Judges: "Goeke, Joseph Robert"
Attorneys: Christopher Kliefoth and Karla L. Palmer , for petitioner. Elizabeth R. Edberg and John W. Stevens , for respondent.
Filed: Nov. 05, 2009
Latest Update: Dec. 05, 2020
Summary: T.C. Memo. 2009-251 UNITED STATES TAX COURT COUNTRY PINE FINANCE, LLC, RICHARD A. PHILLIPS, TAX MATTERS PARTNER, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent Docket No. 1399-07. Filed November 5, 2009. Christopher Kliefoth and Karla L. Palmer, for petitioner. Elizabeth R. Edberg, John W. Stevens, and Robert D. Heitmeyer, for respondent. MEMORANDUM OPINION GOEKE, Judge: During 2001 the members of Country Pine Finance, L.L.C. (Country Pine Finance), sold an unrelated insurance busine
Summary: T.C. Memo. 2009-251 UNITED STATES TAX COURT COUNTRY PINE FINANCE, LLC, RICHARD A. PHILLIPS, TAX MATTERS PARTNER, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent Docket No. 1399-07. Filed November 5, 2009. Christopher Kliefoth and Karla L. Palmer, for petitioner. Elizabeth R. Edberg, John W. Stevens, and Robert D. Heitmeyer, for respondent. MEMORANDUM OPINION GOEKE, Judge: During 2001 the members of Country Pine Finance, L.L.C. (Country Pine Finance), sold an unrelated insurance busines..
More
T.C. Memo. 2009-251
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
COUNTRY PINE FINANCE, LLC, RICHARD A. PHILLIPS, TAX MATTERS
PARTNER, Petitioner v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket No. 1399-07. Filed November 5, 2009.
Christopher Kliefoth and Karla L. Palmer, for petitioner.
Elizabeth R. Edberg, John W. Stevens, and Robert D.
Heitmeyer, for respondent.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
GOEKE, Judge: During 2001 the members of Country Pine
Finance, L.L.C. (Country Pine Finance), sold an unrelated
insurance business, generating gain and leaving them facing a
contingent tax liability. The members entered into a Custom
Adjustable Rate Debt Structure (CARDS) transaction in order to
- 2 -
reduce their tax liabilities. The CARDS transaction generated a
loss on Country Pine Finance’s 2001 Form 1065, U.S. Return of
Partnership Income. The issue for decision is whether Country
Pine Finance is entitled to this loss. For the reasons stated
herein, we find that Country Pine Finance is not entitled to the
claimed loss.
The stipulations of fact and the attached exhibits are
incorporated herein by this reference. Charles C. Burnham, Terry
L. Stewart, Wayne R. Sharp, Jan P. Blick, Thomas E. Kolassa,
Edward M. Burnham, David L. Burnham, James M. Burnham, James L.
Harvin III, Thomas A. Reitan, John S. Avery, Richard A. Phillips
(petitioner), John R. Bromley, and Stephen C. Adams were the
members of Country Pine Finance during its existence
(collectively, the members).
Background
1. The Burnhams
Charles C. Burnham, Edward M. Burnham, David L. Burnham, and
James M. Burnham are brothers. The four were involved in two
business ventures: (1) Blue Marlin, a real estate business; and
(2) Burnham Insurance Group (BIG), an insurance broker.
A. Burnham Insurance Group
Charles Burnham and his brothers formed BIG in 1978. BIG
existed until its sale in 2001. Between 1978 and 2001 BIG merged
with or acquired 12 other entities, usually smaller insurance
- 3 -
brokerages. Typically the owner of the merged or acquired entity
would become a BIG stockholder. Most of the members other than
the Burnhams became BIG shareholders through these mergers and
acquisitions.
B. Blue Marlin
The Burnham brothers and two unrelated individuals, Al Ivany
(Mr. Ivany), and George Markham (Mr. Markham), formed Blue Marlin
in the 1980s to develop a corporate office park on Country Pine
Lane in Calhoun, Michigan. The corporate park was made up of
three buildings: (1) 100 Country Pine Lane; (2) 300 Country Pine
Lane; and (3) 500 Country Pine Lane. Blue Marlin built the 100
and 500 Country Pine Lane buildings.
Later, Blue Marlin divested itself of its holdings. The 500
Country Pine Lane building was sold to three individuals, Thomas
Kolassa (Mr. Kolassa), Don Karsten (Mr. Karsten), and Mills Mayo
(Mr. Mayo). The 100 Country Pine Lane building was sold to Mr.
Ivany. The 300 Country Pine Lane building was sold to BIG.
2. Sale to HUB
Sometime before 2001 the BIG stockholders decided to sell
the company. At that time the members and four unrelated
individuals owned 84 percent of the shares outstanding, with the
remaining 16 percent owned by an employee stock ownership plan.
The BIG stockholders decided to sell the company to HUB
International (HUB). The stockholders of BIG and HUB entered
- 4 -
into an agreement and plan of merger whereby BIG was merged into
a wholly owned subsidiary of HUB. The stockholders of BIG
received shares of HUB stock and cash in exchange for their BIG
shares.
BIG was valued by an appraiser before the stockholders
entered into the merger agreement. However, one of BIG’s
business lines could not be valued accurately at that time. The
parties to the merger agreement agreed that they would value that
business line 2 years later, in 2003, and that if the results of
that future valuation showed this business line to be worth more
than originally thought, HUB might make additional payments to
the BIG stockholders in 2003.
A. Requirements of Sale
During negotiations HUB informed the BIG stockholders that
it was not interested in owning any real estate and would not
purchase the 300 Country Pine Lane building. The stockholders
decided to sell the 300 Country Pine Lane building to Country
Pine Enterprises, L.L.C. (Country Pine Enterprises).
