In Re Frank

322 B.R. 745, 2005 WL 791409
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. North Carolina
DecidedMarch 2, 2005
Docket18-80813
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 322 B.R. 745 (In Re Frank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Frank, 322 B.R. 745, 2005 WL 791409 (N.C. 2005).

Opinion

ORDER

WILLIAM L. STOCKS, Chief Judge.

Pursuant to the Memorandum Opinion entered contemporaneously herewith, it is ORDERED that Claim Number 12 filed by the Internal Revenue Services is DENIED as being superceded by Claim Number 14.

It is FURTHER ORDERED that Donald James Frank’s Objection to Claim Number 14 filed by the Internal Revenue Service (Document No. 166), be and hereby is SUSTAINED IN PART and OVERRULED IN PART as follows:

*749 A. The Internal Revenue Services’s Claim Number 14 is reduced from the principal amount of $206,500.31 as of the petition date to the principal amount of $29,958.79, as of the petition date, plus any accrued pre-petition interest.

B. In all other respects, Donald James Frank’s Objection to Proof of Claim Number 14 is OVERRULED.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This case is before the court for consideration of the objection of Donald James Frank (“Debtor”) to the proof of claim filed by the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) for $213,476.93 in Trust Fund Recovery Penalties assessed against the Debtor, as the responsible party of Continental Textile Corporation (“Continental”), for the failure of Continental to timely remit its trust fund tax obligations. 1 The Debtor asserts that the IRS’s proof of claim should be entirely eliminated due to the IRS’s purported failure to provide notice to him that he was subject to an assessment for the Trust Fund Recovery Penalty under 26 U.S.C. § 6672. Should the court decide that the Debtor is liable to pay a Trust Fund Recovery Penalty, the Debtor argues that the total amount of his liability should be significantly reduced on the basis that he was not a responsible party at all pertinent times, and that his failure to cause Continental to pay its trust fund taxes was not willful.

The court held a hearing on November 9, 2004, in Greensboro, North Carolina, at which time the court took the objection under advisement and gave the parties an opportunity to submit post-hearing briefs. After considering the evidence presented, the argument and submissions of the parties, and the relevant law, the court is prepared to find that the Debtor did not carry the burden of showing a lack of adequate notice from the IRS that he was subject to the Trust Fund Recovery Penalty, that the Debtor was at all times a responsible party, and that there was a willful failure by the Debtor to cause Continental to timely pay some trust fund tax obligations, but not as to all of the trust fund taxes claimed by the IRS.

I. BACKGROUND

The Debtor was the former president of Continental, its sole director, and between the Debtor, his spouse, and his children, the Debtor owned over 50% of Continental’s stock. Continental is no longer an operating entity, but when it was active, it allegedly failed to fully meet five of its quarterly trust fund tax obligations from 1998 to 2000. Based on the purported deficiency, the IRS made two separate assessments against the Debtor, as the responsible party for Continental, for $213,476.93. 2

*750 The Debtor acknowledged that he was the president of Continental before July 1, 1998, but on that date Jay Gillette became the president and the Debtor moved to Missouri to become a company salesman. Sometime in April 1999, however, Jay Gillette quit and the Debtor again took-over as the president in July 1999.

A few days after returning as president, the Debtor realized that Continental was delinquent in its trust fund taxes. The Debtor testified that he could not force Continental to repay all the delinquent trust fund taxes at once because Continental operated under an asset based lending formula whereby its lender swept its accounts daily and each new day Continental was limited in the amount of money that it could request from the lender based on a specific formula. Because the Debtor understood the nature of his personal liability for Continental’s failure to fully pay trust fund taxes, the Debtor stated that he immediately implemented a company policy directing the chief financial officer that the first tax remittances were to be used to satisfy Continental’s trust fund responsibilities — and once that obligation was satisfied — then the company could concentrate on paying its other tax obligations. Under that policy, Continental was able to make some twenty-one payments to the IRS between July 9, 1999 and September 17, 1999, totaling $76,043.73. Those twenty-one payments were made in the form of multiple checks sent to Centura Bank — not the IRS — and Centura Bank would then forward the amount of the payment elec-ironically to the IRS. Following what he believed to be a proper procedure based on an IRS publication that he had read, the Debtor caused the memo line on each check, or the accompanying check stub, to state a designation that the payment was for a “Trust Fund Deposit.”

Sandra Goins, a technical services advis- or with the IRS, testified that the only way the IRS would know if a check was designated for the payment of a particular tax is if that check was sent to the IRS directly and that the IRS did not have any way of knowing that a taxpayer had designated a payment for a certain tax when that check was sent to a collecting bank. According to Ms. Goins, the only information that the IRS received from a bank’s electronic transmission was the employer identification number, the quarter for which the deposit was received, and the amount of the check — the physical checks that Continental sent to Centura Bank were never actually seen by the IRS and the IRS was not aware of any designation. There was no evidence that the Debtor was aware of the limitations described by Ms. Goins. According to the Debtor, as he later learned, the IRS applied Continental’s tax payments in whichever way it saw fit to its overall tax obligations.

The Debtor testified that later in the fall of 1999, and subsequent to the twenty-one payments that were made by check, Continental, consistent with the directives of the IRS, began to make all tax payments solely by electronic means. Pursuant to Con *751 tinental’s policy that the trust fund taxes be paid first, however, Continental’s book and records reflect that the payments sent to the IRS electronically comprised payments on its trust fund taxes. From September 24, 1999 to October 26, 1999, the Debtor submits that Continental made $44,713.40 in electronic transfers to the IRS that should be treated as payment of trust fund taxes. Continental, however, never made any overt, contemporaneous effort to notify the IRS of the intended designation of the electronic transfers.

Eventually, the IRS acted on Continental’s trust fund tax deficiency. In April 2000, it sent a revenue officer, Evette Davis, to investigate whether the IRS could hold the Debtor personally liable for Continental’s trust fund tax delinquency.

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Related

KCH Services, Inc. v. Nordam Group, Inc.
345 B.R. 542 (W.D. North Carolina, 2006)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
322 B.R. 745, 2005 WL 791409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-frank-ncmb-2005.