Vasudev v. Director

13 N.J. Tax 223
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedJune 2, 1993
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 13 N.J. Tax 223 (Vasudev v. Director) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vasudev v. Director, 13 N.J. Tax 223 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1993).

Opinion

CRABTREE, J.T.C.

This is a gross income tax case wherein plaintiffs1 seek review of defendant’s partial denial of their claim for refund of gross income tax for 1986.

The issues are:

1. Whether the amounts involved in the release of certain obligations constitute discharge of indebtedness income (DOI) or whether such amounts are includible in the amount realized upon the sale of certain real property in determining taxable gain for purposes of N.J.S.A 54A:5-l(e).

2. Whether, if the court finds the release of such obligations to be includible in the amount realized, the basis of the property sold should be adjusted by reason of plaintiffs’ inability to derive a tax benefit from depreciation allowances applicable to prior years.

All the facts have been stipulated except for the evidence pertaining to the execution and release of the second mortgage note.

At all times pertinent hereto, plaintiff owned a 25% limited partnership interest in Wallis Ridgeland Associates, Ltd. (WRAL), a Texas limited partnership with its principal office in New York City.

In 1984, WRAL purchased a 99% limited partnership interest in each of two Texas limited partnerships based in New York City: Vance Wallis Associates, Ltd. (“Wallis”) and Vance Ridgeland [227]*227Associates, Ltd. (“Ridgeland”). In the same year Wallis and Ridgeland acquired leasehold and fee interests in certain commercial real estate. Wallis acquired property in Louisiana; Ridgeland acquired property in Mississippi.

Wallis paid $5,781,381 for its Louisiana property, financing the acquisition with nonrecourse loans from institutional lenders secured by first mortgages and an assignment of rents. Wallis also issued a nonrecourse note for $1,070,000 secured by a second mortgage on the Louisiana property to the corporate manager of WRAL purportedly in consideration for an assignment of the right to purchase the Louisiana property.

Ridgeland purchased a D.H. Holmes Co. department store located in a Ridgeland, Mississippi shopping center for $6,050,000. D.H. Holmes is a Louisiana corporation which owns and operates a chain of department stores in Louisiana, Mississippi and other States of the Deep South. The purchase was financed by a first mortgage loan granted by Bankers Life Co. for $5,950,000 and an unsecured purchase money note for $100,000 given to the seller. In addition, Ridgeland executed a nonrecourse promissory note for $1,041,000, secured by a second mortgage on the property, purportedly in consideration for the assignment of the right to purchase the property. The note and mortgage (which was never recorded) were given to Vance Capital Corporation (Vance Capital), the corporate manager of Ridgeland, the assignor of the right to purchase the property.

The conveyance was followed immediately by the execution of a 20-year net lease between the purchaser, Ridgeland, and D.H. Holmes Co. as lessee. The term of the lease coincided with the amortization period of the first mortgage note.

Testimony at the trial by Robert F. Gossett, Jr., the managing director and principal shareholder of Vance Capital, disclosed that the second mortgage on the Mississippi property was, in reality, Vance Capital’s syndication fee for putting the sale-leaseback transaction together and marketing partnership interests in WRAL to outside investors. Gossett felt that, without additional equity investment, the deal was not viable.

[228]*228Wallis continued its activity concerning the Louisiana property until July 1985, at which time it sold the property and discontinued its real estate operation. Ridgeland continued its real estate operation in Mississippi throughout 1985.

Plaintiff had no partnership income from any source unrelated to his interest in WRAL in any of the years 1984, 1985 and 1986. In each of those years plaintiff sustained a net loss from his investment in WRAL. In view of the prohibition in N.J.S.A 54A:5-2 against netting of intereategory income and losses, plaintiff derived no New Jersey tax benefit from his distributive share of WRAL’s losses in 1984 and 1985.

Gossett testified that the assembly of the two tax shelters for Wallis and Ridgeland, using WRAL as the primary investment vehicle, coincided with the announcement by the Reagan Administration of the proposed Tax Reform Act, which was ultimately enacted in October 1986. That legislation sounded the death knell for tax shelters, as it contained a provision denying deductions for so-called passive activity losses to the extent they exceeded passive activity income. As partnership interests in WRAL would fit the proposed statutory definition of passive activities, Gossett was unable to market those interests. As indicated above, further equity investment in WRAL was essential to the viability of the tax shelter transactions. Consequently, the sale-leaseback deal between D.H. Holmes and Ridgeland, although consummated, was aborted. In December 1986, Ridgeland reconveyed the Mississippi property to D.H. Holmes, the consideration for which was the latter’s assumption of the first mortgage on a recourse basis. Contemporaneously with the reconveyance, Ridgeland’s liability for the unsecured purchase money note to D.H. Holmes was released. At the same time, according to Gossett’s testimony, Vance Capital surrendered its claim to the syndication fee, an action which took the form of a release of the unrecorded second mortgage and note. Gossett testified that he felt impelled to relinquish Vance Capital’s claim, no part of which had been paid, because of his inability to market interests in WRAL.

[229]*229The assumption and cancellation agreement of December 1, 1986, whereby D.H. Holmes reacquired the Mississippi property from Ridgeland, refers to the assumption by D.H. Holmes of the first mortgage and its undertaking to be personally liable on the first mortgage note. There is no reference in that agreement to the second mortgage nor to the unsecured purchase money note.

Ridgeland’s 1986 Federal return (Form 1065) reported a net gain from the sale of its Mississippi property of $1,179,471 and DOI income of $405,267. The adjusted basis of the property for Federal income tax purposes was reported as $5,899,550 (original cost of $7,091,000 minus accumulated depreciation of $1,191,450). The amount realized was reported as $7,145,377.

Ridgeland’s income and expenses for 1984, 1985 and 1986 were as follows:

1984 1985 1986
Rents $178,022 $ 327J3275 $420^88
Ground rent (5,250) (10,000) (10,000)
Depreciation (198,704) (556,433) (436,313)
Interest2 (381,950) (902,544) (9,479)
Net income (loss) ($407,882) ($1,141,352) ($ 35,504)

Wallis’ income and expenses for 1984 and 1985 were as follows:

1984 1985**
Interest income $34,449 —0—
Ground rent (2,000) —0—
Mise, expense (381) Interest expense (46,932) (27,143) (766,163)
(refer to footnote # 2) Depreciation (134,322)
Net income (loss) ($14,864) ($927,628)

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Moroney v. Director, Division of Taxation
21 N.J. Tax 220 (New Jersey Tax Court, 2004)
Weintraub v. Director, Division of Taxation
19 N.J. Tax 65 (New Jersey Tax Court, 2000)
Koch v. Director, Division of Taxation
722 A.2d 918 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1999)
Schiff v. Director, Division of Taxation
15 N.J. Tax 370 (New Jersey Tax Court, 1995)
Koch v. Director, Division of Taxation
15 N.J. Tax 387 (New Jersey Tax Court, 1995)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 N.J. Tax 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vasudev-v-director-njtaxct-1993.