Samuel Wegbreit & Elizabeth J. Wegbreit v. Commissioner

2019 T.C. Memo. 82
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJuly 8, 2019
Docket7109-13, 15305-13
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2019 T.C. Memo. 82 (Samuel Wegbreit & Elizabeth J. Wegbreit 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
Samuel Wegbreit & Elizabeth J. Wegbreit v. Commissioner, 2019 T.C. Memo. 82 (tax 2019).

Opinion

T.C. Memo. 2019-82

UNITED STATES TAX COURT

SAMUEL WEGBREIT AND ELIZABETH J. WEGBREIT, Petitioners v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent

THE SAMUEL WEGBREIT TRUST FUND, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent

Docket Nos. 7109-13, 15305-13. Filed July 8, 2019.

John E. Rogers, for petitioners.

Lauren N. May, David A. Lee, Angela B. Reynolds, Michelle E. Marcove,

Naseem Jehan Khan, Thomas F. Harriman, and Tess Deliefde, for respondent.

MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION

COHEN, Judge: Respondent determined deficiencies, penalties, and

additions to tax in the individual petitioners’ Federal income tax as follows: -2-

[*2] Samuel and Elizabeth J. Wegbreit (Docket No. 7109-13)1 Additions to tax Excise tax Penalty Sec. Sec. Year Deficiency sec. 4973(a) sec. 6662 6651(a)(1) 6651(a)(2)

2005 $1,596,298.00 --- $319,260 --- --- 2006 32,733.00 --- 6,512 --- --- 2007 525,381.50 $23,674.26 188,660 $5,327 $5,919 2008 13,200.00 24,173.10 1,665 5,439 5,318 2009 8,068.00 20,352.90 1,614 4,579 3,256

1 The parties stipulated that petitioners Wegbreit were not liable for sec. 6662A penalties for 2006 and 2007.

The Samuel Wegbreit Trust Fund (Docket No. 15305-13) Additions to tax Sec. Sec. Sec. Year Deficiency 6654 6651(a)(1) 6651(a)(2)

2005 $1,589,646.55 $63,765.49 $357,670.47 $397,411.64 2006 24,850.05 1,175.95 5,591.26 6,212.51 2007 92,383.95 4,204.67 20,786.39 23,095.99 2008 13,241.50 425.57 2,979.34 2,913.13 2009 25,275.75 605.10 5,687.04 4,044.12

After the petitions were filed, respondent filed an amended answer asserting that

Samuel Wegbreit (S. Wegbreit) and Elizabeth J. Wegbreit (E. Wegbreit) were each -3-

[*3] liable for penalties for fraud pursuant to section 6663 for 2005 through 2009.

The cases were consolidated for trial, briefing, and opinion.

After concessions and as a result of the stipulations, the issues remaining for

decision are: (1) whether S. Wegbreit and E. Wegbreit had unreported income for

2005 through 2009; (2) whether the assets held by the Samuel Wegbreit Trust

Fund (SWTF) are the assets of petitioners Wegbreit for which they were required

to take into account the income, deductions, and credits of SWTF in computing

their taxable income for 2005 thought 2009; (3) whether S. Wegbreit transferred

his interest in Oak Ridge Investments, LLC (Oak Ridge, LLC), to SWTF on or

before January 1, 2005; (4) whether gain realized on the sale of S. Wegbreit’s Oak

Ridge, LLC interest to Pioneer Investment Management USA (Pioneer) was

includable in petitioners Wegbreit’s gross income for 2005; (5) whether the

purported exchange of the Threshold Alliance, Ltd. (Threshold), variable life

insurance policy (Threshold policy) for the Acadia Life, Ltd. (Acadia), variable

life insurance policy (Acadia policy) qualified for nonrecognition treatment under

section 1035; (6) whether petitioners Wegbreit are liable for excise tax on excess

individual retirement account (IRA) contributions under section 4973(a) and

additions to tax under section 6651(a)(1) and (2) for 2007 through 2009; and

(7) whether petitioners Wegbreit are each liable for fraud penalties under section -4-

[*4] 6663 for 2005 through 2009, or in the alternative accuracy-related penalties

under section 6662(a). Unless otherwise indicated all section references are to the

Internal Revenue Code in effect at all relevant times, and all Rule references are to

the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Some of the facts have been stipulated, and the stipulated facts are

incorporated in our findings by this reference. Petitioners Wegbreit resided in

Illinois when their petitions were filed. SWTF was a Colorado trust when its

petition was filed. S. Wegbreit was born in 1957, and he graduated from Brown

University with a degree in applied mathematics in 1979. At all material times

S. Wegbreit worked in the financial industry. E. Wegbreit was born in 1963. She

graduated from the College of St. Catherine in 1985 and received a master of

science degree in maternal child health in 1995 from the University of Illinois at

Chicago. Petitioners Wegbreit were married in 1994, they remained married to

each other at all material times, and they filed a joint return for each of the years in

issue. They have two children, a son born in 1994 and a daughter born in 1996. -5-

[*5] The Oak Ridge Companies

S. Wegbreit started Oak Ridge Investments, Inc. (Oak Ridge, Inc.), together

with David Klaskin in 1989 as a retail broker-dealer. From the beginning,

S. Wegbreit ran all of the compliance, operations, and finance functions for Oak

Ridge, Inc., and Klaskin focused on marketing and the investment side of the

business. Oak Ridge, Inc. eventually added a registered investment adviser

service to its business.

On March 3, 1997, S. Wegbreit and Klaskin formed Oak Ridge, LLC to

shield the value of the registered investment adviser business from any litigation

risks involving the broker-dealer portion of the business. The registered

investment adviser portion was placed in Oak Ridge, LLC, and Oak Ridge, Inc.

retained the broker-dealer portion of the business and certain assets such as office

equipment.

At the time Oak Ridge, LLC was formed, Klaskin received a 50%

membership interest, S. Wegbreit received a 37.5% membership interest, and the

remaining 12.5% interest was divided equally among five minority members. The

March 3, 1997, Oak Ridge, LLC operating agreement (Oak Ridge, LLC operating

agreement) contained provisions that restricted transfer of members’ interests

including the following: -6-

[*6] Article XVI

Transfer of Membership Interest

16.1 A Member shall not voluntarily assign, gift, sell, transfer, pledge or otherwise encumber its Interest, or any portion thereof, or any other rights of a Member without complying with the terms of this Operating Agreement, including without limitation, the provisions of Section 16.5 of this Operating Agreement.

16.2 The proposed assignee or transferee of a Member’s Interest (in compliance with this Article XIV [sic]) may be admitted to the Company as a Member in the place and stead of, or together with, as the case may be, the Member who has assigned or transferred his Interest(s) upon satisfaction of all of the following conditions:

(a) Approval of the Members (in accordance with Section 11.3 of this Operating Agreement) to such substitution shall be obtained, the granting or denial of which shall be within the sole discretion of each such voting Members.

(b) The assignor and the assignee must execute and deliver such other instruments as counsel to the Company may deem necessary or desirable to effect such admission, including the written acceptance and adoption by the assignee of the provisions of this Operating Agreement.

After all of the foregoing conditions have been fulfilled and the assignee has been admitted to the Company as a Member, the Member-Managers shall amend Exhibit B hereto to reflect the assignee’s admission to the Company as a Member.

* * * * * * * -7-

[*7] 16.5 Right of First Refusal

(a) If a Member wants to transfer any or all of the Member’s Interest to a party other than the Company or to David M. Klaskin (a “Third Party”), the member agrees (unless the transfer is part of a transfer that includes the transfer by David M.

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