Jade Trading, LLC ex rel. Ervin Capital, LLC v. United States

80 Fed. Cl. 11, 100 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 7123, 2007 U.S. Claims LEXIS 405, 2007 WL 4553043
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedDecember 21, 2007
DocketNo. 03-2164T
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 80 Fed. Cl. 11 (Jade Trading, LLC ex rel. Ervin Capital, LLC 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
Jade Trading, LLC ex rel. Ervin Capital, LLC v. United States, 80 Fed. Cl. 11, 100 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 7123, 2007 U.S. Claims LEXIS 405, 2007 WL 4553043 (uscfc 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

WILLIAMS, Judge.

Introduction

This tax refund case presents the issue of whether investments of $450,000 which generated over $40 million in tax losses possessed economic substance. In 1999, the Er-vin brothers sold their cable business, netting over $40 million in profit. That same year, each of the three Ervin brothers, through his limited liability corporation (LLC), simultaneously purchased a euro option from AIG for a premium of $15,000,020 and sold a euro option to AIG for a premium of $14,850,018 but only paid AIG the difference—a net premium of $150,002. Each LLC contributed the option spread to Jade Trading, LLC (Jade), and upon exiting the partnership, claimed a basis of over $15 million in its Jade interest by including only the premium for the purchased call option and ignoring the premium for the sold call option. The artificially high basis generated a loss of almost $15 million when each LLC redeemed its partnership interest at its fair market value.

At issue in this case is whether the spread transactions contributed to Jade lacked economic substance such that they must be disregarded for tax purposes. This issue is complicated by the reality that precedent at the time of these transactions permitted each LLC to ignore the sold call option in computing its basis in its Jade interest because that option was a contingent obligation, not a liability, under section 752 of the Internal Revenue Code.1 Poignantly at play here is the tension between technical compliance with the Internal Revenue Code and the longstanding common-law economic substance doctrine which compels courts to disregard transactions which lack economic substance despite their literal compliance with the Code. Plaintiffs characterize the tension differently, arguing that the economic substance doctrine cannot ignore “deliberately adopted rules of law,” in particular, the holding in Helmet v. Commissioner, 34 T.C.M. (CCH) 727 (1975), that contingent obligations do not constitute section 752 liabilities for purposes of calculating a partner’s basis. According to Plaintiffs, Helmet and its progeny construed section 752 to permit taxpayers to exclude contingent obligations like the sold option in calculating basis under the theory that the sold option did not create a fixed liability because it was uncertain when, at what price, or if AIG would ever exercise the option.

Plaintiffs’ theory cannot prevail in light of the Federal Circuit’s decision in Coltec Industries, Inc. v. United States, 454 F.3d 1340, 1352-54 (Fed.Cir.2006), reaffirming the vitality of the economic substance doctrine. Coltec teaches that the legitimacy of a transaction for tax purposes is not guaranteed merely because a technical interpretation of the Code would support the tax treatment. Id. at 1354. Rather, Coltec mandates additional scrutiny of the bona fides of a transaction, requiring independently that the transaction pass muster under the objective economic substance test. Id. at 1355. Further, the Coltec Court clarified the parameters for applying that test holding that the taxpayer has the burden of proving that the transaction which gave rise to the tax benefit objectively had economic substance, i.e., was a real transaction structured in a partic[14]*14ular way to provide a tax benefit as opposed to a transaction created for tax avoidance purposes. Id.

Here, several factors compel a conclusion that Plaintiffs have not met their burden of demonstrating that the spread transactions contributed to Jade objectively had economic substance. First, their claimed losses were purely fictional—each of the Ervins did not invest $15 million in the spread and did not lose $15 million when exiting Jade without exercising either option.2 Second, although Plaintiffs contend that the spread transaction had the potential to earn a profit, that contention is belied by two factors—the structure of the transaction itself and the large and unusual fees the LLCs were forced to pay to do the transaction. The structure of this transaction delimited the maximum net profit to some $140,000 per LLC, no matter how high the euro climbed. The fees also undercut profit potential. Each LLC paid fees of $934,100 on an investment of $150,002.3

Third, the spread transaction was developed as a tax avoidance mechanism and not an investment strategy. The transaction was devised and marketed by a tax accounting group, BDO Seidman’s “Tax $ells” Division, as a tax product, not by an investment advis- or as a vehicle to earn profit. The spread transaction was included in the chapter of BDO Seidmaris Tax Product Manual entitled “Capital Gain or Ordinary Income Eliminators” and was described as being structured around “anomalies in the tax law to allow for the creation of stepped-up basis that can be used to shelter gains.” Def.’s Ex. DX (DX) 665 at 019776.

Fourth, the requirement that the spread transaction be purchased outside the partnership and contributed to it had no effect whatsoever on the investment’s value, quality, or profitability, except to add cost and burden. However, packaging the investment in the partnership vehicle was an absolute necessity for securing the tax benefits.

A final indicium of the lack of economic substance here, while not dispositive in and of itself, is the highly disproportionate tax advantage to the underlying monetary outlay—the tax loss per brother, $14.9 million, was roughly 65 times greater than each LLC’s $225,002 financial commitment to Jade, almost 100 times each LLC’s $150,002 investment in the spread transaction which generated the loss, and approximately 100 times the $140,000 potential net profit each LLC could have earned.

In sum, this transaction’s fictional loss, inability to realize a profit, lack of investment character, meaningless inclusion in a partnership, arid disproportionate tax advantage as compared to the amount invested and potential return, compel a conclusion that the spread transaction objectively lacked economic substance.

The determination that the transaction lacked economic substance and the conclusion that each LLC’s basis in its partnership interests must be substantially reduced requires this Court to conclude that the IRS’s 40-pereent penalty is applicable at this juncture. Section 6662(h). Under the Code, the 40-percent gross valuation misstatement penalty applies as a matter of computation if the misstated basis was 400 percent higher than the corrected adjusted basis. Here, each LLC’s adjusted basis must be reduced [15]*15from some $15 million to $225,002,—meaning each LLC’s basis was misstated by well over 400 percent. The alternative 20-percent penalties for substantial understatement of income tax and negligence are also applicable. Because only partnership items are before the Court in this proceeding, the Court lacks jurisdiction to consider the individual partners’ defenses to the penalties, but these defenses may be entertained subsequently in individual partner-level proceedings.

Findings of Fact 4

The Ervins

In 1980, Gary Ervin applied for a cable franchise, and Ervin Cable Construction was awarded a cable franchise in the Ervins’ home town of Sturgis, Kentucky. Tr. 292-96, 322 (G. Ervin).5

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Bluebook (online)
80 Fed. Cl. 11, 100 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 7123, 2007 U.S. Claims LEXIS 405, 2007 WL 4553043, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jade-trading-llc-ex-rel-ervin-capital-llc-v-united-states-uscfc-2007.