amount of $16,457.02 attributable to the payroll taxes of Village Junction, Inc. is a proper claim against Jon Ford.” (Objection to Claim of Internal Rev *586 enue Service, p. 2). They did, however, object to the $8,612.18 in interest, arguing that “this amount is overstated and may fail to reflect payments made.” (Id.) Thus, in this respect, the Fords, in essence, challenged the interest assessed against Mr. Ford.

Counsel for the Fords explained that the Fords objected to the amount of interest because the IRS could not explain how it applied the $30,469.09 it had received from the proceeds of the sale of Village Junction Restaurant, Inc. 5 (Transcript of hearing, p. 9.) As a result, it was inappropriate, counsel argued, for the IRS to charge interest on the penalty assessed against Jon Ford. The IRS conceded that it could not explain how the $30,469.09 payment was applied. (Id. at 15.) It argued, however, that $30,469.09 was insufficient to have extinguished Village Junction Restaurant, Inc.’s tax liabilities and that the penalty and interest assessed against Mr. Ford in March 1988 were accurate. (Id. at 71-72.)

In disallowing the IRS’s claim, the bankruptcy court explained at the conclusion of the hearing:

[I]t seems to me the Debtor did all the Debtor could do in terms of defeating the prima facie evidence validity of their claim based on that amount. It was then incumbent on the Internal Revenue Service to show that despite that credit, an amount remained owing, and I don’t have that evidence.
The evidence is that the IRS thinks a certain amount is still owing, but there’s never been any indication of where the credit was made. I think there must have been some mistake. Whether the credit was made in the wrong place or wasn’t made, I don’t know. But I think that this Debtor has asked and tried to find out, and all he’s doing is getting deeper.

(Id. at 73-74.)

In accordance with the foregoing statement, the bankruptcy court held in an order entered September 13, 1993 that the IRS “failed to carry its burden of proof that any amount

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Bluebook (online)
194 B.R. 583, 77 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 685, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20095, 1995 WL 822634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ford-ohsd-1995.