Morton v. United States

98 Fed. Cl. 596, 2011 U.S. Claims LEXIS 661, 2011 WL 1570439
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedApril 27, 2011
DocketNo. 08-804C
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 98 Fed. Cl. 596 (Morton v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Federal Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morton v. United States, 98 Fed. Cl. 596, 2011 U.S. Claims LEXIS 661, 2011 WL 1570439 (uscfc 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

BASKIR, Judge.

This case comes before the Court on Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment. Plaintiff claims he is entitled to a tax refund in the amount of $9,755,483 because Defendant improperly denied business expenses and depreciation deductions, and improperly required Plaintiff to recognize the gain on a purported like-kind exchange involving air-crafts. Plaintiff contends he may take deductions for the asserted business expenses because his individual business activities and the business activities of his corporate entities are intertwined and should be viewed as a “unified business enterprise.” The parties dispute the business purposes of the individual expenses.

Because categorization of the aircraft transaction as a like-kind exchange is dependent on substantiating these business expenses, the Court must defer ruling on the validity of the like-kind exchange. Accordingly, the Plaintiffs Motion for Summary Judgment is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART. The Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment is DENIED.

I. Background

A Plaintiffs Businesses

The facts are taken from the Complaint and papers filed by the parties, including the Consolidated Statement of Undisputed Facts (CSUF). They are undisputed except where noted. Plaintiff Peter Morton is one of the co-founders of the Hard Rock Café chain, and the creator and developer of the Hard Rock brand. He has worked in the restaurant, hotel, and gaming businesses from 1971 to the present.

Prior to the years in suit, Plaintiff established the Hard Rock Hotel, Inc. (HRH), a C corporation, which owned and operated the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas. He also established several S corporations in which he was the sole or majority shareholder, including Red, White and Blue Pictures, Inc. (RWB), Lily Pond Investments (Lily Pond), and 510 Development Corporation. RWB owned the real estate underlying some of the Hard Rock Cafes and acted as landlord. Lily Pond was a holding company that owned all the voting shares and 94% of the total shares of HRH. HRH owned and operated the Hard Rock Hotel. 510 Development performed marketing, design, public relations, management services, and accounting services for the Hard Rock Hotel. 510 Development was also the employment vehicle for Mr. Morton’s staff. Plaintiff personally performed management services for HRH. Plaintiff contends that these corporations “facilitated Morton’s overall business: the maintenance, exploitation and expansion of the Hard Rock trademark and Peter Morton brand through cafes, hotel-casinos, and casinos.” Plaintiff personally made loans to these entities to facilitate business growth. He states that all these entities were interrelated and it did not matter which entity he used to conduct any particular business.

Plaintiff sold his interests in the various Hard Rock Cafes around the world in 1996. After the sale, he retained a royalty-free sub-license to use the trademark in certain geographical areas for hotel-casinos or casinos. RWB retained a ground lease on the Hard Rock Café in Las Vegas and a reversionary interest in the Café. The lease specified that [598]*598the amount of rent RWB could collect was a percentage of the Hard Rock Cafe’s net worth. The grounds of the Café in Las Vegas were adjacent to the grounds of HRH’s hotel. Plaintiff states that their proximity created a feeling of common ownership in the eyes of the public, and Plaintiff still owned all the voting shares and 94% of all shares of HRH through Lily Pond. Plaintiff continued to perform management services for HRH after the 1996 sale. His salary was designated as a percentage of HRH’s gross income.

B. Plaintiffs Claims for Tax Refunds

This is a tax refund suit for the tax years 1999, 2000, and 2001 for $9,755,483. Plaintiff claims that he is entitled to deductions for business use of Gulfstream-III (G-III) and Gulfstream-IV (G-IV) aircrafts; he also claims he is not required to recognize a gain on the sale of the G-III. RWB owned the aircrafts. Mr. Morton states that he decided to title the plane in RWB’s name to take advantage of the limited liability protection afforded S corporations. Plaintiff advanced to RWB all funds used to operate the G-III and G-IV. Plaintiff also advanced funds to 510 Development Corporation to pay the salaries of RWB’s flight department which consisted of a pilot, a eo-eaptain, and a flight attendant.

The aircrafts made over 300 flights during the years in suit. Plaintiff was a passenger on nearly all the flights with the exception of the test flights by prospective purchasers of the G-III, the flight to deliver the G-III to the purchaser, a test flight of the G-IV, and a handful of flights chartered by Plaintiffs friends Matthew Vaughn, Gil Friesen, and Steve Tisch. Plaintiff concedes that many of the flights were taken exclusively for personal purposes. Plaintiff used the plane to transport family, friends, and girlfriends to vacation destinations such as Argentina, Ecuador, the Bahamas, England, Germany, Cuba, Mexico, France, Peru, the Netherlands Antilles, Florida, Hawaii, Sweden, and the Hamptons, Long Island, New York.

Plaintiff contends that the other flights were for business purposes because they were taken to promote the Hard Rock brand and to conduct business for HRH, were chartered by Plaintiffs friends, or were the test and demonstration flights. Morton’s pilot kept flight logs detailing use of the planes, including the date and time of the trip, the number of passengers, the departure and arrival airports, the time in flight, and the pilots. Brian Ogaz, Plaintiffs Chief Financial Officer, met with Plaintiff sometime after the trips were completed to determine which uses were personal and which were business-related. Mr. Ogaz maintained a spreadsheet identifying the various uses.

Plaintiff argues that the plane was used for business purposes when he used it to travel between the Hard Rock headquarters in Los Angeles and the Hotel and Café located in Las Vegas. He also claims he used it for business purposes when he traveled to other cities in which Hard Rock hotel-casinos or casinos might be built to conduct meetings regarding the possible expansion of his brand. He asserts that he intended that RWB would own the land for any new hotel-casinos or casinos.

Plaintiff also argues the plane was used for business purposes in the course of his providing consulting services to HRH, such as oversight and supervision of the design and operation of the Hard Rock Hotel. Plaintiff received a “supervisory fee” in return for this work. He entered into an agreement with HRH whereby HRH reimbursed him for expenses incurred in connection with these services. Plaintiff submitted invoices to HRH for travel on the G-III when he flew places to conduct HRH business; the quoted amounts were the estimated costs of commercial airline tickets on the same routes rather than the costs of operating the aircraft.

Plaintiff concedes he was not engaged in the aircraft charter business at any time during the years in suit, but rather entered into a Charter Agreement to reduce some costs in operating the aircraft. Plaintiff contracted with the charter company Clay Lacy Aviation, Inc. (Clay Lacy). RWB chartered five flights, all to Plaintiffs friends.

In 1999, Plaintiff sought to exchange the G-III for the G-IV aircraft. The main rea[599]*599sons for this exchange were concerns about the safety and the level of noise generated by the G-III.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
98 Fed. Cl. 596, 2011 U.S. Claims LEXIS 661, 2011 WL 1570439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morton-v-united-states-uscfc-2011.