Jerry S. Payne v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

224 F.3d 415
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 18, 2000
Docket99-60074
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 224 F.3d 415 (Jerry S. Payne v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jerry S. Payne v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 224 F.3d 415 (5th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

WIENER, Circuit Judge:

Petitioner-Appellant Jerry S. Payne appeals an adverse decision of the Tax Court, which awarded Respondent-Appellee Commissioner of Internal Revenue (“the government” or “the IRS”) $438,722 in delinquent income taxes and penalties for tax years 1987 and 1988, plus interest. As a general rule, the IRS must assess taxes within three years following the date that the return is filed. Here, the IRS did not send Payne a notice of deficiency (an event that tolls the statute of limitations pending assessment) until more than three years *417 after he had filed his return for each of those years. The Tax Court found, nevertheless, that the IRS’s collection action was timely under the statutory fraud exception to the three-year statute of limitations. 1 As it had to if it were to determine taxpayer fraud, the Tax Court found the government’s evidence of fraud to be clear and convincing. But in our clear error review, we see that evidence as weak and equivocal, so that disregarding the statute of limitations cannot be justified on grounds of tax fraud. The judgment of the Tax Court is therefore reversed and judgment rendered in favor of Payne, granting his petition for redetermination of income taxes, penalties, and interest for 1987 and 1988 and holding that the government is barred by the statute of limitations from collecting anything from Payne for those tax years.

I.

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Payne is a lawyer. During the years at issue he practiced law, concentrating in litigation. Payne provided extensive legal representation to, and eventually came to own, a corporation called 2618, Inc. (“2618”) which, as sole proprietor, operated Caligula XXI, a topless dance club (the “club”) in Houston, Texas. Payne also represented Gerard Helmle, one of 2618’s two equal shareholders and the club’s manager. Among other things, Payne defended Helmle against a criminal charge for possession of illegal drugs. Most of the operable facts of this case arise out of these professional representations.

At the beginning of 1987, Helmle and Leo Kalantzakis each owned one-half of the stock of 2618. As prerequisites to operating a topless dance club in Houston, 2618 needed both (1) a liquor license, technically a Mixed Beverage Permit, from the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission (the “TABC”), and (2) a Sexually Oriented Business Permit (“SOB permit”) from the City of Houston (“the City”). The SOB permit was required by a Houston ordinance passed in 1986 which provides, inter alia, that one topless dance club cannot operate within 1,000 feet of another. The ordinance also specifies that if two such dance clubs seeking SOB permits are located within 1000 feet of each other, a permit can be issued only to the club that has been in operation longer. As part of his representation of 2618, Payne helped it apply for an SOB permit. The club was located within 1000 feet of a competing topless dance establishment, however, so 2618’s application for an SOB permit was denied. The Tax Court recognized that without an SOB permit the club’s viability was in serious doubt.

Payne filed suit against the City to force issuance of an SOB permit to 2618. The primary issue in the suit was which club had been in operation longer.

While that suit was proceeding in state district court, Helmle and Kalantzakis, had a falling out. Their' dispute resulted in litigation between 2618 and Kalantzakis, in which Payne represented the corporation. Ultimately this matter was settled by Helmle’s agreeing to purchase Kalantzak-is’s stock in 2618, which would leave Helm-le as the corporation’s sole stockholder.

By this time, Payne had amassed substantial unpaid accounts receivable resulting from his criminal defense of Helmle and his representation of 2618 in several matters. Helmle did not have the financial wherewithal either to fund his purchase of Kalantzakis’s stock or to pay Payne’s account. The club was Helmle’s sole source of income, and his dispute and eventual settlement with Kalantzakis threatened the continued existence of the club. Payne was aware that the club’s survival represented his only realistic possibility of ever recovering his fees for legal services rendered to Helmle and to 2618. As neither *418 Helmle nor 2618 was creditworthy, Payne borrowed $275,000 from Texas Guaranty National Bank then lent that same sum to Helmle, who used these funds to purchase Kalantzakis’s stock in 2618.

Payne and Helmle agreed that Helmle would cause 2618 to make monthly payments to Payne so that he, in turn, could make periodic payments of principal and interest on the bank loan. In essence, Payne acted as an intermediary, first in borrowing from the bank and passing the loan proceeds through to his client, and then in receiving funds from his client and immediately disbursing those funds to the bank that had made the loan.

Helmle also agreed to compensate Payne for his increased involvement in the club’s operations during this period by paying him a management fee. Payne reported the management fee on his income tax returns for the years in question. He did not, however, report the sums that he received from his clients and then immedi.ately remitted to the lender bank. As to these he took the position that he was a mere accommodation borrower and conduit through which the loan proceeds and repayments passed, not a party in interest to an income-producing transaction.

During the time that Kalantzakis owned one-half of the stock of 2618, he had handled the renewals of the corporation’s mixed-beverage permit from the TABC. Kalantzakis had apparently developed relationships with high-level personnel at the TABC, which helped expedite the permit renewal process. After Kalantzakis’s split with Helmle and Helmle’s subsequent purchase of Kalantzakis’s stock, however, Ka-lantzakis was no longer willing to use his relationship with TABC officials for the corporation’s benefit. In fact, there are allegations that Kalantzakis lobbied his contacts at the TABC to deny renewal of 2618’s mixed-beverage permit. Payne contends that ultimately, through its relationship with Kalantzakis, the TABC learned that criminal drug charges were pending against Helmle. This prompted the head of enforcement for the TABC to determine that, because Helmle was the sole owner of 2618, its mixed-beverage permit should not be renewed.

Payne counseled Helmle that his best solution was to sell the club. Helmle agreed and authorized Payne to find a buyer. Unfortunately for Helmle, though, all potential buyers that Payne contacted lost interest when they discovered that the City had denied the club’s application for an SOB license and that the TABC was refusing to renew the club’s mixed-beverage permit.

After trying unsuccessfully to preserve any going-concern value that the club might have (apparently at this point, there was little or none), Payne foreclosed on encumbrances of 2618’s assets that he held as security for unpaid legal fees. Specifically, Payne foreclosed on the corporation’s (1) leasehold interest in the building in which the club operated, (2) furniture, furnishings, fixtures, and leasehold improvements in the building, and (3) right to use the name Caligula XXI. Payne concluded that the assets he foreclosed on had a fair market value of $35,000 and reported this amount as income on his federal income tax return.

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Bluebook (online)
224 F.3d 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jerry-s-payne-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca5-2000.