Mitchel Skolnick v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

62 F.4th 95
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMarch 8, 2023
Docket22-1501
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 62 F.4th 95 (Mitchel Skolnick v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mitchel Skolnick v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 62 F.4th 95 (3d Cir. 2023).

Opinion

PRECEDENTIAL

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT ____________

Nos. 22-1501, 22-1502, and 22-1503 ____________

MITCHEL SKOLNICK; LESLIE SKOLNICK, Appellants in No. 22-1501

v.

COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE ____________

MITCHEL SKOLNICK; BRIANNA SKOLNICK, Appellants in No. 22-1502

ERIC FREEMAN, Appellant in No. 22-1503

COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE ____________ On Appeal from the United States Tax Court (IRS Nos. 16-24649, 16-24650, 16-24980) Tax Court Judge: Honorable Albert G. Lauber ____________

Submitted Under Third Circuit L.A.R. 34.1(a) January 30, 2023

Before: HARDIMAN, KRAUSE, and MATEY, Circuit Judges.

(Filed: March 8, 2023)

Bryan E. Bloom Kevin H. DeMaio Faegre Drinker Biddle & Reath 600 Campus Drive Florham Park, NJ 07932

B. Paul Husband Law Offices of B. Paul Husband 101 South First Street Suite 202 Burbank, CA 91502

Richard W. Craigo 10724 Wilshire Boulevard Suite 406 Los Angeles, CA 90024

Counsel for Appellants

2 David A. Hubbert Janet A. Bradley Joan I. Oppenheimer United States Department of Justice Tax Division Room 4738 950 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W. P.O. Box 502 Washington, DC 20044

Counsel for Appellee

___________

OPINION OF THE COURT ____________

HARDIMAN, Circuit Judge.

Mitchel Skolnick, Leslie Skolnick, Brianna Skolnick, and Eric Freeman (collectively, Taxpayers), appeal an order of the United States Tax Court. They argue the Court clearly erred when it held their horse activity—undertaken through Bluestone Farms, LLC (the Company)—was “not engaged in for profit” under § 183 of the Internal Revenue Code. Taxpayers also claim the Court erred when it held they could not carry forward net operating losses (NOLs) allegedly arising from their horse activity in prior years. After scrutinizing the Tax Court’s comprehensive opinion, the record, and the briefs, we perceive no reversible error. We will affirm.

3 I

A

During the tax years at issue, 2010–2013, Mitchel Skolnick and Eric Freeman owned the Company, a horse farm in New Jersey. They bought, sold, bred, and raced Standardbred horses. Mitchel’s first wife, Leslie, and his second wife, Brianna, are parties to the case only because they filed tax returns jointly with Mitchel. So we focus on the activities of Mitchel and Eric.

Mitchel received an undergraduate degree from Emory University in 1976 and an MBA from Adelphi University in 1986. He remained in Atlanta after college and worked briefly as an engineer in training. In 1978, he joined Solgar Co., Inc., a successful vitamin company his father Allen Skolnick operated. That same year, Allen took an interest in Standardbred horses, which led him and his wife to found Southwind Farms to start a breeding operation. In 1986, Mitchel started his own consulting firm and became involved in the Standardbred industry when Allen asked him to manage three horses. By 1996, Mitchel had retired from his consulting business and was working full-time at Southwind with Allen.

Eric graduated from Cornell in 1966 and earned an MBA from the University of Virginia two years later. His career focused mainly on insurance. Eric’s clients included Southwind and Allen’s other ventures. Allen introduced Eric to Standardbred horse breeding.

Around 1993, Eric asked Allen if he could get involved in the horse breeding industry. Allen invited Eric to join him, along with Mitchel, in the Chancery Equine Group, a syndicate

4 that enabled investors to purchase Standardbred horses. When Allen invited Eric to invest, he cautioned Eric that though he might lose all his money, he would at least meet people he would never meet otherwise. Eric called the predictions “prophetic.”

Following disputes with his father, Mitchel left Southwind and the Chancery Group in 1998. Mitchel had discussed with Eric starting their own horse farm and they had created a business plan and a budget for the Company. They planned to buy and breed a stallion and to board other horses. To that end, they acquired 61 acres in Hopewell, New Jersey, not far from Southwind. They paid $559,000 for the property and called it Bluestone Farms.

By 2000, Mitchel did not have the money to pay for the Company’s expenses, so Eric paid most of the bills while Mitchel returned to his consulting firm. That year, Mitchel and Eric crafted a second business plan, hoping to supplement the Company’s income by winning horse races and breeder’s awards. In 2001, the Company received $325,000 from a passive investor, Frank Russo, in exchange for a 15 percent interest. In 2002, the Company bought a 30-acre property, Wert Farm, for $850,000.

In 2003, the Company sold a conservation easement at Bluestone for $869,640. The same year, Mitchel retired from the consulting business again, and he and Eric developed a third business plan. They wrote a fourth (and final) business plan in 2004. Soon after, Mitchel began receiving millions of dollars from an irrevocable trust his parents created. In 2007, the Company purchased 200 acres near Bluestone (the Rosenthal Farm) for $4 million. Mitchel and Eric planned to expand operations with more broodmares at Rosenthal Farm,

5 but that effort was halted after New Jersey ceased using Atlantic City casino funds to subsidize racetracks. The Company was audited in 2008, but the Commissioner of Internal Revenue took no adverse action. By 2009, Mitchel had received about $10 million from his parents’ trust.

B

During the tax years at issue (2010–2013) between 15 and 25 horses lived at Bluestone, Wert, and Rosenthal Farms at any given time. Other horses were boarded at out-of-state farms. The Company employed between seven and ten employees who assisted with the horses and organized the Company records. None of the employees had a budget. Taxpayers do not contest that they lost more than $3.5 million during the years at issue and more than $11.4 million between 1998 and 2013. See Skolnick v. Comm’r, 2021 WL 5936986, at *20 (T.C. Dec. 16, 2021).

Mitchel handled daily operations for the Company, including paying bills and monitoring the horse breeding process. Eric split his time between Florida and New Jersey, and handled the Company’s insurance needs, but had little involvement in its day-to-day operations. Eric did, however, accompany horses to races and attended “pretty lavish parties.” App. 972. Taxpayers contributed capital and made loans to the Company without differentiating between the two.

Over the years, Taxpayers increasingly focused on winning studs. The Company owned a 35% interest in a successful stallion, Always A Virgin, stabled in Indiana. In 2013, the Company bought for about $50,000 a 35 percent interest (later increased to 55 percent) in a horse sired by Always A Virgin called Always B Miki. Always B Miki earned

6 purses totaling $2.7 million from racing through his retirement in 2016 and generated substantial stud fees. In 2016, the Company sold interests in Always B Miki for nearly $1.2 million, enabling it to report a modest overall profit in that year.

During the tax years at issue, the Company responded to changes in the horse market. New Jersey stopped subsidies to racetracks and decreased the purse structures for breeder’s awards. Meanwhile, Pennsylvania had tightened its requirements for awards by requiring breeders to locate mares in Pennsylvania for 180 days to maintain eligibility for state- sponsored races. So the Company continued its previous partnership with a Kentucky operation, Cane Run Farm, to board horses outside Kentucky, including in Pennsylvania, to capitalize on breeder’s awards.

The Wert and Rosenthal Farms were never expanded to include additional mares, as originally planned.

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62 F.4th 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchel-skolnick-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca3-2023.