New Phoenix Sunrise Corp. v. Commissioner

408 F. App'x 908
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 18, 2010
Docket09-2354
StatusUnpublished
Cited by88 cases

This text of 408 F. App'x 908 (New Phoenix Sunrise Corp. v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Phoenix Sunrise Corp. v. Commissioner, 408 F. App'x 908 (6th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

CORNELIA G. KENNEDY, Circuit Judge.

New Phoenix Sunrise Corporation (“New Phoenix”), the taxpayer and petitioner below, appeals the decision of the tax court upholding the Commissioner’s assessment of a tax deficiency of $3,355,906 and a penalty of $1,298,284 based on New Phoenix’s claim of a loss of over $10 million from a pair of swap contracts that caused it an economic loss of slightly more than $100,000. The tax court found that the transaction lacked economic substance and that New Phoenix’s reliance on the advice of Jenkens & Gilchrist, the law firm that had promoted the tax shelter, did not prevent the application of the penalties. New Phoenix challenges these rulings, as well as the disclosure, admission into evidence, and tax court’s reliance on several documents that the tax court determined were related to the tax opinion prepared by Jenkens & *911 Gilchrist in support of the challenged transaction. Because New Phoenix’s claims lack merit, we AFFIRM.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

New Phoenix originated in the 1970s as an Arizona corporation involved in the agricultural industry. Capital Poly Bag, Inc. (“Capital”), which manufactured plastic bags, was incorporated in 1972 and became a wholly owned subsidiary of New Phoenix in 1986. Capital prospered and, in April 2001, sold its assets for over $15 million.

Timothy Wray, the president and CEO of New Phoenix as well as Capital’s president, treasurer, and sole director, testified at trial that after Capital’s asset sale, he sought investments for the company. In the fall of 2001, Gordon Litt, an attorney from New Phoenix’s law firm, Bricker & Eckler, introduced Mr. Wray to Paul Daugerdas and John Beery of the law firm of Jenkens & Gilchrist. Daugerdas proposed that Capital engage in a series of actions known as the “Basis Leveraged Investment Swap Spread” transaction, or the BLISS transaction. The transaction involved currency speculation with the theoretical chance of a large windfall, but which also allowed a partnership engaging in the speculation to write off large paper losses on tax returns while suffering only small actual losses. Wray, acting for Capital, opted to engage in the BLISS transaction. New Phoenix ultimately paid $500,000 to Jenkens & Gilchrist, which Wray testified was for a legal opinion on the tax consequences of the BLISS transaction and not for any other services that Jenkens & Gilchrist performed.

To establish the foundations of the BLISS transaction, on or before November 19, 2001, Capital directed Jenkens & Gilchrist to set up a partnership, Olentangy Partners (“Olentangy”), in which Capital owned a 99% interest and Mr. Wray owned the remaining 1% interest. 1 Then, on or about November 30, 2001, Wray simultaneously opened two separate brokerage accounts with Deutsche Banc Alex. Brown, a licensed broker-dealer engaged in the securities brokerage business in the United States and an indirect subsidiary of Deutsche Bank AG (“Deutsche Bank”). One account was on behalf of Olentangy and the other on behalf of Capital.

In December 2001, Capital and the London branch of Deutsche Bank entered into two swap contracts in execution of the BLISS transaction. 2 In the first contract (also known as the “long contract”), Capital was to pay a premium of $10,631,250 to Deutsche Bank on December 11, 2001. Additionally, Capital was to make two fixed payments of $63 million on December 14 and December 20. In return, Deutsche Bank provided an option that required it to pay Capital $73,631,250 if the exchange rate of the Japanese yen 3 (the “spot rate”) *912 was above 127.75 yen per dollar (the “strike price”) at 10:00 a.m. on December 12, and $73,631,250 if the rate was above 128.75 yen per dollar at 10:00 a.m. on December 18. The second contract (the “short contract”) was very similar to the first, but the roles were reversed. Deutsche Bank was to pay a premium of $10,368,750 to Capital on December 11, 2001, and two fixed payments of $63,065,625 on December 14 and December 20. In return, Capital agreed to pay $73,500,000 if the spot rate exceeded 127.77 yen per dollar at 10:00 a.m. on December 12, and $73,500,000 if the spot rate exceeded 128.77 yen per dollar at 10:00 a.m. on December 18. Though the parties stylized the two contracts as “digital swap transactions,” they essentially amounted to a single “digital option spread” consisting of two long-and-short-option pairs: one pair expiring on December 12, 2001 with digital levels of 127.75 yen per dollar (long) and 127.77 yen per dollar (short); the other pair expiring on December 18, 2001 with digital levels of 128.75 yen per dollar (long) and 128.77 yen per dollar (short). Capital then assigned the contracts to Olentangy.

Although the swap transactions seem to involve large sums of money, the offsetting mutual obligations reflected in the contracts were likely to result in the exchange of only relatively modest amounts of money. Consider, first, the premium and fixed payments owed under both contracts. The premiums offset except for a $262,500 remainder owed by Capital to Deutsche Bank. Similarly, the fixed payments offset to the extent of $63 million each, leaving Deutsche Bank scheduled to make two required payments of $65,625, for a total of $131,250. Therefore, at the end of the contract period, Deutsche Bank earned a $131,250 net profit, not considering the potential value of the options themselves. There were several theoretically possible outcomes under the digital option spread. As the Commissioner explained, the first possible outcome would occur if both the long option and the short option comprising each option pair expired “out of the money” — that is, if the specified spot rate were less than the strike price of 127.75 yen per dollar on December 12 and 128.75 yen per dollar on December 18. In that case, Capital would lose its $131,250 net investment because there would be no additional net receipts on December 14 and December 20. The second possible outcome would occur if both the long option and the short option comprising each option pair expired “in the money” — that is, if the specified spot rate was equal to or greater than the strike price of 127.77 yen per dollar on December 12 and 128.77 yen per dollar on December 18. In that case, Capital would earn a profit of $131,250 on its net investment of $131,250 because it would have additional net receipts of $131,250 (the difference between Capital’s $73,631,250 option and Deutsche Bank’s $73,500,000 option) on both December 14 and December 20. The third possible outcome would occur if both the long option and the short option comprising one of the option pairs expired in the money, but the long option and the short option of the other option pair expired out of the money. Then, Capital would break even on its $131,250 net investment because it would have had an additional net receipt of $131,250 on either December 14 or December 20. The fourth possible outcome would occur if the spot rate for one of the option pairs “hit the sweet spot,” meaning that the long option and the short option comprising one of the option pairs expired in the money and out of the money, respectively. This would happen if the spot rate on December 12 were 127.75 or 127.76 yen per dollar, or if the spot rate on December 18 were 128.75 or 128.76 yen

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
408 F. App'x 908, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-phoenix-sunrise-corp-v-commissioner-ca6-2010.