B. Country Pine Enterprises
Country Pine Enterprises was formed to hold the 300 Country
Pine Lane building, which was conveyed to Country Pine
Enterprises on June 29, 2001. Country Pine Enterprises then
leased the 300 Country Pine Lane building to HUB. As a result,
the BIG offices remained in the 300 Country Pine Lane building
- 5 -
after the merger. Country Pine Enterprises later acquired the
500 Country Pine Lane building and some adjacent land.
C. Results of Sale
On June 18, 2001, HUB and BIG executed a letter of intent
whereby the stockholders of BIG agreed to sell their shares to
HUB. The merger was put into effect on July 20, 2001, through a
subsidiary of HUB. The stockholders of BIG received HUB stock
and cash in exchange for their shares in BIG. The BIG
shareholders all recognized gain on the exchange of their stock
and reported it on their individual Forms 1040, U.S. Individual
Income Tax Return, for tax year 2001. Facing large contingent
tax liabilities as a result of this gain, the members sought ways
to offset their gains. One possible solution was a CARDS
transaction.
3. Introduction to CARDS
The members participated in a CARDS transaction in 2001.
The transaction was developed by Chenery Associates, Inc.
(Chenery). The members decided to participate after viewing two
presentations by Chenery.
A. Chenery Associates, Inc.
Chenery was incorporated in 1993. Roy Hahn (Mr. Hahn) was a
principal at Chenery. Chenery developed and marketed tax
shelters and worked with different investment banks in New York
to implement its transactions. Chenery developed and implemented
- 6 -
numerous CARDS transactions, including the CARDS transaction at
issue, and received fees for each. A portion of the fees was
used to pay the third parties involved in the specific CARDS
transaction and their counsel.
B. Bob Baker
Bob Baker (Mr. Baker) was an insurance executive who later
founded his own wealth management company, Asset Strategies. Mr.
Baker met Mr. Hahn in the mid-1990s, and they remained in contact
during their careers. Mr. Hahn introduced Mr. Baker to the CARDS
transaction.
Mr. Baker also met Mr. Kolassa during the mid-1990s. Mr.
Baker became acquainted with BIG and the other BIG stockholders
through Mr. Kolassa after Mr. Kolassa joined BIG. Later, Mr.
Baker and David Burnham discussed tax planning before the BIG-HUB
merger was consummated. Mr. Baker referred the members to Mr.
Hahn.
C. Miller Canfield
Miller, Canfield, Paddock & Stone, P.L.C. (Miller Canfield),
was a law firm located in Michigan. John Campbell was an
attorney at Miller Canfield who provided legal advice to the
members and Country Pine Finance on implementing the CARDS
transaction. Mr. Campbell and Miller Canfield did not provide
any advice to the members or Country Pine Finance other than in
connection with the CARDS transaction.
- 7 -
D. Decision To Enter Into a CARDS Transaction
On August 30, 2001, petitioner told Mr. Hahn that the
members wanted to enter into a CARDS transaction. The three
parties involved were: (1) Zurich Bank; (2) Fairlop Financial
Trading, L.L.C. (Fairlop Trading); and (3) Country Pine Finance.
4. The CARDS Transaction in General
A CARDS transaction has three phases: (1) The loan
origination phase; (2) the loan assumption phase; and (3) the
operational phase. In general, three parties are required to
carry out a CARDS transaction: (1) A bank; (2) a borrower; and
(3) an assuming party.
A. Loan Origination
During the loan origination phase, the bank agrees to lend
funds to the borrower. The borrower is a Delaware limited
liability company with two members, both of whom are United
Kingdom citizens to ensure that there are no U.S. income tax
effects at the borrower level. The bank requires the borrower to
be capitalized in an amount equal to 3 percent of the funds to be
borrowed.
The loan is typically for 30 years, with principal due after
30 years but interest due annually. The credit agreement
memorializing the loan imposes restrictions on what the loan
proceeds can be used for. Collateralization requirements imposed
by the bank require the borrower to use the loan proceeds to
- 8 -
acquire highly stable items such as Government bonds or highly
rated commercial paper. After initially collateralizing the loan
with high-value, stable assets, such as Treasury bonds or
promissory notes from the bank, the borrower can substitute
collateral and gain access to the loan proceeds. In effect, the
loan proceeds are initially used to purchase high-value items to
serve as collateral for the loan until an equally high-value item
can be swapped for the purchased items. This swapping of
collateral purportedly frees some of the loan proceeds to be used
for investment purposes as the borrowers see fit. However, the
decision to swap collateral is not left to the discretion of the
borrower. The bank ultimately decides whether and on what terms
a certain asset or security can be used as collateral.
B. Loan Assumption
The second phase is the loan assumption phase--when the
assuming party would assume a portion of the loan on behalf of
the borrower. The assuming party would receive only a portion of
the loan proceeds but would agree to become jointly and severally
liable for the entire amount of the original loan to the
borrower.1 The assuming party would assume a portion of the loan
1
Suppose the amount of the original loan from the bank to
the borrower was $10 million. The assuming party would assume a
portion, $1 million, of the loan. The $1 million would be
transferred from the borrower to the assuming party, and in
exchange the assuming party would become jointly and severally
liable for the entire $10 million loan.
- 9 -
equal to the present value of the principal amount due in 30
years.
C. Operational Phase
The operational phase consists of periodic “reset dates”.
Each reset date allows the borrower to exchange collateral, with
corresponding adjustments of the interest rate, and of the term
until the next reset date. The decision to swap collateral or
adjust the interest rate at a reset date is left to the
discretion of the bank. If new collateral is proposed, it often
results in a change of loan terms to reflect any adjustments to
the amount of risk the parties face.
