Nirav B. Babu v. Commissioner

2020 T.C. Memo. 121
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedAugust 17, 2020
Docket8649-17, 20266-18
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2020 T.C. Memo. 121 (Nirav B. Babu 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
Nirav B. Babu v. Commissioner, 2020 T.C. Memo. 121 (tax 2020).

Opinion

T.C. Memo. 2020-121

UNITED STATES TAX COURT

NIRAV B. BABU, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent

NIRAV BABU, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent

Docket Nos. 8649-17, 20266-18.1 Filed August 17, 2020.

Gerald W. Kelly, Jr., Daniel S. Heller, Vadim D. Ronzhes, Derek W.

Kaczmarek, and David R. Jojola, for petitioner.

Richard J. Hassebrock, Evan K. Like, and Gary R. Shuler, Jr., for

respondent.

1 Nirav B. Babu and Nirav Babu are the same person. We consolidated these cases for trial, briefing, and opinion by order dated July 23, 2019. -2-

[*2] MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION

LAUBER, Judge: With respect to petitioner’s Federal income tax for 2013

and 2014, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS or respondent) determined deficien-

cies and accuracy-related penalties as follows:

Year Deficiency Penalty

2013 $338,752 $67,750 2014 7,030,829 1,406,166

For 2013 petitioner has conceded all of the adjustments including the

penalty, subject to respondent’s concession that he is entitled to an additional

deduction of $79,500 from Schedule C, Profit or Loss From Business. For 2014

the parties have both made numerous concessions, including concessions by

respondent that eliminated unreported income adjustments exceeding $14 million.

The parties’ concessions are set forth in a joint stipulation of settled issues filed

October 16, 2019, which is incorporated by this reference.

Particularly relevant for this opinion are petitioner’s concessions that Re-

funds Plus, LLC, a passthrough entity of which he was the sole member, had gross

receipts of $2,819,433 for 2014 and that he failed to report on Schedule E, Supple-

mental Income and Loss, $2,908,220 of flow-through income from that entity.

The sole question remaining for decision is whether that failure generates an -3-

[*3] accuracy-related penalty for an underpayment attributable to a substantial

understatement of income tax. See sec. 6662(a), (b)(2), (d)(1).2 We resolve this

question in respondent’s favor.

FINDINGS OF FACT

The parties filed multiple stipulations of facts with accompanying exhibits

that are incorporated by this reference. Petitioner resided in Maryland when he

filed his petitions.

After earning a B.A. degree in finance petitioner attended law school at the

University of Baltimore, graduating in 2005. During law school he took courses

in tax law, participated in a tax clinic that assisted low-income taxpayers, and fin-

ished “with a pretty good understanding of tax.” In 2006 he became licensed to

practice law in three jurisdictions and maintained those licenses through 2013.

During law school petitioner was employed by Instant Tax Services (ITS),

which at the time was one of the largest tax return preparation firms in the country.

He assisted Fesum Ogbazion, the owner of ITS, in opening four ITS stores in the

Baltimore area. During law school petitioner served as area manager for those

locations, and after graduating he served for five years as general counsel for ITS.

2 All statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code (Code) in effect at the relevant times, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. We round all monetary amounts to the nearest dollar. -4-

[*4] ITS operated on a franchise basis, supplying store owners with software that

they used to prepare and process returns. While serving as ITS’ general counsel

petitioner began acquiring ITS franchises, and by 2013 he held franchises for 19

separate ITS locations. These franchises were profitable, netting aggregate profits

exceeding $800,000 for petitioner during 2008-2010.

In March 2012 the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) filed a civil complaint

against ITS, Ogbazion, and related entities seeking to enjoin them from “engaging

in and facilitating extensive and pervasive tax fraud.” A two-week trial was held

before the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio in July 2013. On

November 6, 2013, that court permanently enjoined Ogbazion and ITS from en-

gaging in any business involving the preparation or filing of Federal tax returns.

Petitioner regarded Ogbazion as a close friend and mentor. Although peti-

tioner was not a named defendant in the injunction case, he was singled out in the

court’s opinion as having been complicit in the abusive conduct in which ITS en-

gaged. This conduct included assisting Ogbazion in concealing $5 million in a

secret bank account to avoid creditors.

Because of petitioner’s close association with Ogbazion, the DOJ would not

approve any arrangement that enabled petitioner to take over the tax preparation

business formerly conducted by ITS. That business was taken over by Great Tax, -5-

[*5] LLC (GTX), a new tax preparation firm wholly owned by John Mirlisena.

Many store owners that had been ITS franchisees signed up with GTX, offering to

consumers tax preparation services similar to those that ITS had previously

provided.

In December 2013, roughly a month after the court issued its injunction

against ITS, petitioner formed and became the sole member of Refunds Plus, LLC

(RP), an S corporation for Federal tax purposes. Petitioner acquired from Ogba-

zion and made available to RP the tax processing software that ITS had previously

used. During 2014 RP provided services to GTX by using this software to process

tax returns for GTX customers, most or all of whom expected refunds.

Mr. Mirlisena agreed that RP would be paid a fee of $100.95 for each GTX

return that it processed claiming a refund. In many such cases the customer re-

ceived a “refund loan” from GTX. In that event RP’s processing activity included

dividing the tax refund (once received from the IRS) into “buckets” corresponding

to the sums due GTX (for repayment of the loan), RP (for its $100.95-per-return

fee), the store owner (for its fee), and the taxpayer (if anything was left over). Be-

cause the fees due RP were segregated into a separate “bucket,” petitioner was

aware at all times of the amounts that GTX owed RP. -6-

[*6] Petitioner opened bank accounts for RP, but they showed little activity dur-

ing 2014.3 However, on January 2, 2014, petitioner and Mr. Mirlisena executed

deposit account control agreements that authorized petitioner to withdraw cash

from GTX’s bank accounts. Petitioner was permitted access to any GTX account

and did not need to secure consent from GTX or Mr. Mirlisena before making

withdrawals. Exercising this authority petitioner wired well over $3 million out of

GTX’s bank accounts, to himself and others, during 2014.4

Petitioner maintained no formal books or records tracking RP’s income and

expenses during 2014. During that year RP processed almost 30,000 returns for

GTX and thereby earned a fee of $100.95 per return. On its 2014 Federal income

tax return RP checked the box electing the cash basis of accounting and reported

that it had zero gross receipts. The parties now agree that RP during 2014 in fact

had gross receipts of $2,819,433 from GTX and that petitioner failed to report, on

his individual return, $2,908,220 of flow-through income from RP.

3 RP had four bank accounts. Two had no activity during 2014, and the other two had aggregate deposits of $18,000.

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