NCA Argyle LP, Newport Capital Advisors, LLC, A Partner Other Than the Tax Matters Partner v. Commissioner

2020 T.C. Memo. 56
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMay 13, 2020
Docket3272-18, 6662-18, 6663-18, 6829-18
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2020 T.C. Memo. 56 (NCA Argyle LP, Newport Capital Advisors, LLC, A Partner Other Than the Tax Matters Partner 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.

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NCA Argyle LP, Newport Capital Advisors, LLC, A Partner Other Than the Tax Matters Partner v. Commissioner, 2020 T.C. Memo. 56 (tax 2020).

Opinion

T.C. Memo. 2020-56

UNITED STATES TAX COURT

NCA ARGYLE LP, NEWPORT CAPITAL ADVISORS, LLC, A PARTNER OTHER THAN THE TAX MATTERS PARTNER, ET AL.,1 Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent

Docket Nos. 3272-18, 6662-18, Filed May 13, 2020. 6663-18, 6829-18.

Nathan J. Hochman and Andrew D. Allen, for petitioner.

Hans Famularo, Sandy Hwang, and Blake J. Corry, for respondent.

1 The following cases are consolidated herewith: NCA Palladium LP, Newport Capital Advisors, LLC, A Partner Other Than the Tax Matters Partner, docket No. 6662-18; NCA Cherokee LP, Newport Capital Advisors, LLC, A Partner Other Than the Tax Matters Partner, docket No. 6663-18; and NCA Highland LP, Newport Capital Advisors, LLC, A Partner Other Than the Tax Matters Partner, docket No. 6829-18. -2-

[*2] MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION

BUCH, Judge: Newport Capital Advisors, LLC (NCA) entered into real

estate joint ventures with Commonfund Realty, Inc. (Commonfund). When

Commonfund later disavowed those joint ventures, the two parties ended up in

litigation. NCA was awarded damages for the value of the joint venture interests

repudiated by Commonfund, plus punitive damages. That value was estimated, in

part, on the anticipated revenue stream of the joint ventures. While that case was

on appeal, the parties settled for a lump-sum payment from Commonfund to NCA

in exchange for NCA’s relinquishing whatever rights it had in the joint ventures.

The Commissioner argues that most of this payment was ordinary income because

the payment represented estimates of future income. The Commissioner further

argues that a portion of the payment is ordinary income attributable to the receipt

of punitive damages. Because NCA received the payment in exchange for its joint

venture interests, the income is from the sale of capital assets, i.e., the joint

venture interests. Further, because the payment was made by adversarial parties

negotiating at arm’s length, and because the payment was within the reasonable

range of value of the joint venture interests, the Court will respect the parties’

allocation of all of the payment to the exchange of the capital assets. -3-

[*3] FINDINGS OF FACT

NCA is a real estate development and investment firm. David Zak owned

NCA at all relevant times. Beginning in 2005, Mr. Zak worked with David Nix

and Ravi Choudry to find properties to develop in the Los Angeles area. They

found desirable properties, but they needed capital to proceed with development.

In 2005, they connected with Commonfund Realty and its affiliates.

Commonfund was interested in financing development of the properties NCA

found. David Nix and David Zak, on behalf of NCA, executed a term sheet with

Commonfund, and that term sheet stated the major terms for a real estate

development joint venture.2

Although NCA and Commonfund were the parties who entered into the

term sheet, NCA formed additional entities to carry out its responsibilities for the

contemplated projects. Those entities are the four partnerships now before us:

NCA Argyle, LP; NCA Cherokee, LP; NCA Highland, LP; and NCA Palladium,

LP (collectively, NCA entities). NCA, David Zak, David Nix, and Ravi Choudry

owned the NCA entities in various percentages. Commonfund likewise formed

entities to serve as its partners in each of the joint ventures: CFRI Palladium,

2 Although David Nix and Ravi Choudry did not own interests in NCA, these real estate development activities were conducted in the name of NCA. -4-

[*4] LLC; CFRI Cherokee Las Palmas, LLC; CFRI Hollywood, LLC; and CFRI

Hollywood II, LLC (collectively, Commonfund entities).

Four additional entities were formed as the joint ventures between NCA and

Commonfund: CFRI-NCA Hollywood Venture, LLC; CFRI-NCA Hollywood

Venture II, LLC; CFRI-NCA Palladium Venture, LLC; and CFRI-NCA Cherokee

Las Palmas Venture, LLC (collectively, joint ventures).

While NCA and Commonfund were working on developing the properties,

conflict arose between them. The parties struggled to formalize the terms of their

deal in a written agreement and never succeeded in doing so. In March 2008,

Commonfund asked Mr. Zak to a meeting. That meeting left Mr. Zak with the

understanding that Commonfund did not intend to honor the terms of their joint

venture and that Commonfund wanted to replace NCA with another development

company. Eventually, Commonfund brought in the other development company

while NCA was still working on the projects.

In May 2009, Commonfund and the Commonfund entities filed a complaint

against NCA and the NCA entities. In the complaint Commonfund and the

Commonfund entities claimed that NCA and the NCA entities did not have any

interest in the joint ventures, and Commonfund sought declaratory relief and

damages for conversion, imposition of constructive trust, breach of contract, and -5-

[*5] breach of fiduciary duty. They alleged that Commonfund and NCA had

negotiated potential terms for real estate development ventures but never entered

any written agreement. Commonfund asserted that “[p]ending the execution and

delivery of written agreements * * * [NCA and Commonfund] entered into an oral

contract, pursuant to which * * * [NCA] rendered services to and for * * *

[Commonfund].”

In August 2009, the NCA entities filed a cross-complaint alleging that the

joint ventures and their Commonfund partners had breached their fiduciary duties

to the NCA entities as their co-joint venturers. They sought declaratory relief and

partition of property. They further stated that they had an oral joint venture

agreement that the parties had intended to formalize as a written agreement.

In April 2010, NCA filed an amended cross-complaint. NCA claimed that

the joint ventures, Commonfund, and the Commonfund entities had breached their

fiduciary duties by repudiating NCA’s interests in the joint ventures. NCA alleged

that its joint venture with Commonfund was reflected “in many oral and written

statements and emails.” It also alleged that the parties had operated according to

the term sheet, which the parties executed intending to finalize the terms of the

joint ventures. NCA claimed that because they were partners in a joint venture,

Commonfund owed NCA fiduciary duties of care and loyalty and had an -6-

[*6] obligation of good faith and fair dealing, and that repudiating the existence of

the joint ventures breached those duties.

The only counts presented to the jury were NCA’s claims for breach of

fiduciary duty. The trial court instructed the jury that to establish its claim “NCA

must prove that * * * [Commonfund was] in a joint venture with NCA and that

* * * [Commonfund] excluded NCA from a joint venture, wrongfully repudiated

the existence of the joint venture and converted all of the joint venture assets to

its/their own use.”

Under California State law, the victim of repudiation of a partnership

interest may choose among several methods of measuring damages. NCA chose

the “conversion measure of damages, which is the value of what was taken on the

date of repudiation.”

At trial, NCA hired an expert to determine the value of the repudiated joint

venture interests. The expert made three estimates of value as of the date of

repudiation, each applying a different discount rate. The estimates valued the joint

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