The purported purpose behind a CARDS transaction was to
provide investment financing. A CARDS participant would enter
into the CARDS transaction and use the assumed portion of the
loan proceeds to make an investment. The investment property
would then be swapped as collateral. In theory, the investment
would be successful if the rate of return on the investment
property exceeded the costs of entering into the CARDS
transaction.
5. Country Pine Finance and Third Parties
A. Zurich Bank
Zurich Bank acted as the lender in the CARDS transaction at
issue. Chenery had previously engaged Deutsche Bank in its
transactions, but Mr. Hahn’s contact at Deutsche Bank had moved
- 10 -
to Zurich Bank. Shortly thereafter Zurich Bank was engaged. ZCM
Matched Funding Corp. acted as Zurich Bank’s agent for purposes
of the CARDS transaction.2
B. Fairlop Trading
Fairlop Trading, the borrower, was organized as a Delaware
limited liability company on July 13, 2001, with Elizabeth A. D.
Sylvester and Michael Sherry, citizens and residents of the
United Kingdom, the members.
The Fairlop Trading members contributed $444,182 to Fairlop
Trading. Cash of $6,296 was contributed with the remaining
$437,885 due pursuant to notes payable. Fairlop Trading was set
up solely to take part in this CARDS transaction.
C. Country Pine Finance
Articles of incorporation for Country Pine Finance were
filed on November 14, 2001. A certificate of dissolution for
Country Pine Finance was filed 1 year later, on November 14,
2002. Petitioner served as Country Pine Finance’s tax matters
partner at all relevant times.
The members made capital contributions to Country Pine
Finance on November 21, 2001, and February 27, 2002, as follows:
Member 11/21/01 2/27/02
Charles C. Burnham $145,497 $42,010
Terry L. Stewart 132,425 38,235
2
We refer to Zurich Bank and ZCM Matched Funding Corp. as
Zurich Bank for simplicity.
- 11 -
Wayne R. Sharp 76,335 22,040
Jan P. Blick 48,720 14,067
Thomas E. Kolassa 61,761 17,832
Edward M. Burnham 41,087 11,863
David L. Burnham 36,063 10,413
James M. Burnham 32,862 9,488
James L. Harvin, III 31,483 9,090
Thomas A. Reitan 22,144 6,394
John S. Avery 21,651 6,251
Richard A. Phillips 24,550 7,088
John R. Bromley 17,807 5,141
Stephen C. Adams 17,613 5,085
Total (rounded) 710,000 205,000
Country Pine Finance was formed specifically to carry out the
CARDS transaction. The amounts contributed were based on the
amount of the fees to be paid to Chenery. A portion of the fees
paid to Chenery was used to pay the third parties for their
participation in the transaction.
6. The CARDS Transaction at Issue
A. Origination
On November 9, 2001, Zurich Bank and Fairlop Trading entered
into a credit agreement. Fairlop Trading was required to pledge
collateral in order to borrow funds. Fairlop Trading entered
into a master pledge and security agreement on November 9, 2001,
in order to satisfy the collateral requirement.
Zurich Bank applied a “haircut” to any pledged collateral.
The haircut varied depending on the type of collateral pledged.
For example, promissory notes from Zurich Bank or cash would not
be subject to a haircut, while long-term commercial paper might
receive a 10-percent haircut. The effect of the haircut would be
- 12 -
to require the borrower to contribute or acquire additional
assets to serve as collateral to make up for the haircut applied.
On December 4, 2001, Fairlop Trading informed Zurich Bank
that it intended to borrow 16,613,000. The notice of intent to
borrow indicated that the 16,613,000 would be used to purchase
assets from Zurich Bank to collateralize the loan.
On December 4, 2001, 16,613,000 was deposited into Fairlop
Trading’s Zurich Bank account. The 16,613,000 was used to
purchase two promissory notes from Zurich Bank, one for
13,662,660, the other for 2,990,340. Both promissory notes
matured on December 4, 2002, and were used to collateralize the
16,613,000 loan from Zurich Bank to Fairlop Trading.
Fairlop Trading borrowed 16,613,000 from Zurich Bank, then
exchanged the 16,613,000 for Zurich Bank promissory notes worth
16,613,000. This left Fairlop Trading owing Zurich Bank
16,613,000, and Zurich Bank owing Fairlop Trading 16,613,000.
The 13,662,660 and 2,990,340 promissory notes were pledged as
collateral for the loan. If Fairlop Trading defaulted on the
loan, Zurich Bank could use the promissory notes to satisfy the
debt.
Zurich Bank did not apply a haircut to promissory notes
issued by Zurich Bank pledged as collateral, so no haircut was
applied and Fairlop Trading did not have to contribute additional
collateral. The terms of the loan from Zurich Bank to Fairlop
- 13 -
Trading matched the terms of the promissory notes except that
Fairlop Trading was required to pay 50 additional basis points of
interest. This 50-basis-point spread served as a portion of the
fees paid to Zurich Bank for entering into the CARDS transaction.
The 13,662,660 note remained with Fairlop Trading. The
2,990,340 note was later exchanged for a new note from Zurich
Bank and 1,015,493.60. The note had a principal amount of
1,981,671.3 Fairlop Trading immediately pledged the 1,981,671
note and the euro as collateral.
B. Assumption by the Members
On December 26, 2001, the members entered into a purchase
agreement to purchase the 1,981,671 promissory note and
1,015,493.60 from Fairlop Trading. In exchange for the note and
euro, the members agreed to become jointly and severally liable
for the entire 16,613,000 loan from Zurich Bank to Fairlop
Trading and waived any right of contribution against Fairlop
Trading. The purported purpose of the waiver was to make the
members fully liable for the entire 16,613,000 even if Fairlop
Trading still maintained control over any portion of the
proceeds. The members immediately pledged the promissory note
and euro as collateral for the loan.
