Jones, Grey & Bayley, P.S. v. Department of Revenue

16 Or. Tax 300
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedDecember 12, 2000
DocketTC-MD 991316B
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 16 Or. Tax 300 (Jones, Grey & Bayley, P.S. v. Department of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones, Grey & Bayley, P.S. v. Department of Revenue, 16 Or. Tax 300 (Or. Super. Ct. 2000).

Opinion

SCOT A. SIDERAS, Presiding Magistrate.

This matter is before the court on cross-motions for summary judgment. Defendant assessed Plaintiff, asserting that individuals, shareholders in Plaintiff, were partners of an Oregon firm who may be taxed for their share of partnership income that had an Oregon source. The 1995 tax year is at issue.

STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE

A brief discussion is necessary in order to provide a cogent statement of the issue. Oregon may tax nonresident partners of multistate partnerships to the extent their partnership income has an Oregon source. See ORS 316.127(1)(a);1 Lane v. Dept. of Rev., 10 OTR 168, 171 (1985). If, however, the nonresident is not a partner in the multistate partnership, but stands in a different relationship to the partnership, such as an employee or shareholder of a corporate partner, Oregon has no basis on which to tax the income attributable to the relationship. See OAR 150-316.127-(A)(1).

The appeal before the court concerns 29 Washington attorneys who are principals of a multistate law firm. Defendant argues that the Washington attorneys are partners by virtue of their specific rights, benefits, and obligations within the firm. As partners in an Oregon partnership, Defendant continues, the Washington attorneys are required to pay taxes to Oregon as nonresidents for their share of partnership income that has an Oregon source. Plaintiff reasons that the Washington attorneys are shareholders and employees in a Washington corporation that is itself a corporate partner in the Oregon partnership, and that this choice of business [302]*302organization insulates the Washington attorneys from Oregon tax.

The issue to be decided is whether Plaintiffs business entity choice is entitled to recognition for tax purposes. If the Washington corporate partner is recognized as a separate entity, its attorney-shareholders2 are shielded from tax. If the Washington corporate partner is not recognized as a separate entity, its attorney-shareholders become taxable as partners.

STATEMENT OF FACTS3

In 1980, Jones, Grey & Bayley, a Washington partnership engaged in the practice of law, chose to incorporate under Washington’s professional corporation statute and become Jones Grey. As shareholders in a professional corporation rather than partners in a general partnership, the attorneys enjoyed the benefits of limited liability, improved retirement benefits, the ability to change their tax year from a calendar year to a fiscal year, and a management structure that was more centralized and representative.

Following its incorporation Jones Grey continued its operations as a successful law firm in the Seattle area. The next milestone in the corporation came in the summer of 1986, when the Oregon law firm of Stoel Rives contacted Jones Grey to discuss the possibility of a merger. Sound business reasons supported the suggestion. Jones Grey had a strong presence in the Seattle legal market for corporate and security work. Stoel Rives offered additional depth in this area, as well as other attorneys with expertise in allied specialty areas. Economies of scale and access to preferable insurance markets were also factors.

As merger talks continued, the negotiating teams came to recognize the importance of preserving, in the new combine, the separate existence of Jones Grey. It was perceived that if Jones Grey were to liquidate as part of the merger of the two law firms, the immediate federal income tax consequences to Jones Grey and its shareholders would [303]*303be dramatic. Because liquidation would be treated as a fair market sale of Jones Grey’s assets to its shareholders, Jones Grey would be subject to federal tax on the gain from its appreciated assets.

In addition to avoiding this federal tax burden, the shareholders of Jones Grey had additional reasons for wishing to preserve their corporation, among which included the favorable federal tax treatment of benefits they received as employees, such as the ability to exclude from federal gross income the cost of health and other insurance premiums paid on their behalf by the corporation. They also wished to avoid making income from their practice of law in Washington subject to tax by Oregon. Another strong concern was the shareholders’ belief that Jones Grey must be preserved as a separate entity so that the corporation could withdraw and resume its independent practice of law in the event the union of the law firms failed.

Those perceptions of the Jones Grey shareholders could have been fatal to the merger, for Stoel Rives was a partnership. As a partnership, Stoel Rives was especially concerned with corporate partners. Inconsistent treatment between the partnership and its corporate partners could place Stoel Rives’ retirement plans in jeopardy. Corporate partners also typically increase administration costs, and facilitate the impression, especially undesirable in a merger of law firms, that the Jones Grey attorneys were not integrated members of the new business, but a self-governing unit.

For those reasons, two guidelines framed the merger between the Oregon and Washington firms; first, that in the new business Jones Grey would continue to exist; and second, that within that business the differences between the Washington attorneys working as the employees of Jones Grey and the attorneys located elsewhere working as individual partners would be minimized. Each attorney would have an equal right to participate. Each would have the same vote as other members. No special privileges would attach to either group of attorneys.4

[304]*304Those principles led to the June 1,1987, execution of two merger documents, a “Merger Agreement” and an “Alternative Merger Agreement.” The “Merger Agreement” created a union between Jones Grey and Stoel Rives by converting Jones Grey into a group of professional corporations, each of which would be owned by a single attorney. In this form Jones Grey was admitted as a partner in the Stoel Rives partnership, and the shareholders of Jones Grey became principals in the Stoel Rives firm. The “Alternative Merger Agreement” was based on the premise that Jones Grey would be liquidated at some time after January 1,1989.

The “Alternative Merger Agreement” has yet to be fulfilled. Jones Grey will in all likelihood never be liquidated, due to continuing concern about the federal tax consequences, the advantage Jones Grey affords in reducing other states’ minimum franchise tax, and most particularly, the fact that the administration of Jones Grey has been less expensive than the alternative.

For the last 13 years, Jones Grey has carried on as a partner in Stoel Rives. Jones Grey transacts its business with the Stoel Rives partnership in its own name. Jones Grey maintains all formal, and practical, signs of its continued existence as a corporation.

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Related

Dept. of Rev. v. Stoel Rives PC
21 Or. Tax 1 (Oregon Tax Court, 2012)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 Or. Tax 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-grey-bayley-ps-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-2000.