Walter F. Barton and Betty E. Barton v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

893 F.2d 306
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJune 11, 1990
Docket88-8844
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 893 F.2d 306 (Walter F. Barton and Betty E. Barton v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walter F. Barton and Betty E. Barton v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 893 F.2d 306 (11th Cir. 1990).

Opinion

CLARK, Circuit Judge:

In this appeal from the United States Tax Court, we are asked to untangle a complicated “sale/lease-baek” transaction to determine whether, during 1982, the appellants were “at risk” within the meaning of Section 465(b) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended. Based on a stipulated factual record, the Tax Court found that the appellants were not at risk and upheld the Commissioner’s deficiency assessment. Having extensively analyzed the facts as stipulated by the parties, as understood by the Tax Court, and as presented by the parties on appeal, we find that the Tax Court erred in refusing to consider relevant evidence and based its ruling on a misunderstanding of the facts of the case. Furthermore, we are unable to rectify the misunderstanding because the factual record is incomplete. Therefore, we vacate the Tax Court’s decision and remand this case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

This ease involves multi-layered contractual relations among five parties that arise from the purchase and lease of $700,000 worth of computer equipment. It appears from the record that as of October 30, 1978, St. Joseph Leasing Corporation (“Leasing”) was the sole owner of the computer equipment. (Exh. R-18) By June 26, 1981, Leasing had leased all of the computer equipment to TRW, Inc. 1 (Exh. R-18) From that point on, the computer equipment has apparently remained in the possession of TRW, Inc., which uses it in its business. Although the documents relating to this transfer of ownership are not in the record, it appears that sometime after June 26 and on or before November 25, 1981, Leasing sold its ownership interest in the computer equipment to St. Joseph Equity Corporation (“Equity”). On November 25, 1981, Equity sold its ownership interest in the computer equipment to petitioner Walter F. Barton, in return for $20,000 cash, a full-recourse Promissory Note for $110,000, and a non-recourse Installment Note for $570,000. (Exh. G — 7, H-8, 1-9, *308 E-5) On that same day Mr. Barton leased the computer equipment back to Equity. (Exh. K-ll)

Pursuant to the terms of the Installment Note and the lease agreement between Mr. Barton and Equity, Mr. Barton was required to make 96 monthly Installment Note payments of $10,102.60 and Equity was required to make 96 monthly lease payments of $10,535.93. (Petitioner’s Brief, p. 5; Commissioner’s Brief, p. 4-5) Equity’s monthly obligation to Mr. Barton therefore exceeded Mr. Barton’s monthly obligation to Equity by $433.33. Instead of tendering checks to each other monthly, Equity offset Mr. Barton’s obligation under the Installment Note, and paid Mr. Barton $2,599.98 (six times $433.33) every six months.

The parties agree that Mr. Barton was at-risk for the amount of the full recourse Promissory Note. The question of whether he was at-risk for the amount of the Installment Note would not have arisen but for a December, 1982 amendment to the Installment Note. As noted above, the Installment Note was originally written to be a non-recourse obligation, and thus, Mr. Barton was not originally personally at-risk for the $570,000. The December, 1982 amendment (the “Amendment”) was intended to convert a portion of the Installment Note debt to recourse debt. Specifically, it provided that during certain years the non-recourse language of the Installment Note would only apply to amounts in excess of specified amounts, as follows:

December 31, 1982 $ 91,000
December 31, 1983 $201,000
December 31, 1984 $299,000
December 31, 1985 $383,000
December 31, 1986 $305,000
December 31, 1987 $216,000
December 31, 1988 $113,000
December 31, 1989 $ 5,000

Paragraph 2(ii) of the Amendment further provided:

The Seller [Equity] and its Assignee ... (ii) agree that if either: (a) the corporate bond rating of the lessee to whom the Seller is leasing the Equipment as published by Moody’s Investors Service, Inc. falls below such lessee’s rating as of the Commencement Date of the Original Term of the Lease; or (b) the net worth of the lessee to whom the Seller is leasing the Equipment falls below such lessee’s net worth as set forth in the most recent audited financial statement available as of the Commencement Date of the Original Term of the Lease, the Buyer may rescind this Amendment, in whole or in part, by tendering written notice to the Seller by registered mail, return receipt requested.

(Exh. F-6) This paragraph clearly gives Mr. Barton the option to relieve himself of the recourse liability for the amounts listed above upon the happening of one of two events. The Commissioner and the Tax Court take the position that this “opt-out” provision serves to prevent Mr. Barton from ever being at-risk, while Mr. Barton contends that the “opt-out” provision does not protect him in two “worst case scenarios” and thus he was at-risk for the listed amounts.

Mr. Barton and the Commissioner agree that if the word “rescind” in the Amendment was intended to mean prospective rescission only, then the Amendment would not operate as a stop-loss agreement, because Mr. Barton would still be at-risk for the listed amounts prior to the date of rescission. On the other hand, if “rescind” means that Mr. Barton could be relieved of all personal liability, past, present and future, then the Amendment would operate as a stop-loss agreement. Mr. Barton argues on appeal that the Tax Court erred in refusing to consider evidence that he and Equity intended for the word “rescind” to allow prospective rescission only. The Tax Court stated in a footnote: “In view of our conclusion and discussion in this opinion we do not consider it necessary to discuss the various arguments made by the parties ... such as whether the parol evidence rule would bar testimony as to the intent of the parties with respect to the provisions and whether “rescind” as used in the arrangement means ‘rescind’ or ‘revoke’.” Nevertheless, the Tax Court necessarily determined that the word “rescind” allowed re *309 scission ab initio, because the Tax Court held:

[T]he net effect of the Amendment is to protect petitioner from economic loss because the only circumstance under which he realistically would be called upon to pay is where the end-user, TRW, would not or could not pay on its obligation and that is exactly the circumstance in which petitioner could get out of his recourse liability.

Tax Court Memorandum Opinion, p. 14.

The parties have stipulated that Virginia law is the applicable law to the construction of the Amendment. Under Virginia law, extrinsic (parol) evidence is admissible to determine the meaning of ambiguous contract terms. See Renner Plumbing, Heating and Air Conditioning, Inc. v. Renner, 225 Va. 508, 303 S.E.2d 894 (Va. 1983); Reed v. Dent, 194 Va. 156, 72 S.E.2d 255 (1952); Sunbury Textile Mills, Inc. v.

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Bluebook (online)
893 F.2d 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walter-f-barton-and-betty-e-barton-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca11-1990.