3
The 6,824 difference between the value of the original
note, 2,990,340, and the value of the new note and euro,
2,997,164, was due to interest received on the 2,990,340
promissory note.
- 14 -
The members contributed the 1,981,671 note and
1,015,493.60 to Country Pine Finance. In exchange, Country Pine
Finance guaranteed the loan. Country Pine Finance claimed bases
in the 1,981,671 promissory note and the 1,015,493.60 of
$9,658,146 and $4,938,036, respectively. Country Pine Finance’s
claimed bases were based on the members’ purportedly becoming
jointly and severally liable for the entire 16,613,000.
Shortly thereafter Country Pine Finance pledged the
1,981,671 note and the 1,015,493.60 as collateral for the loan.
Again all amounts lent by Zurich Bank were guaranteed by
collateral purchased from Zurich Bank with those loan proceeds.
None of the “liable” parties ever contributed any additional
collateral. If Country Pine Finance had wanted to substitute
collateral for the note and euro, Zurich Bank would have had to
consent.
On December 28, 2001, Country Pine Finance and Zurich Bank
entered into a cross-currency swap. Section 1.988-2(e)(2)(ii),
Income Tax Regs., defines a currency swap contract as a contract
involving different currencies between two or more parties to
exchange periodic interim payments on or before maturity of the
contract and exchange the swap principal amount upon maturity of
the contract. The exchange of periodic interim payments is the
exchange of a payment in one currency for a payment in another
currency, with both payments being determined by reference to an
- 15 -
interest index applied to the swap principal amount. Sec. 1.988-
2(e)(2)(ii)(C), Income Tax Regs.
The cross-currency swap was a combination of an interest-
rate swap and a foreign exchange forward contract. Initially
Country Pine Finance transferred the 2,997,640 to Zurich Bank,
and Zurich Bank transferred $2,633,308 to Country Pine Finance.
These were the notional amounts of the swap.
On December 28, 2001, the $2,633,308 Country Pine Finance
received from Zurich Bank was used to purchase a promissory note
with a principal amount of $2,633,308 from the bank. The
promissory note was then pledged as collateral.
The interest portion of the currency swap required Zurich
Bank to pay to Country Pine Finance annual interest on the
2,997,162 at the euro Interbank Offered Rate (EURIBOR),4 and
Country Pine Finance to make monthly interest payments at the
U.S. dollar London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR)5 to Zurich Bank
on the $2,633,308.
The interest-rate swap allowed petitioner to receive
interest payments equal to the amount of interest it would
eventually owe on the 1,981,671 note and the 1,015,493.60.
4
Euro Interbank Offered Rate refers to the short-term rate
of interest paid by one euro zone bank to another.
5
London Interbank Offered Rate refers to the rate of
interest paid when one bank borrows from another in the London
interbank lending market.
- 16 -
The foreign exchange forward contract allowed Country Pine
Finance to convert the $2,633,308 value of the promissory note
purchased from Zurich Bank back into euro on December 4, 2002, at
the same rate used to convert the euro into dollars on December
28, 2001. This in effect would allow Country Pine Finance to end
up in the same economic position upon the closing of the cross-
currency swap as it was on the day it entered into the swap. The
cross-currency swap was closed out less than 1 year later on
December 4, 2002.
C. Operational Phase
The members asserted that the purpose for entering into the
CARDS transaction was to finance a real estate investment.
According to the members, they would purchase real estate and use
the real estate as collateral. If the members’ investment was
profitable, earnings from the real estate would exceed the costs
of the CARDS transaction.
Zurich Bank told the members at the initiation of the CARDS
transaction at issue that they would not be able to use real
estate as collateral. On October 30, 2001, Mr. Hahn sent
petitioner an email informing him that Zurich Bank would not
allow the members to swap commercial real estate as collateral
for the loan at that time because Zurich Bank could not properly
evaluate any possible real estate before the initiation of the
CARDS transaction. The members decided to enter into the CARDS
- 17 -
transaction even though it would be some time before real estate
could possibly be used as collateral. The members decided to
enter into the CARDS transaction in 2001 anyway because the tax
loss was needed in 2001.
Real estate was never substituted as collateral, and neither
the members nor Country Pine Finance ever attempted to substitute
any specific piece of real estate as collateral. During 2002
petitioner made attempts to determine whether real estate in a
general sense could be substituted, but the members never
attempted to purchase or use a specific piece of real estate as
collateral. Nor did the members have any specific piece of real
estate evaluated by Zurich Bank for collateralization purposes.
Likewise the members never attempted to substitute any type of
collateral other than real estate for the promissory notes.
On August 15, 2002, Zurich Bank informed Fairlop Trading and
the members that Zurich Bank was no longer willing to maintain
the loan. All of the borrowed funds were paid back with the
pledged collateral, and no additional capital contributions were
ever made. Country Pine Finance was dissolved on November 14,
2002, by unanimous vote of the members.
7. Country Pine Finance’s and Members’ Returns
Country Pine Finance filed a Form 1065 for tax year 2001 on
September 16, 2002, claiming a $7,917,051 net short-term capital
loss on a “Euro Promissory Note” and a $4,045,820 loss on the
- 18 -
sale of business property. The $4,045,820 loss was reported on a
Form 4797, Sales of Business Property, as an ordinary loss on a
“Euro Deposit”.
The losses resulted from Country Pine Finance’s swapping the
note and euro for U.S. dollars as part of the cross-currency
swap. Country Pine Finance claimed a basis of $14,596,182 in the
euro. This was the U.S. dollar value of the initial loan from
Zurich Bank to Fairlop Trading, 16,613,000. The members claimed
this high basis in the euro because of the members’ agreeing to
be liable for the amount of the entire loan from Zurich Bank to
Fairlop Trading.
