Prudhomme v. Commissioner

345 F. App'x 6
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 16, 2009
Docket08-60449
StatusUnpublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 345 F. App'x 6 (Prudhomme v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prudhomme v. Commissioner, 345 F. App'x 6 (5th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

PER CURIAM: *

Sometimes, the resolution of a case on appeal turns largely on the standard of review. This is one of those cases.

Petitioners-Appellants Richard and Cathy Prudhomme (the “Prudhommes”) appeal the United States Tax Court’s decision that they are liable for an accuracy-related penalty for underpaying their taxes. We must determine whether the Prudhommes can avoid the penalty because they acted in “good faith” and with “reasonable cause,” per I.R.C. § 6664(e)(1), when relying on their accountants to prepare their tax return. The Tax Court held that the Prudhommes did not meet this standard because they provided their accountants with insufficient information to prepare the tax return accurately and did not make a reasonable effort to assess their proper tax liability. Given that there is evidence that cuts both ways, we cannot say that the Tax Court clearly erred in its factual findings. Therefore, we affirm.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In 1981, the Prudhommes, who both have high school educations, formed Bronco Oilfield Services, Inc. (“Bronco”), a family business. Richard Prudhomme worked in the field and Cathy Prudhomme maintained the office. The business was quite successful, and in 2003 they sold the company to RPC, Inc. for almost $11 million. They received $5,490,579 in cash at the closing, a promissory note of $3,500,000, *8 and $2,000,000 in RPC’s stock. The proceeds from the sale of Bronco form the basis of the Prudhommes’ individual tax liability at issue in this case.

For the past fourteen or fifteen years, the Prudhommes have used the services of CPA Jon Hurt (“Hurt”) and his firm to prepare both Bronco’s and their individual tax returns. Alice Vaughan (“Vaughan”), an accountant with Hurt’s firm, handled both accounts. Vaughan prepared Bronco’s 2003 tax return, which reflected the sale of the company to RPC. Hurt reviewed and signed the tax return as the “preparer,” and Cathy Prudhomme signed and filed it on March 15, 2004. However, subsequent to completing the Bronco return, Vaughan took a leave of absence from Hurt’s firm to care for her ailing husband. Hurt then assigned the Prud-hommes’ personal tax return to another CPA in his office, Dwayne Whitley (“Whitley”), and notified Cathy Prudhomme of this switch. The tax return Whitley prepared reflected an adjusted gross income for 2003 of $2,194,666, which was a significant increase over the Prudhommes’ adjusted gross income in 2002 of $216,534. Most of this increase stemmed from the sale of Bronco. Cathy Prudhomme picked up the Prudhommes’ personal tax return from Hurt on October 15, 2003 — the day it was due after the Prudhommes had received extensions — but did not review it before signing it on behalf of herself and her husband and mailing it in.

After determining that the Prudhommes may have underpaid their 2003 taxes, the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) began an audit. In preparing for a meeting with the revenue agent, Hurt noticed that the Prudhommes’ individual return failed to include some of the proceeds they received from the sale of Bronco. Specifically, when comparing the Bronco return with the individual return, Hurt observed that the Bronco return correctly reflected an expense of $3.2 million but that this income was missing from the Prudhommes’ individual return. Hurt testified, “And in the transfer [of the Prudhomme account to Whitley] some of the information did not get, you know, transferred properly. And I’m embarrassed to say this, I mean it’s, you know, it’s our fault. We basically just screwed up is what happened and didn’t get the income transferred.” The Prud-hommes then paid $576,728 in additional taxes on November 28, 2005. As Hurt explained,

In fact, you know, when they got picked for an audit, that Saturday before the guy was coming on Monday I looked over and I saw it bigger than Dallas, it was just like, oh man, this is just — you know, this is going to be embarrassing. And I went right to the agent and told him. I mean it wasn’t like anything was hidden, anybody tried to pull a fast one or anything like that. And, you know, and I brought it to his attention right off the bat and, you know, and told him we need to pick this up, we need to pay income on it. I mean the Prudhommes as soon as they got the report they paid within a week or so. I mean, you know, it’s just an error.

In justifying her reliance on the Hurt firm to prepare the Prudhommes’ taxes, Cathy Prudhomme stated that the tax return would not have made sense to her. She testified, “I wouldn’t have known where the $[3.2] million went in this tax return, if it was back in the back or where. I don’t know where the income is on this tax return. I don’t know where that would have showed up.” Further, the Prud-hommes observe that the return itself was complicated, spanning thirty-three pages and including nine schedules.

The Prudhommes also assert that they notified the Hurt firm of the sale of Bron *9 co, thereby deflecting the blame for their mistake in failing to declare some of the proceeds they received from the sale. In particular, the Prudhommes provided Vaughan with a document titled “Payouts at Closing,” which describes the income from the sale of Bronco. That document reflects a cash payment from the buyer, RPC, of $5,490,579. The document then designates the allocation of that amount: $4,059,735 to Bronco, $406,579 to the Prud-hommes, and $1,024,265 to loans. Thus, the document reflects the total proceeds from the sale, meaning that an accountant preparing both Bronco’s and the Prud-hommes’ taxes would have to account for the full amount, but it does not state explicitly that the Prudhommes received additional payments from Bronco stemming from the sale.

Five weeks after the audit, the IRS issued a Notice of Deficiency, declaring that the Prudhommes owed $576,728 — the additional taxes they had already paid — as well as $143,976.28 in “additions to tax.” Specifically, the IRS determined that the Prudhommes owed $28,565.70 for failing to file them income tax on time under I.R.C. § 6651(a)(1), $64.98 for underpaying their estimated tax under I.R.C. § 6654, and $115,345.60 for negligence or a substantial understatement of tax under I.R.C. § 6662.

The main basis for the IRS’s imposition of the addition to tax under I.R.C. § 6662 was its determination that the Prud-hommes received proceeds from the sale of Bronco but did not notify their accountants or declare the extra income on their tax return. The IRS notes that the Prud-hommes made three deposits to their bank account, which reflected payments from Bronco to the Prudhommes stemming from the sale, but that their tax return did not account for the last deposit of $3.2 million. 1 The IRS claims that if the Prud-hommes had furnished their accountants with then* bank statements, the accountants would have noticed the additional $3.2 million proceeds from the sale of Bronco and would have adjusted the Prudhommes’ individual tax return accordingly. Moreover, the IRS observes that the Prud-hommes did not have Bronco issue them a Form 1099-DIV to reflect the $3.2 million dividend they received from the sale.

The Prudhommes petitioned the Tax Court for a redetermination of their tax liability, challenging the imposition of some of these penalties.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
345 F. App'x 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prudhomme-v-commissioner-ca5-2009.