Karen Veeraswamy

CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedSeptember 4, 2024
Docket23581-22
StatusUnpublished

This text of Karen Veeraswamy (Karen Veeraswamy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Karen Veeraswamy, (tax 2024).

Opinion

United States Tax Court

T.C. Memo. 2024-83

KAREN VEERASWAMY, Petitioner

v.

COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent

__________

Docket No. 23581-22. Filed September 4, 2024.

Karen Veeraswamy, pro se.

Heather L. Marello and John M. Janusz, for respondent.

MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION

HOLMES, Judge: Karen and Velappan Veeraswamy formed Ashand Enterprises in 2000. Their marriage was failing when Velappan took Ashand into bankruptcy in 2013. But Ashand was a success—when it sold its principal asset in 2014, the proceeds exceeded its liabilities. The Government took the position in bankruptcy court that Karen didn’t own any part of Ashand and shouldn’t receive any share of Ashand’s surplus. Now the Commissioner says she owned 50 percent and needs to include her share of that excess in her taxable income for 2014.

Karen relies on the doctrines of equitable and collateral estoppel to argue that the Commissioner is wrong. The Commissioner wagers that “contradiction is not a sign of falsity, nor the want of contradiction a sign of truth.” 1

1Blaise Pascal, Pensées 104, No. 384 (William Finlayson Trotter trans., J.M. Dent & Sons 1956) (1670).

Served 09/04/24 2

[*2] FINDINGS OF FACT

I. The Veeraswamys

Karen Veeraswamy is a member of the Seneca Nation and was living on its reservation in Salamanca, New York, when she petitioned the Court. 2 She married her husband, Velappan, in 1990. They started a family and raised two bright children who are now successful adults.

The couple also started a business, Ashand Enterprises, Inc., (“Ashand”) in 2000. They elected to make it an S corporation under section 1362(a). 3 Even though they don’t pay corporate taxes directly, S corporations are required to file information returns to the Commissioner to report the income and deductions which pass through to their owners. See § 6037.

When Ashand was incorporated in 2000, Velappan and Karen each owned 100 shares of the business. We know this because we have Ashand’s list of shareholders, which was memorialized in its first board meeting and in its articles of incorporation. Karen also says she herself remembers going to a Manhattan attorney’s office in 2000 to sign the corporate formation documents with her husband. We also have Ashand’s 2010 Form 1120S, U.S. Income Tax Return for an S Corporation, which showed Karen as a 50-percent shareholder.

Velappan started Ashand as a vehicle for trading tech stocks. After the dotcom bubble burst, he pivoted to real estate. Through Ashand, Velappan and Karen bought a building on Ward Avenue in The Bronx in 2005. The property was Ashand’s primary asset. It had about 70 tenants, including apartment-dwellers and three commercial units.

Velappan served as Ashand’s president and all agree that he was the person who ran the business. Karen, however, did contribute. She was listed as Ashand’s secretary and treasurer. She helped open the corporate bank accounts, worked in its office, and collected rent from the tenants. Both spouses served on Ashand’s board of directors.

2 The parties stipulated that appellate venue lies in the Second Circuit. See

§ 7482(b)(1)(A). (All section reference are to the Internal Revenue Code and regulations in effect for the year at issue, and all Rule reference are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure, unless we say otherwise). 3 See Maines v. Commissioner, 144 T.C. 123, 125 n.3 (2015) (describing

S corporations). 3

[*3] Even as Ashand was prospering, the Veeraswamys’ marriage was not. Sometime around 2004, Velappan acquired what Karen describes as a “paramour”. He lived with this paramour on one floor of the two- story marital home. Karen and their children lived on the other.

Things turned darker when Velappan began to abuse Karen and their children. At least one incident left her hospitalized. After years of enduring this, Karen moved out in 2011 and filed for divorce.

Despite this personal turmoil, Karen still helped with Ashand’s books and sent out eviction notices even after she discovered her husband’s adultery in 2004. But Velappan began to isolate his wife from the business. He took her off Ashand’s bank accounts and attempted to limit her access to the office.

He then used his cutting Karen off from the business in the increasingly acrimonious divorce litigation. He argued that Ashand wasn’t a marital asset because Karen was no longer involved with the company. Karen apparently took that to mean she was no longer a shareholder in Ashand. She also began to file her tax returns as married filing separately.

The turmoil from the Veeraswamys’ personal life overflowed into their business. Ashand fell behind on its mortgage payments, and in 2013 Velappan filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on its behalf. 4

II. Ashand’s Bankruptcy

Velappan filed Ashand’s petition in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of New York. In those proceedings, he confirmed Karen’s fears and represented to the court that he was Ashand’s president and sole owner.

The Veeraswamy children were at this point still young, and Karen had won an order from divorce court that required Velappan to pay support. Once she got this order, she filed a proof of claim in Ashand’s bankruptcy. Karen did not represent to the bankruptcy court that she was co-owner of Ashand—only that she was entitled to domestic support by way of her marriage to Ashand’s purported sole owner, Velappan. It would, of course, be an unusual corporate debtor that owed

4 Because there were filings for chapter 7, chapter 11, and chapter 13

bankruptcy among the various actors in this case, we’ll refer to the chapter 11 bankruptcy as “Ashand’s bankruptcy” throughout for the sake of simplicity. 4

[*4] domestic support to its owner’s wife, and the bankruptcy court denied Karen’s claim, though it continued to let her participate in the case.

The bankruptcy moved quickly, and in 2014 the trustee assigned to Ashand decided to put the Ward Avenue property up for sale. The property ultimately fetched $7.6 million, more than enough to pay Ashand’s debts and leave a nearly $2 million surplus even after expenses.

When there’s a surplus, there’s usually a line of equity holders with their hands out. But Karen wasn’t one of them. There is nowhere in her initial proof of claim any assertion that she was Ashand’s co- owner. At this point, Karen didn’t believe that she was a shareholder in Ashand. But because Karen remained a party in Ashand’s bankruptcy, the bankruptcy court—even though it denied her claim for domestic support—ordered that the surplus from the Ward Avenue sale be put into an escrow account controlled by Karen’s attorney until a resolution of the divorce proceedings.

The court entered its final decree in Ashand’s bankruptcy case in early 2015. The court stated that the decree “shall not be construed as to settle any issues as to the propriety of payments by the Debtor as between the Debtor’s equity holders or parties in interest.”

The resolution of these issues would take another bankruptcy proceeding.

III. Velappan’s Bankruptcy

Velappan had what seemed to be a very large family-support debt, and it turned out he had a federal tax debt as well. Velappan filed for chapter 13 bankruptcy in 2018. This bankruptcy petition was converted to a chapter 7 bankruptcy on Karen’s motion later that year. 5 Karen hadn’t received any domestic support from her husband before she filed that motion, and it seemed like a good tactic to enforce her claim.

5 11 U.S.C. § 1307

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