The euro were a nonfunctional currency within the definition
of section 988.6 See sec. 1.988-1(c), Income Tax Regs. When
Country Pine Finance exchanged the 2,997,640 for $2,633,308, it
claimed a loss on the disposition of the euro equal to the
difference between $14,596,182 and $2,633,308. Section 1.988-
1(a)(1), Income Tax Regs., provides that disposition of a
nonfunctional currency is a section 988 transaction. Thus the
members’ transfer of the euro was treated as a section 988
transaction. The loss was split between the promissory note and
the euro. This resulted in a $7,917,051 net short-term capital
loss on the promissory note and a $4,045,820 loss on the euro.
6
Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to
the Internal Revenue Code (Code), and all Rule references are to
the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
- 19 -
Country Pine Finance filed a document titled “Disclosure
Statement For Reportable Transaction Under Reg. 1.6011-4T” (the
disclosure statement). The disclosure statement stated that
Country Pine Finance had entered into a “Custom Adjustable Rate
Debt Program” and that the principal tax benefits were the
$7,917,000 short-term capital loss and the $4,045,000 ordinary
loss. The disclosure statement further indicated that Country
Pine Finance estimated a reduction in Federal income tax
liability of its members for 2001 of $3,120,000 as a result.
Attached to the Form 1065 were Schedules K-1, Partner’s
Share of Income, Credits, Deductions, etc., for all of the
members. Each Schedule K-1 reported a member’s share of the net
short-term capital loss and the ordinary loss.
Each member filed his own Form 1040 reporting both his gains
from the exchange of BIG stock and the claimed flow-through
losses from Country Pine Finance. The losses from Country Pine
Finance were used to offset the members’ various gains on the
disposition of BIG stock. However, some of the members decided
not to claim all of the losses available to them, on the advice
of their personal return preparers who had determined that the
transaction might be challenged by the Internal Revenue Service
(IRS). The percentage of the loss claimed by each member who did
not claim the entire loss available to him was based on his
- 20 -
return preparer’s estimation of a hypothetical future settlement
with the IRS should the IRS challenge the transaction.
On October 17, 2006, respondent issued a notice of final
partnership administrative adjustment (FPAA) to Country Pine
Finance for taxable year 2001. The FPAA disallowed the claimed
net short-term capital loss and the ordinary loss. The FPAA did
not assert any penalties against Country Pine Finance or its
members.
The FPAA included a document titled “Explanation of
Adjustments” which provided numerous alternative arguments in
support of the adjustments made in the FPAA, including that:
(1) The CARDS transaction lacked economic substance, was
entered into primarily for tax-avoidance purposes, and was
prearranged or predetermined;
(2) application of the substance-over-form or step-
transaction doctrine would disallow the loss; or
(3) neither Country Pine Finance nor any member was
entitled to a deduction under section 165, 465, or 988.
On January 17, 2007, petitioner filed his petition
contesting the determinations in the FPAA. A trial was held on
January 26-30 and February 5-6, 2009, at a special session of the
Court in Chicago, Illinois. Both petitioner and respondent
presented fact witnesses and expert witnesses.
- 21 -
Respondent submitted two expert reports prepared by Dr. A.
Lawrence Kolbe (Dr. Kolbe) and Dennis Logue (Mr. Logue). Dr.
Kolbe’s report focused on a financial analysis of the CARDS
transaction and the lack of rationality of entering into the
CARDS transaction versus standard mortgage-based real estate
financing. Mr. Logue’s report evaluated the relationships among
Zurich Bank, Fairlop Trading, and Country Pine Finance in the
context of the banking industry and the bona fides of the
purported loans. Mr. Logue concluded that the loan transactions
to which Zurich Bank, Fairlop Trading, and Country Pine Finance
were parties were not carried out in accordance with industry
norms.
Petitioner submitted expert reports by Gordon L. Klein (Mr.
Klein) and Frank A. De Lisi (Mr. De Lisi). Mr. Klein focused on
Country Pine Finance’s business purpose for entering into a CARDS
transaction and whether Country Pine Finance could have generated
a nontax economic profit from the CARDS transaction. Mr. De Lisi
studied the documents memorializing the various stages of the
CARDS transaction and concluded that it would have been
reasonable for Zurich Bank to allow Country Pine Finance to
substitute commercial real estate as collateral for the loan.
- 22 -
Discussion
I. TEFRA in General
Partnerships do not pay Federal income taxes, but they are
required to file annual information returns reporting the
partners’ distributive shares of tax items. Secs. 701, 6031.
The individual partners then report their distributive shares of
the tax items on their Federal income tax returns. Secs. 701-
704. Upon formation a limited liability company with two or more
members is treated as a partnership unless it elects to be
treated as a corporation. Sec. 301.7701-3(b)(1)(i), Proced. &
Admin. Regs. Country Pine Finance did not elect to be treated as
a corporation and thus is treated as a partnership for Federal
income tax purposes.
To remove the substantial administrative burden occasioned
by duplicative audits and litigation and to provide consistent
treatment of partnership tax items among partners in the same
partnership, Congress enacted the unified audit and litigation
procedures of the Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of
1982 (TEFRA), Pub. L. 97-248, sec. 402, 96 Stat. 648. See
Randell v. United States,
64 F.3d 101, 103 (2d Cir. 1995); H.
Conf. Rept. 97-760, at 599-600 (1982), 1982-2 C.B. 600, 662-663.
