Russian Recovery Fund Ltd. v. United States

101 Fed. Cl. 498, 108 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 7182, 2011 U.S. Claims LEXIS 2172, 2011 WL 5543747
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedOctober 28, 2011
DocketNos. 06-30 T, 06-35 T
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 101 Fed. Cl. 498 (Russian Recovery Fund Ltd. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Federal Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Russian Recovery Fund Ltd. v. United States, 101 Fed. Cl. 498, 108 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 7182, 2011 U.S. Claims LEXIS 2172, 2011 WL 5543747 (uscfc 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

BRUGGINK, Judge.

This Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act (“TEFRA”), 26 U.S.C. §§ 6221-6233 (2006), action is a petition for readjustment of partnership items brought under 26 U.S.C. § 6226(a)2 by Russian Recovery Advisors, LLC (“RRA”) as the tax matters partner for Russian Recovery Fund, LTD (“RRF”). Plaintiffs allege, among other contentions, that the Internal Revenue Service’s (“IRS”) issuance of a Final Partnership Administrative Adjustment (“FPAA”) for the tax year ending December 31, 2000, was untimely and therefore invalid, and that the representative partners’ 2000 and 2001 tax years are closed for adjustment and assessment.

In this ease, we previously held it improper for an FPAA to adjust an individual partner’s amount at-risk in its distributive share of non-recourse partnership liabilities and that the remedy for improper adjustment of a non-partnership item in a FPAA was not the invalidation of the FPAA. See Russian Recovery Fund Ltd. v. United States, 81 Fed.Cl. 793 (2008). We also held that plaintiffs’ jurisdictional deposit as required under 26 U.S.C. § 6226(e) must include the potential increased tax liability for all tax years affected by the FPAA. See 90 Fed.Cl. 698 (2009).

Currently pending are cross motions for partial summary judgment on the 2000 tax year. At a status conference we agreed to limit the briefing to two representative partners: James DiBiase and Nancy Zimmer[500]*500man. We heard oral argument on November 18, 2010, and the parties submitted supplemental briefing thereafter. For the reasons set out below, we grant plaintiffs’ motion with regard to Mr. DiBiase and the partners he represents and deny plaintiffs’ motion with regard to Ms. Zimmerman and the partners she represents. We also grant defendant’s motion with regard to Ms. Zimmerman and the partners she represents and deny defendant’s motion with regard to Mr. DiBiase and the partners he represents.

BACKGROUND3

RRF is a limited liability company that has elected to be treated as a partnership for federal income tax purposes. It is therefore subject to TEFRA. Because RRF is a TEFRA partnership, the IRS issues a FPAA to the partnership before the IRS may make assessments on individual partners.

RRF is part of a complex tiered partnership structure consisting of various pass-thru entities, partners, and indirect partners. One of RRF’s direct partners, FFIP, is itself a TEFRA partnership. Braeebridge Capital, L.L.C., (“Braeebridge”) is a direct partner of FFIP and an indirect partner of RRF. Ms. Zimmerman, one of the representative partners in this motion, is a direct partner of FFIP and an indirect partner of RRF through FFIP and various other entities. Mr. DiBiase, the other representative partner, is a direct partner of Braeebridge and an indirect partner of RRF.

RRF filed its 2000 tax return on August 14, 2001. In the 2000 tax year, RRF allocated $46,424,782 of net section 988 losses4 to FFIP. On October 14, 2005, the IRS issued an FPAA to RRF for the 2000 tax year, proposing adjustments to RRF partnership items.5 In the 2000 FPAA, the IRS proposed to characterize this $46,424,782 reported loss as “Other Income” on the 2000 RRF return, functionally disallowing all of the claimed losses that were allocated to FFIP.

FFIP, a partner of RRF and also a pass thru entity, filed its own 2000 partnership tax return on or before August 16, 2001. After netting the losses it received from RRF with its own losses, FFIP reported $4,205,888 in losses for the 2000 tax year and $25,272,185 in losses for the 2001 tax year. The original $46.4 million in section 988 losses that were allocated from RRF make up a large portion of both of these loss figures.

Meanwhile, Ms. Zimmerman, an indirect partner of RRF through FFIP as well as other entities, filed her original 2000 tax return more than three years prior to the FPAA. Ms. Zimmerman filed her 2001 tax return on October 15, 2002, however, less than three years before the FPAA was issued. For the 2001 tax year, FFIP, Brace-bridge, and other pass-thru partners allocated various gains and losses to her, including a substantial amount of RRF section 988 losses from 2000. In other words, the bulk of the losses RRF allocated to FFIP in 2000 were not passed through in 2000, but were retained by FFIP until 2001, at which point the losses impacted Ms. Zimmerman’s 2001 return. The proper treatment of this fact drives much of the parties’ disagreement as to Ms. Zimmerman.

Mr. DiBiase, an indirect partner of RRF through two pass-thru entities, FFIP and Braeebridge, filed his 2000 return more than three years prior to the issuance of the FPAA In that year, he reported $62 of section 988 net losses. He filed his 2001 return on August 15, 2002, also more than three years prior to the FPAA, and reported net losses of $6,676, which reflected $42,851 of the 2000 RRF losses that were passed through to him from FFIP via Braeebridge in 2001.

On May 10, 2005, FFIP, through its tax matters partner Braeebridge, entered into an extension agreement with the IRS on a form 872-P, Consent to Extend the Time to Assess Tax Attributable to Partnership. This [501]*501extension allowed the IRS to “assess any federal income tax attributable to the partnership items of the partnership named above [FFIP] against any partner of the partnership for the period(s) ended December 31, 2001 at any time on or before August 31, 2006.” Def. Cross Motion Ex. 5.

Beginning in 2005, the IRS performed an audit of FFIP’s 2001 partnership return. During the course of this audit, the IRS made specific and detailed inquiries into the source of RRF’s net section 988 losses reported on FFIP’s 2001 tax return. The IRS completed the review of FFIP’s 2001 partnership return and issued a “no adjustments” letter to FFIP.

Before the court are cross-motions for summary judgment with respect to the RRF 2000 tax year and the RRF indirect partners’ 2001 tax year. Plaintiffs argue that the FPAA to RRF was untimely because the statute of limitations to assess any partners for losses adjusted due to the FPAA had already expired. Defendant has cross moved, seeking a declaration that the FPAA is timely and that the statute of limitations is still open to assess tax attributable to the RRF items for the representative partners with respect to their 2001 tax returns, because those returns were open on October 14, 2005, when the FPAA was initiated.

DISCUSSION

This court has jurisdiction over a challenge to an FPAA pursuant to 26 U.S.C. § 6226(a)(3), which allows a tax matters partner to file “a petition for readjustment of the partnership items for such taxable year with the [Court of Federal Claims].” Russian Recovery Advisors is the tax matters partner for RRF and appropriately filed this proceeding to protest the FPAA issued to RRF by the IRS for RRF’s 2000 tax year.

I. The plaintiffs have standing.

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101 Fed. Cl. 498, 108 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 7182, 2011 U.S. Claims LEXIS 2172, 2011 WL 5543747, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/russian-recovery-fund-ltd-v-united-states-uscfc-2011.