Streber v. Hunter

14 F. Supp. 2d 978, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20706, 1998 WL 428815
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Texas
DecidedApril 30, 1998
Docket1:96-cv-00476
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 14 F. Supp. 2d 978 (Streber v. Hunter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Streber v. Hunter, 14 F. Supp. 2d 978, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20706, 1998 WL 428815 (W.D. Tex. 1998).

Opinion

*980 OPINION

CAPELLE, United States Magistrate Judge.

Before the Court are the following pleadings:

1. Attorney Defendants Hunter, Dupuy, Hunter & Boland, Blazier, O’Dowd, and Hunter, Blazier et al 1 Motion to Compel Application of Louisiana Law to the Claims Against the Attorney Defendants filed December 1, 1997 (Doc. # 69); Plaintiff Streber’s Response to Attorney Defendants’ Motion filed December 22, 1997 (Doc. # 92); Plaintiff Delony’s Response to Attorney Defendants’ Motion filed December 23,1997 (Doc. # 98); Defendants’ Reply filed January 27, 1998 (Doc. # 111);

2. Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment based on Louisiana Limitations Law filed December 1, 1997 (Doc. # 70) and Appendix (Doc. # 72); Plaintiff Stre-ber’s Response and Appendix filed December 22, 1997 (Docs. # 88 & # 90); Plaintiff Delony’s Response and Appendix filed December 23, 1997 (Docs. # 96 & #99); and Defendants’ Reply filed January 27,1998 (Doc. # 110).

3. Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment based on Texas Limitations Law filed December 1, 1997 (Doc. #71) and Appendix (Doc. # 72); Plaintiff Streber’s Response to Attorney Defendants’ Motion based on Texas Limitations Law and Appendix filed December 22, 1997 (Docs. #89 & #90); Plaintiff Delony’s Response and Appendix filed December 23, 1997 (Docs. # 97 & # 99); Defendants’ Reply filed January 13,1998 (Doe. # 104) and Reply filed January 15, 1998 (Doc. # 105); and Plaintiff Streber’s Reply filed February 4,1998 (Doc. # 113).

After review of the pleadings and relevant law, the Court finds as follows:

I. BACKGROUND

In short, this case involves alleged attorney malpractice in a tax case. The underlying case was a dispute between the Internal Revenue Service and Tracy Parker Streber, Terry Parker Davis Delony, and Larry Parker, the sisters’ father, as to who owed taxes on money Tracy and Terry received in 1985. Although the facts are convoluted, the undersigned summarizes them as follows, keeping in mind that all disputed facts are resolved in favor of Plaintiffs, Tracy Parker Streber and Terry Parker Davis Delony.

In 1979, Plaintiffs’ father, Mr. Larry Parker — a non-party to this malpractice suit— set up a real estate joint venture involving 440 acres of undeveloped property in Harris County, Texas (the Northgate Forest property). Parker’s two daughters, Terry and Tracy Parker (the Parker sisters or sisters), received a percentage interest in the joint venture, held in trust for them by a trustee (J. Robert Bradish) On March 4, 1981, the investors sold the land involved in the joint venture, and Terry and Tracy each received notes for $2 million, representing their professed share of the proceeds. The notes indicated that the notes would mature on March 4, 1985. However, there is some evidence that there was no guarantee at that time that the sisters’ possession of the notes would in actuality result in any monetary payment to them.

Disputes arose among the participants in the real estate joint venture and the makers of the notes, which disputes were finally settled in April of 1985. As a result of the gift of the notes to them by their father and the settlement in April of 1985, Terry and Tracy each received $1.7 million dollars on April 23, 1985 and a half interest each in real property in Houston with, a total approximate value of $225,000. This was the first time the Parker sisters received any cash proceeds as a result of the real estate joint venture.

In 1982, Larry Parker and the Parker sisters’ mother, Betty, were divorced. By 1985, both were remarried, Larry to Martha A. Parker and Betty to Lee Berwick. After the sisters received the money in April of 1985, a dispute arose between the Parker sisters and their father concerning his desire to “manage” the money pursuant to an agreement previously signed by the sisters *981 giving him control over any proceeds until each sister reached the age of twenty-five. 2

In May of 1985, the sisters sought advice from Edwin Hunter and other members of his Lake Charles, Louisiana law firm 3 concerning the dispute with their father and also how the money should be reported to the Internal Revenue Service. The sisters chose Mr. Hunter and his law firm because Mr. Hunter had handled tax matters for the sisters’ stepfather, Lee Berwick, since 1969. 4

Mr. Hunter is an attorney specializing in tax work who is licensed in both Louisiana and Texas. Hunter provided the sisters with two basic alternatives: (1) pay capital gains tax on the income they received; or (2) treat the income as a gift from their father, who would then be liable for any gift taxes due. In accordance with this advice, the sisters and Terry’s husband, Stephen Davis, reported the proceeds of the notes on their tax returns as a 1985 gift from Larry Parker— with taxes on the proceeds owed by their father. 5

On October 22, 1991, the Commissioner issued statutory notices of deficiency 6 to Tracy, Teresa, and Stephen for 1985, stating that the sisters and Stephen should have included the joint venture income they received in their 1985 returns and assessing past due taxes, interest, and penalties. The IRS based this assessment on its determination that the sisters received the property forming the basis for the 1985 proceeds in 1979. The IRS also sent a notice of deficiency to Plaintiffs’ father, Larry Parker, indicating that he also owed [the same] back taxes based on his “gift” to the sisters in 1985.

Plaintiffs were therefore the subject of an IRS “whipsaw.” From the perspective of the IRS, a “whipsaw” occurs when taxpayers treat the same transaction involving the same income inconsistently, thus creating the possibility that the income might go untaxed. See Bouterie v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 36 F.3d 1361, 1373-74 (5th Cir.1994), citing Wickert v. Commissioner, 842 F.2d 1005 (8th Cir.1988). 7 When a whipsaw occurs in tax returns, the IRS frequently takes inconsistent positions, essentially arguing that one of the parties is liable even if it doesn’t know which party it is. For that reason, it is not uncommon for the IRS to assess the same taxes on two different taxpayers, essentially pitting the taxpayers against each other and requiring each taxpayer to assert that it is the other taxpayer’s tax liability. Thus, the central and disposi-tive issue before the Tax Court was a question of fact as to whether the money represented a 1985 gift or was a gift given in the underlying transaction in 1979.

Both Larry Parker and the sisters contested the notices of deficiency in Tax Court in Houston, Texas and the cases were consolidated before the Tax Court.

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14 F. Supp. 2d 978, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20706, 1998 WL 428815, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/streber-v-hunter-txwd-1998.