Under TEFRA, all partnership items are determined in a
single partnership-level proceeding. Sec. 6226; see also Randell
v. United States, supra at 103. The determination of partnership
- 23 -
items in a partnership-level proceeding is binding on the
partners and may not be challenged in a subsequent partner-level
proceeding. See secs. 6230(c)(4), 7422(h). This precludes the
Government from relitigating the same issues with each of the
partners.
In partnership-level proceedings such as the case before us,
the Court’s jurisdiction is limited by section 6226(f) to a
redetermination of partnership items and penalties on those
partnership items. Section 6231(a)(3) defines the term
“partnership item” as any item required to be taken into account
for the partnership’s taxable year under any provision of
subtitle A of the Code to the extent the regulations provide that
such item is more appropriately determined at the partnership
level than at the partner level. The loss claimed on Country
Pine Finance’s Form 1065 is a partnership item properly
determined at a partnership-level proceeding. Sec.
301.6231(a)(3)-1(a)(1)(i), Proced. & Admin. Regs.
II. Burden of Proof
Tax deductions are a matter of legislative grace, and a
taxpayer has the burden of proving that he is entitled to the
deductions claimed. Rule 142(a)(1); INDOPCO, Inc. v.
Commissioner,
503 U.S. 79, 84 (1992); New Colonial Ice Co. v.
Helvering,
292 U.S. 435, 440 (1934). The burden of proof on
factual issues that affect a taxpayer’s liability for tax may be
- 24 -
shifted to the Commissioner where the “taxpayer introduces
credible evidence with respect to * * * such issue.” Sec.
7491(a)(1). Petitioner does not claim that the burden shifts to
respondent under section 7491(a). In any event, petitioner has
failed to establish that he has satisfied the requirements of
section 7491(a)(2). On the record before us, we find that the
burden of proof does not shift to respondent under section
7491(a).
III. Economic Substance Doctrine
“The legal right of a taxpayer to decrease the amount of
what otherwise would be his taxes, or altogether avoid them, by
means which the law permits, cannot be doubted.” Gregory v.
Helvering,
293 U.S. 465, 469 (1935). However, even if a
transaction is in formal compliance with Code provisions, a
deduction will be disallowed if the transaction is an economic
sham. Am. Elec. Power Co. v. United States,
326 F.3d 737, 741
(6th Cir. 2003).
The parties have not formally stipulated where an appeal of
this case will lie. At trial counsel for both petitioner and
respondent indicated that appeal would likely lie with the Court
of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, and both petitioner and
respondent focus on caselaw of that circuit in their posttrial
briefs. However, absent stipulation to the contrary, appeal may
lie in the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit
- 25 -
because Country Pine Finance was dissolved. See sec. 7482(b)(1)
(flush language). Whether appeal lies in the Court of Appeals
for the Sixth Circuit or the District of Columbia Circuit does
not affect our decision.
The Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit has stated that
“‘The proper standard in determining if a transaction is a sham
is whether the transaction has any practicable economic effects
other than the creation of income tax losses.’” Dow Chem. Co. v.
United States,
435 F.3d 594, 599 (6th Cir. 2006) (quoting Rose v.
Commissioner,
868 F.2d 851, 853 (6th Cir. 1989), affg.
88 T.C.
386 (1987)). “[W]hen ‘it is patent that there [is] nothing of
substance to be realized by [the taxpayer] from [a] transaction
beyond a tax deduction,’ the deduction is not allowed despite the
transaction’s formal compliance with Code provisions.” Am. Elec.
Power Co. v. United States, supra at 741 (quoting Knetsch v.
United States,
364 U.S. 361, 366 (1960)). “If the transaction
has economic substance, ‘the question becomes whether the
taxpayer was motivated by profit to participate in the
transaction.’” Dow Chem. Co. v. United States, supra at 599
(quoting Illes v. Commissioner,
982 F.2d 163, 165 (6th Cir.
1992), affg. T.C. Memo. 1991-449). “‘If, however, the court
determines that the transaction is a sham, the entire transaction
is disallowed for federal tax purposes,’”
id., and no subjective
inquiry into the taxpayer’s motivation is made
, id. at 599. A
- 26 -
court “will not inquire into whether a transaction’s primary
objective was for the production of income or to make a profit,
until it determines that the transaction is bona fide and not a
sham.” Rose v. Commissioner, supra at 853.
In Horn v. Commissioner,
968 F.2d 1229, 1239 (D.C. Cir.
1992), revg. Fox v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1988-570, the Court
of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit stated that a transaction lacked
economic substance if: (1) The taxpayer had no business purpose
other than obtaining tax benefits in entering the transaction;
and (2) the transaction lacks any reasonable possibility of
earning a profit. See also Andantech L.L.C. v. Commissioner,
T.C. Memo. 2002-97, affd. in part and remanded in part
331 F.3d
972 (D.C. Cir. 2003). The test in Horn is disjunctive;
satisfaction of either prong satisfies the conditions for a
determination that the subject transaction has economic
substance. Countryside Ltd. Pship. v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo.
2008-3 n.20.
IV. Petitioner’s Arguments
Petitioner argues that the CARDS transaction had economic
substance and was entered into to permit Country Pine Finance to
finance real estate investments on the members’ behalf.
Petitioner contends that the CARDS transaction satisfies both the
objective and subjective requirements of the economic substance
test and that the claimed loss should be allowed.
- 27 -
Petitioner argues that the CARDS transaction had legal
significance to Country Pine Finance and the members because the
loans were bona fide and the members were jointly and severally
liable for the entire 16,613,000. Petitioner also argues that
Fairlop Trading, the members, and Country Pine Finance were all
at risk for the loan proceeds.
Petitioner focuses on the profit potential of the CARDS
transaction as if real estate had been substituted for collateral
and points to his expert reports in support of this contention.
Petitioner argues that if real estate had been allowed as
collateral, the members would have used the proceeds to invest in
real estate and attempt to earn a profit.
