R. Timmis Ware and Catherine K. Ware v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

906 F.2d 62
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedSeptember 17, 1990
Docket807, Docket 89-4113
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 906 F.2d 62 (R. Timmis Ware and Catherine K. Ware v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
R. Timmis Ware and Catherine K. Ware v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 906 F.2d 62 (2d Cir. 1990).

Opinion

OAKES, Chief Judge:

R. Timmis Ware appeals a decision of the United States Tax Court, Theodore Tannen-wald, Jr., Judge, entered on April 19, 1989, determining that a portion of a payment received by Ware upon withdrawing from his law partnership was attributable to an “unrealized receivable” and therefore should have been treated as ordinary income rather than as capital gain on Ware’s 1982 income tax return. We affirm.

In 1981, Ware was a partner in the New York City law firm of Rogers, Hoge & Hills when he and another partner, James B. Swire, helped arrange the sale of a pharmaceutical plant in Ireland. In return, they were to receive a fee. Hoping to keep the fee for themselves, Ware and Swire continuously concealed their activities from the firm, despite using the firm’s facilities and personnel to arrange the sale over a period of several months. * In August 1981, the sale closed, but a dispute arose with the owner of the pharmaceutical plant over payment of the fee, and as a result the fee was paid to an escrow agent in Ireland designated by Ware. By October 1981, the firm became aware of Ware’s and Swire’s activities and claimed rights to the fee. Ware and Swire resisted. The firm filed suit against them in the Supreme Court of New York and forced them out of the partnership. Their departure was memorialized in a withdrawal agreement signed on January 15, 1982. The agreement provided for the sale of Ware’s and Swire’s respective partnership interests back to the firm as of December 31, 1981, as well as for payment of half of the Ireland fee to the firm and half to Ware and Swire.

On his 1982 tax return, Ware treated the $95,306.64 he received from the Ireland fee as capital gain income. He claimed that it constituted part of the proceeds from the sale of his interest in the partnership and was entitled, pursuant to section 741 of the Internal Revenue Code, to capital gain treatment. See 26 U.S.C. § 741 (1988). A revenue agent for the Internal Revenue Service performed an audit and concluded that the fee should be treated as ordinary income, because it was earned directly by Ware and not by the partnership. The IRS Appeals Division agreed. Accordingly, a statutory notice of deficiency was issued, positing that Ware had underpaid his taxes by $31,969.

Ware petitioned for review to the Tax Court. In lieu of a trial, Ware and the Commissioner stipulated to a set of facts for the Tax Court’s consideration. After the stipulated facts were submitted to the *64 Tax Court, opening briefs were filed within one day of each other by both parties in June 1988. Only then did the Commissioner advance a different theory for why the fee should have been treated as ordinary income. The Commissioner now conceded that the fee was indeed income to the firm and not directly to Ware. Nevertheless, the Commissioner argued, the fee was an “unrealized receivable” of the partnership and as such not subject to capital gain treatment. See 26 U.S.C. § 751(a)(1) (1988). The Tax Court accepted this theory and found in favor of the Commissioner. See T.C. Memo 1989-165 (Apr. 13, 1989), petition for reconsideration denied, 92 T.C. No. 83 (June 13, 1989).

In this appeal, Ware contends, first, that the fee was not an unrealized receivable; second, that even if the fee were an unrealized receivable, it would not be attributable to him; and third, that the Commissioner raised the unrealized receivable issue too late for it to be considered by the Tax Court.

DISCUSSION

The proceeds from a sale of an interest in a partnership are generally treated as capital gain, except to the extent that they are attributable to “unrealized receivables,” which are treated as ordinary income. See 26 U.S.C. §§ 741, 751(a)(1). Section 751(c) defines “unrealized receivables” as follows:

For purposes of this subchapter, the term “unrealized receivables” includes, to the extent not previously includible in income under the method of accounting used by the partnership, any rights (contractual or otherwise) to payment for— (1) goods delivered, or to be delivered ..., or (2) services rendered, or to be rendered.

26 U.S.C. § 751(c) (1988). The point behind denying capital gain treatment for unrealized receivables to the departing partner is that they correspond to income that has not yet become part of the partnership interest and, absent that partner’s exchange of his interest, would be taxable to him as ordinary income. Congress wished “to prevent the use of the partnership as a device for obtaining capital-gain treatment on fees or other rights to income.” S.Rep. No. 1622, 83d Cong., 2d Sess., reprinted in 1954 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 4621, 4732. Without the unrealized receivable exception to capital gain treatment of sale of partnership interests, members of a partnership could, by dissolving and reforming the partnership each year, be able to treat their otherwise ordinary income as capital gains arising out of the partners’ sales of their interests in the partnership.

We have no hesitation concluding that the Ireland fee was an unrealized receivable of the partnership. As section 751(c) makes clear, whether a fee is an unrealized receivable involves a two-step inquiry. First, there must be a right to payment for the services previously rendered. Here the firm’s right became clearly established upon signing the withdrawal agreement, which provided in paragraph four for “delivery to the firm” of the fee. Ware himself states in his reply brief, “the record clearly shows that the Partnership’s right to the fee was never disputed.” Reply Brief of Appellant at 13. Moreover, the record clearly supports that the firm had no uncontested, clearly established right to the fee prior to signing the withdrawal agreement. Ware and Swire continuously concealed their activities from the firm and formed a separate partnership for the very purpose of retaining the fee for themselves. Ware stipulated to the following statement before the Tax Court: “At all times prior to the payment of the finder’s fee to the appropriate persons, the fee was held in escrow by Thomas F. Figgis, Esq., in Dublin, Ireland, and was subject to the settlement negotiations of the law firm of RH & H, the petitioner and Swire.” Not until the withdrawal agreement was signed in January 1982 did the firm acquire an uncontested right to the fee.

Second, the payment to which the firm has a right must not have been “previously includible in income under the method of accounting used by the partnership.” 26 U.S.C. § 751(c). Ware contends that since the firm’s 1981 tax return is not even in the record, the Tax Court could not have found *65 that the fee was not includible in 1981. 1 We do not agree. Whether the fee was actually

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Bluebook (online)
906 F.2d 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/r-timmis-ware-and-catherine-k-ware-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca2-1990.