Internal Revenue Service v. Levy

130 B.R. 28, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10533, 1991 WL 142112
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedJuly 29, 1991
DocketCiv. A. 91-161-N
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 130 B.R. 28 (Internal Revenue Service v. Levy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Internal Revenue Service v. Levy, 130 B.R. 28, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10533, 1991 WL 142112 (E.D. Va. 1991).

Opinion

ORDER

CLARKE, District Judge.

Landbank Equity Corporation and Richmond Equity Corporation filed Chapter 11 bankruptcy petitions in September 1985. Shortly thereafter, the cases were convert ed to Chapter 7 liquidation proceedings, and Laurence H. Levy was appointed Trustee. On May 23, 1990, the IRS filed a Request for Payment of Internal Revenue Taxes and a Proof of Claim for Internal Revenue Taxes. The Trustee objected to the Request and Proof of Claim filed by the IRS. After the IRS and the Trustee filed a stipulation of facts, the Bankruptcy Court conducted a hearing and sustained the objections of the Trustee to all of the claims of the IRS. The IRS raises three issues in its appeal of the Bankruptcy Court’s Order. Having heard oral argument, the Court will address the issues below.

Facts

Formed in 1981 by William and Marika Runnells, its sole shareholders, Landbank was in the business of making second-mortgage loans to its customers and selling the mortgages on the secondary market to institutions such as the Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae), banks, and savings and loans. William and Mari-ka Runnells are now serving federal sentences of imprisonment exceeding thirty years each for the fraudulent methods with which they conducted Landbank’s business. Stated succinctly, they misrepresented the quality of the loans they were selling and the financial health of Landbank to the purchasing institutions in order to induce the institutions to provide Landbank with ever greater lines of credit, thereby allowing the Runnells to further expand their business.

The Runnells instructed their employees to doctor loan files so that the borrowers’ equity and ability to pay would make the loans attractive to purchasers. In order to further encourage the institutions to buy its loans, Landbank guaranteed that it would buy back any loans that went bad. After it sold the loans, Landbank purported to service them on behalf of the purchasers. As a result of the combination of these features, the institutions never found out that many of the borrowers were making late payments, or making no payments at all. Because this pyramid scheme depended upon the jpstitutions’ continuing to believe that the loans were high quality, Landbank did not disclose accurate delinquency or default information to the purchasers. Nor did Landbank report any losses resulting from these delinquencies or defaults on its tax returns. Moreover, Landbank, whose sole accountant has also been imprisoned for his participation in Landbank’s business, did not maintain accurate delinquency or default information for its own benefit, nor did it keep its books in an orderly or honest fashion. Landbank was thus able to remain in business for four years, and in fact expand its business during this period, despite suffering massive bad debt losses from its inception. The bubble burst in September 1985, however, as the existence of the losses began to emerge.

The IRS allowed the Trustee to charge off against a bad debt reserve more than $9,000,000 in bad debt losses on Land-bank’s 1986 return. The IRS therefore concedes that Landbank incurred these bad *30 debt losses. The main issue on appeal has thus become whether the Trustee may apply deductions for the bad debt losses admittedly suffered by Landbank to income from the tax years during which Landbank was in operation, or whether he must treat the losses as if they were all incurred in the tax year after Landbank had gone bankrupt, and charge them off against a bad debt reserve account, as the IRS contends.

The above-described combination of neglect and fraud operated to make the Trustee’s task in this case even more difficult than it is in the typical corporate liquidation proceeding. When the Trustee first took over, he received very limited and evasive cooperation from Landbank’s principals. As the Trustee’s task progressed, the criminal actions instituted against many of the Landbank principals made their assistance impossible. For instance, William and Marika Runnells fled from prosecution just prior to the first criminal trial in this case, and the vice-president of the corporation committed suicide on the eve of trial.

Bad Debt Loss Deductions

The first issue raised by the IRS concerns the Bankruptcy Court’s decision regarding the Trustee’s treatment of bad debt loss deductions. This issue concerns Landbank’s tax liability for' fiscal years 1982 through 1985. 1 Under the tax laws governing those years, a corporation could account for bad debt losses in one of two ways. It could take deductions for actual bad debts that became worthless during the tax year in question, or it could take deductions for reasonable additions to a bad debt reserve account. See I.R.C. § 166(c) (repealed 1986). After Landbank went into bankruptcy, the IRS conducted an audit of the corporation, and computed Landbank’s tax liabilities using the reserve method, allowing a deduction each year for an amount it determined Landbank should have contributed to a bad debt reserve. Based upon its audit, the IRS then submitted a Form 870, entitled “Waiver of Restrictions on Assessment and Collection of Deficiency in Tax and Acceptance of Overassessment,” to Laurence Levy as Trustee. In October 1986, on the advice of accountants whom he had hired, the Trustee-signed the Form. Form 870 gives the taxpayer’s consent to the IRS’s assessment of liabilities as shown on the Form. Signing the Form constitutes filing tax returns for the years to which the Form applies. Rev.Rul. 74-203, 1974-1 C.B. 330; see also I.R.C. § 6020(a); United States v. Olgeirson, 284 F.Supp. 665, 659 (D.N.D.1968).

In computing Landbank’s taxes for tax years 1982 through 1985, the IRS used the bad debt reserve method, allowing deductions for additions to a bad debt reserve for each of those years. As of the tax year ending in 1985, the bad debt reserve to-talled $6,425,000. See U.S. Corporation Income Tax Return, Schedule F(g) (attached as exh. B to Stipulation of Facts (filed iii the Bankruptcy Court Jan. 31, 1991)). When the Trustee filed the corporation’s 1986 return, he was required to continue to use the bad debt reserve method. See Treas. Reg. § 1.166-l(b)(l). In the 1986 return, the Trustee added $2,824,660 to the bad debt reserve, so that the reserve to-talled $9,250,660, and then charged off against the reserve losses of $9,105,087. See U.S. Corporation Income Tax Return, supra. This method of accounting, instituted by the IRS through the Form 870 it had the Trustee sign, resulted in various tax liabilities for Landbank for the 1982 through 1985 tax years. Although the liability is partially for income taxes for the four years, the vast portion of the liability is for interest and penalties on those taxes.

The Trustee objects to the claim of the IRS for these taxes, interest, and penalties, because the Trustee contends that the taxes upon which the entire liability is based were never actually due the IRS. The debts did not all become worthless in 1986, *31 he argues; they became worthless during the four prior years, but were never accounted for properly because of the fraudulent conduct of Landbank's officers and employees.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
130 B.R. 28, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10533, 1991 WL 142112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/internal-revenue-service-v-levy-vaed-1991.