V. Respondent’s Arguments
Respondent argues that the claimed loss should be disallowed
because the CARDS transaction lacked economic substance and that
the members did not have a nontax reason for entering into the
transaction.
Respondent first argues that the CARDS transaction lacked
economic substance and had no practical effect other than the
creation of income tax losses because: (1) The initial loan, (2)
the members’ assumption of the loan and contribution to the
capital of Country Pine Finance, and (3) the members’ entering
into the cross-currency swap served no purpose other than the
creation of tax losses. Respondent argues that none of the
- 28 -
parties were ever at risk because the various credit agreements
required Fairlop Trading and Country Pine Finance to pledge high-
value collateral and it was in Zurich Bank’s discretion to allow
any collateral to be swapped. Respondent argues that Zurich Bank
would not allow collateral to be swapped because it would be
against Zurich Bank’s financial interest to do so, as it would
expose the bank to unnecessary risk.
Respondent disagrees that we should evaluate the CARDS
transaction as if Country Pine Finance had been able to
substitute real estate as collateral. Respondent contends that
this would be inappropriate because any potential profit from an
investment in real estate that the members could earn would be
profit from a separate transaction, not the transaction that gave
rise to the tax loss at issue. Respondent further contends that
whatever profit Country Pine Finance may or may not have been
able to earn from substituting collateral, the artificial tax
losses at issue would remain. Respondent contends that even if
we were to assume that real estate could be substituted, the
substitution would result in an entirely new loan between Zurich
Bank and Country Pine Finance because it would require the
parties to negotiate new loan terms. Respondent concludes that
because substitution of real estate would lead to an entirely new
loan, the initial CARDS transaction that was consummated and
- 29 -
carried out would have been irrelevant to the real estate
financing but for the tax losses generated.
Respondent next argues that even if we were to accept that
the initial loan and assumption were necessary and that real
estate could be substituted as collateral, the new loan would
still be a sham designed solely to achieve tax benefits because
Country Pine Finance and its members had no chance of making a
profit on any future real estate investment. Respondent points
to his expert witness reports and argues that Country Pine
Finance would still not earn a profit because Zurich Bank would
require onerous loan terms requiring payments that would far
exceed any potential profit. Respondent contends that in order
for Country Pine Finance to make a profit, Zurich Bank would have
to both allow real estate as collateral and agree to loan terms
that would be contrary to its own financial interests.
In the alternative respondent argues that even if we find
that the CARDS transaction had economic substance, the loss
should be disallowed because the members participated in the
CARDS transaction only in order to create an artificial tax loss.
Respondent contends that Country Pine Finance fails the
subjective prong because testimony of the members shows that they
had no knowledge or understanding of the CARDS transaction, did
not read, review, or remember the CARDS transaction documents,
and decided to enter into the transaction for the tax loss.
- 30 -
Respondent points to the members’ failure to research or obtain
any assurance of the availability of real estate as collateral
both before and after they entered into the CARDS transaction as
evidence that the members were just after the tax loss and not
truly interested in financing a real estate investment.
VI. Analysis
A. Objective Analysis
We begin by analyzing the objective profit potential of the
transaction giving rise to the claimed tax loss. The transaction
giving rise to the loss was the swap of 2,997,164 for $2,633,308
as part of the cross-currency swap. Country Pine Finance claimed
a basis totaling $14,596,182 in the euro and the promissory note.
As a result of this inflated basis, Country Pine Finance claimed
losses totaling $11,962,871 when it received the $2,633,308 from
Zurich Bank as part of the cross-currency swap.
There were no third parties in this transaction. Country
Pine Finance, Fairlop Trading, and Zurich Bank were involved
specifically to enter into this CARDS transaction. Fairlop
Trading’s operating agreement indicates that its only purpose was
the CARDS transaction, it could not enter into any other business
transactions, and it was never able to access the loan proceeds.
The CARDS transaction consisted of prearranged steps entered into
to generate a tax loss; the loan proceeds were never at risk and
- 31 -
the transaction giving rise to the tax loss was cashflow
negative.
None of the loan proceeds ever left Zurich Bank’s control,
as both Fairlop Trading and Country Pine Finance used Zurich Bank
accounts. Although Country Pine Finance and the members
purportedly became liable for the loan proceeds, the various loan
agreements required Fairlop Trading, the members, and Country
Pine Finance to immediately pledge trustworthy collateral for
those loan amounts. The proceeds of the initial loan from Zurich
Bank to Fairlop Trading were used to purchase promissory notes
from Zurich Bank that were then used to collateralize the initial
loan. The members immediately pledged the 1,981,671 note and
the 1,015,493 as collateral after assuming the loan. Later,
Country Pine Finance immediately pledged the euro contributed by
the members as collateral for the loan that it now guaranteed.
After the euro were swapped for dollars as part of the cross-
currency swap, the $2,633,108 received was used to purchase a
promissory note from Zurich Bank as collateral for that amount.
There was no chance that Zurich Bank, Fairlop Trading, or the
members would ever lose any money on the CARDS transaction other
than fees. See Am. Elec. Power Co. v. United
States, 326 F.3d at
743 (holding that in corporate-owned life insurance plan,
although individual parts of transaction represented actual
transfers of risk among parties, overall structure of
- 32 -
transaction ensured that no risk existed for taxpayer at overall
plan level).
The members knew in October 2001 that they would not be able
at that time to substitute real estate as collateral. Because
the parties knew that they would not be able to substitute real
estate as collateral and that the only collateral that would be
accepted by Zurich Bank without the bank’s imposing a haircut was
Zurich Bank promissory notes, the members knew that they would
have to purchase Zurich Bank promissory notes and pledge them as
collateral. Because the members knew that they would be using
Zurich Bank promissory notes as collateral, they knew that they
would never truly be at risk for any of the loan proceeds.
