Mariani Frozen Foods, Inc. v. Commissioner

81 T.C. No. 29, 81 T.C. 448, 1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 34
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedSeptember 21, 1983
DocketDocket Nos. 11129-78, 13826-79, 13827-79, 13828-79, 13829-79, 13830-79
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 81 T.C. No. 29 (Mariani Frozen Foods, Inc. v. Commissioner) 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
Mariani Frozen Foods, Inc. v. Commissioner, 81 T.C. No. 29, 81 T.C. 448, 1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 34 (tax 1983).

Opinion

Forrester, Judge:

Respondent determined deficiencies and/or liabilities in petitioners’ Federal income taxes as follows:

Docket No. Petitioners Year Deficiency ending or liability
11129-78 Mariani Frozen Foods, Inc., successor in interest to International Food Technology Service, Inc. 4/30/74 $1,217,489.00
13826-79 Melinda L. Gee Trust, Robert E. 4/30/74 30,374.23 Gee and Kathleen L. Gee, Trustee, 1/3/75 Transferee of L.F.G., Inc.
13827-79 Kathleen E. Gee Trust, Robert E. 4/30/74 $30,374.23 Gee and Kathleen L. Gee, Trustees, 1/3/75 Transferee of L.F.G., Inc.
13828-79 Joel-Ann Foote, Transferee of 4/30/74 643,213.00 L.F.G., Inc. 1/3/75
13829-79 Robert E. Gee, Transferee of 4/30/74 428,808.00 L.F.G., Inc. 1/3/75
13830-79 Kathleen L. Gee, Transferee of 4/30/74 582,465.34 L.F.G., Inc. 1/3/75

Prior to January 1974, International Food Technology Service, Inc. (hereinafter IFTS), and L.F.G., Inc. (hereinafter LFG), were shareholders in Simarloo Pty., Ltd. (hereinafter Simarloo), an Australian corporation organized under the laws of the State of South Australia.

After concessions by the parties, the following issues remain for our decision:

(1) Was Simarloo a foreign personal holding company for its fiscal year ended June 30,1973;2

(2) Do section 551(b)3 constructive dividends includable in gross income by LFG and IFTS qualify as dividends within the intendment of section 543(a)(1);

(3) Are corporate tax liabilities attributable to amounts includable in gross income pursuant to section 551(b) by LFG and IFTS in their taxable years beginning May 1, 1973, properly deductible in calculating their undistributed personal holding company income;

(4) Does the merger of IFTS into Mariani Frozen Foods, Inc. (hereinafter MFF), qualify as a section 368(a)(1)(F) reorganization so that, pursuant to section 381(b), net operating losses of MFF’s may be carried back to offset IFTS’s income for its taxable year beginning May 1,1973;

(5) May IFTS increase its basis in its Simarloo shares pursuant to section 551(e) for purposes of calculating its dividends paid deduction under section 562;

(6) Is respondent barred by the statute of limitations from assessing liabilities against the transferees of LFG. We need reach issues (2) through (6) only if we find that Simarloo was a foreign personal holding company.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found.

Petitioner MFF was a California corporation with its principal office in Cupertino, Calif., when its petition in this case was filed.

On December 4,1973, IFTS distributed its assets to MFF in complete liquidation. The deficiency in docket No. 11129-79 relates to IFTS’s taxable year beginning May 1, 1973, and ending on December 3,1973.

Robert E. Gee and Kathleen L. Gee resided in Los Altos, Calif., when their petitions in this case were filed. Robert E. and Kathleen L. Gee were trustees for the Melinda L. Gee and Kathleen E. Gee trusts when those trusts filed petitions in this case. Joel-Ann Foote resided in Santa Cruz, Calif., at the time of filing her petition in this case. Respondent asserts liabilities in docket Nos. 13826-79, 13827-79, 13828-79, 13829-79, and 13830-79, against the aforementioned individuals and trusts on the theory that each is liable as a transferee of LFG for alleged deficiencies in LFG’s taxable year ended April 30, 1974, and short taxable year ended January 3,1975.

Simarloo

Simarloo was incorporated under the laws of South Australia in 1964. During 1968-74, the period material to this case, Simarloo engaged in the business of developing fruit orchards and producing and marketing fruit and other produce.

In mid-1968, Simarloo had 1,000 shares of stock outstanding, held as follows:

Paul A. Mariani, Jr. (hereinafter Mariani) 499 shares
W. Matthew Looney (hereinafter Looney) 375 shares
Robert E. Gee 125 shares (hereinafter Gee)
James Trowbridge 1 share

Sometime in 1968 Mariani, on behalf of Simarloo, began negotiating with the Dairy Farm Ice & Cold Storage Co., Ltd. (hereafter Dairy Farm), a Hong Kong corporation, for the sale to Dairy Farm of a minority interest in Simarloo. Dairy Farm was a large, publicly traded Hong Kong corporation that owned and operated retail stores that offered an outlet for Simarloo’s produce.

Simarloo’s motive for seeking to induce Dairy Farm to become a shareholder was to acquire additional funds for development, primarily through loans from Dairy Farm, and to assure itself of a market for its agricultural produce.

In 1968, pursuant to its negotiations with Simarloo, Dairy Farm requested an appraisal of Simarloo’s assets. As a result of that appraisal, which revealed a substantial increase over book value of Simarloo’s assets, an asset revaluation reserve of $A654,368 was created. Dairy Farm relied upon this appraisal in its negotiations with Simarloo shareholders. Because Simar-loo was in a developmental stage and did not expect to market significant amounts of produce for some time, Dairy Farm’s negotiations with Simarloo were predicated on the assumption that Simarloo would not distribute any dividends for 10 years.

On December 13, 1968, Simarloo executed an agreement with Dairy Farm and Asian Food Industries, Ltd. (hereinafter AFIL), a Dairy Farm affiliate. In accordance with this agreement, (a) Mariani, Looney, and Gee increased their loans to Simarloo to $A200,000; (b) Mariani, Looney, and Gee bought 26,472 preference shares at $A2 per share, and Simarloo used the proceeds to pay off. a loan from Paul A. Mariani Enterprises, Inc.; (c) the aforementioned 26,472 preference shares were reclassified, 5,348 as class A preference shares, and 21,388 as class M preference shares; (d) Mariani, Looney, and Gee sold the 5,348 class A preference shares, representing 20 percent of all outstanding preference shares, to AFIL at $A2 per share; (e) AFIL purchased 250 class A ordinary shares, representing 20 percent of outstanding ordinary shares, from Simarloo for $A114,305; (f) Simarloo purchased 44,060 ordinary shares of AFIL at $A1 per share; (g) Simarloo purchased 16,655 shares of Dairy Farm at HK$35 per share, or approximately $A83,275.

Following the aforementioned transactions, AFIL held 20 percent of Simarloo’s outstanding shares and Simarloo held 18.75 percent of AFIL’s outstanding shares and 2.33 percent of Dairy Farm’s outstanding shares. AFIL’s relative interest in Simarloo remained unchanged through Simarloo’s year ended June 30,1973.

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81 T.C. No. 29, 81 T.C. 448, 1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mariani-frozen-foods-inc-v-commissioner-tax-1983.