Jason L. Honigman and Edith Honigman, Petitioners-Cross-Appellees v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, Respondent-Cross-Appellant

466 F.2d 69, 30 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5360, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 8069
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 3, 1972
Docket71-1927, 71-1928
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 466 F.2d 69 (Jason L. Honigman and Edith Honigman, Petitioners-Cross-Appellees v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, Respondent-Cross-Appellant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Jason L. Honigman and Edith Honigman, Petitioners-Cross-Appellees v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, Respondent-Cross-Appellant, 466 F.2d 69, 30 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5360, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 8069 (6th Cir. 1972).

Opinion

PHILLIPS, Chief Judge.

This is an appeal and cross-appeal from a decision of the United States Tax Court reported at 55 T.C. 1067 (1971). We affirm as to the issues on *71 appeal and reverse as to the issue on cross-appeal.

The principal controversy involves the tax consequences of the sale of corporate property below market value to a minority shareholder. A secondary unrelated question will be treated in Part III of this opinion, infra.

I.

Reference is made to the reported Tax Court decision for a detailed statement of the facts. The National Building Corporation was incorporated under the laws of Michigan in 1946 to engage in the ownership and operation of commercial real estate. Its principal stockholders were the Honigman family (35%), the Silberstein family (35%) and the Galperin family (20%). A member of each family held a position as a director and officer of National.

In early 1963 steps were undertaken to effect a complete liquidation of National. A preliminary agreement to sell its principal asset, the First National Building in Detroit, was entered into in February 1963. At that time, National’s only unsuccessful investment was the Pantlind Hotel in downtown Grand Rapids, Michigan, which it had acquired in 1951. Taxpayers were aware that the Pantlind should be sold prior to adoption of the liquidation plan in order to permit the corporation to recognize the loss on this sale while shielding it from recognition of the substantial gains to be realized from the sale of the remaining assets. During this time, unsuccessful efforts were made to sell the hotel at offering prices ranging from $200,000 to $250,000 over its $590,000 mortgage. At an informal meeting of the directors in April, Jason Honigman proposed that the property be sold for a “nominal” price of $50,000 over mortgage. The hotel had not been offered previously at this price, nor was such an offer ever made to outsiders. Ben Silberstein initially indicated an interest in the transaction, but subsequently declined the purchase. Honigman later decided to buy the property at the “nominal” price.

The Pantlind Hotel Corporation was organized under Michigan law to purchase the hotel for some $661,000, representing assumption of the mortgage and a $21,000 tax liability, and $50,000 cash. Mrs. Edith Honigman, wife of Jason Honigman, was the sole stockholder. Title was transferred on May 27, 1963. Two days later a further adjustment of about $38,000 was paid to National. At the time of the sale, National’s adjusted basis in the Pantlind was approximately $1,486,000.

In August 1963 National adopted a qualified liquidation plan. All assets were sold within one year and the proceeds distributed pro rata to the shareholders.

The Honigmans reported no income from the May transaction on their 1963 joint income tax return. National deducted the difference between the sale price and the basis of the Pantlind as a business loss on its corporate tax return. The Commissioner determined a deficiency against the Honigmans individually, asserting that they had received a taxable dividend from the Pantlind sale equal to the excess of the fair market value over the purchase price. The fair market value was asserted by the Commissioner to have been $1,300,000. A further deficiency was asserted against the Honigmans as transferees of National, the Commissioner disallowing National’s claimed loss deduction on the ground that the constructive dividend to the Honigmans was not recognizable as a loss by the corporation. Similar transferee liability was asserted against the Silbersteins and Galperins.

These deficiencies were contested in a consolidated Tax Court proceeding. The Tax Court found that the fair market value of the Pantlind at the time of sale was $830,000. The court held the transaction to have been a dividend to the Honigmans to the extent of the difference between the market value and sale price and a sale to the extent of the difference between adjusted basis and market value. The former was held to be includible as income to the Honigmans *72 and not deductible by National. The latter was held to be deductible by National.

A threshold question is whether the Tax Court’s finding as to the fair market value was clearly erroneous. At trial taxpayers and the Commissioner introduced appraisal evidence as to the fair market value of the Pantlind at the time of the sale. Taxpayers’ proofs showed values of $625,000 (Berry appraisal), $660,000 (Horwath appraisal), and $700,000 (Harris appraisal). The Commissioner’s evidence indicated values of $1,300,000 (Humphrey appraisal) and $967,000 (Broersma appraisal). Taxpayers further showed that the local managers of the Pantlind had purchased stock in the Pantlind Corporation for the same price per share as Mrs. Edith Honigman has paid and that the lessor of about 20 per cent of the hotel and underlying land had sold it to the Pantlind Corporation for $137,000 in December 1964.

All appraisals were based on the capitalization of earnings method of valuation which is conceded by all parties to have been the appropriate method. This technique projects future earnings and applies a multiple based upon the accepted rate of return for such investments. The Tax Court employed an average of the income during the five years prior to the sale to project future annual earnings of $135,000. This figure, coupled with a 15 year useful life, a five per cent interest rate, and a nine per cent capitalization rate yielded the $830,000 figure. There is no controversy as to the appropriateness of the useful life, interest rate and capitalization rate values used by the Tax Court.

Taxpayers’ principal attack on the valuation involves the projected earning. They urge that only fiscal years 1961-62 should be averaged to project earnings, these being the most recent figures reflecting the downward earnings trend which then was expected to continue. Projected earnings based upon an average of these two years would be $115,000 annually, yielding a market value below the sale price. The Commissioner urges that the decline in earnings reflected in the two years immediately prior to the sale was unrepresentative and contends that the five year average was appropriate. In light of the conflicting evidence as to the proper earnings figures to be used in projection, we are unable to say that the use of a five year average was clearly erroneous.

Taxpayers further urge that even if a five year average is used, the Tax Court projection is overstated, contending that “[i]n using projected earnings of $135,000, the trial judge apparently adopted the earnings projection in the Broersma Appraisal.” It is then contended that Broersma’s figures are incorrect in that they are based on material factual errors. We do not agree with this contention. There is no support in the record for taxpayers’ assumption as to the source of the Tax Court’s figures. Taxpayers’ principal expert witness’s report shows five year average annual earnings of just under $138,000.

The Tax Court rejected as unrepresentative the sale of Pantlind stock to the local managers and of the part of the hotel to Pantlind Corporation by the lessor, relying on the opinions of all expert witnesses that there were no comparable sales. On this record we cannot say that this rejection was unwarranted.

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466 F.2d 69, 30 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5360, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 8069, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jason-l-honigman-and-edith-honigman-petitioners-cross-appellees-v-ca6-1972.