After entering into the CARDS transaction, none of the
parties ever made any additional contributions to capital or ever
attempted to use the loan proceeds. Once the loans came due, the
various promissory notes were used to pay back the loans. The
terms and interest rates of the currency swap and the forward
contract allowed Country Pine Finance to back out of the
transactions without paying any amounts other than the fees
required as part of the transaction.
If we look past the predetermined steps, the CARDS
transaction lacks economic substance because it was cashflow
negative. Respondent’s expert Dr. Kolbe testified that the CARDS
transaction had a negative net present value and rate of return
- 33 -
relative to the capital invested. Both calculations indicate
that the CARDS transaction was cashflow negative.
Dr. Kolbe calculated the net present value and rate of
return relative to capital by reference to the amounts Country
Pine Finance received and paid out as part of the CARDS
transaction. After taking into account fees and interest, Dr.
Kolbe calculated that Country Pine Finance received about 2.2
million on December 28, 2001, and paid back 3.1 million on
December 4, 2002. Applying the relevant cost of capital at the
time the members decided to enter into the transaction, 3.806
percent,7 resulted in the transaction’s having a negative net
present value of 771,042. Dr. Kolbe also calculated that
Country Pine Finance paid nearly 36 percent interest on the loan,
significantly higher than the relevant cost of capital, 3.806
percent. Dr. Kolbe concluded that Country Pine Finance had no
possibility of profit and that any use of the loan proceeds would
create a material and unnecessary drag on that investment.
We find this testimony accurate. Country Pine Finance paid
more than $700,000 in order to borrow 2,997,164 for 1 year.
Those funds were then used to purchase investments that would
never earn a profit. Because the restrictions imposed by Zurich
Bank meant that Country Pine Finance would never be able to
7
This figure is the EURIBOR on that date plus 50 basis
points, as required by the loan terms.
- 34 -
substitute collateral that could earn a profit, the transaction
would always be cashflow negative. The CARDS transaction was
always a losing proposition from a nontax perspective because for
Country Pine Finance to earn a profit, Zurich Bank would have to
allow the substitution of collateral that would earn more than
the cost of the initial loans without imposing any more onerous
terms than the ones in place when the transaction was initiated.
This would have been against Zurich Bank’s economic interests
because it would have exposed Zurich Bank to increased risk
without a corresponding economic benefit. See Mahoney v.
Commissioner,
808 F.2d 1219, 1220 (6th Cir. 1987) (in
commodities-trading-based tax shelter, grant of complete
discretion over transaction in one party is curious in face of
alleged risk involved and lack of experience of taxpayers), affg.
85 T.C. 127 (1985); New Phoenix Sunrise Corp. & Subs. v.
Commissioner, 132 T.C. at ___ (slip op. at 33). As it was
initially structured, the CARDS transaction resulted in interest
payments to Zurich Bank without the bank’s facing any economic
risk because the loans were guaranteed with Zurich Bank
promissory notes. Zurich Bank had no reason to allow Country
Pine Finance to substitute collateral because it would have
exposed the bank to increased risk without a corresponding
financial benefit. Although Zurich Bank could have adjusted the
loan terms to account for this increased risk, for example by
- 35 -
increasing the interest rate, the adjustment in loan terms would
have negatively affected Country Pine Finance. Country Pine
Finance would have had to either provide additional capital for
collateral purposes or pay higher interest on the loan. This
would have resulted in higher costs and an increased negative
cashflow.
Country Pine Finance argues that we should look at the CARDS
transaction as if real estate could have been substituted, but we
must look at the transaction that gave rise to the tax loss. See
Am. Elec. Power Co. v. United
States, 326 F.3d at 744. As
respondent points out, the substitution of real estate would have
been a separate transaction from the one giving rise to the tax
benefit. That transaction is separate from any hypothetical
future swap of real estate as collateral, and any profit from the
real estate investment would not be a profit from the CARDS
transaction. See
id. (“Money generated by means of abusive tax
deductions can always be applied to beneficial causes, but the
eventual use of the money thus generated is not part of the
economic-sham analysis.”). Even if we were to find that the
CARDS transaction had a profit potential if real estate were
substituted, the claimed loss generated by the currency swap
would remain.
The substitution of real estate would have created a new
transaction with new terms. Each reset date allowed Country Pine
- 36 -
Finance to swap collateral, but this would require Zurich Bank to
evaluate the new collateral and determine whether any haircut
would apply. Further, the parties would also have to negotiate
new terms, including the applicable interest rate and term until
the next reset date.
Petitioner’s arguments overlook the fact that the members
entered into the transaction having reason to believe that real
estate could not be used as collateral. The possibility of real
estate as collateral was never explored before the decision to
enter into the CARDS transaction, and the record indicates that
petitioner knew in October 2001 that real estate could not be
substituted. The members and Country Pine Finance never received
confirmation from Zurich Bank that real estate could be
substituted. The members likewise did not determine whether real
estate had been allowed as collateral in any of the other
Chenery-implemented CARDS transactions. Further, if Zurich Bank
was applying a haircut to highly stable corporate and U.S.
Treasury bonds, it is not credible that a long-term real estate
investment would be allowed without a substantial haircut that
would require the members to contribute additional collateral or
pay substantially higher fees.
As of October 2001, before the initiation of the CARDS
transaction, petitioner knew that any potential real estate could
not be evaluated, and thus could not used as collateral.
- 37 -
However, the members decided to forge ahead with the CARDS
transaction even though there was no real estate investment to
finance. The members entered into the CARDS transaction in 2001
in order to generate losses that could be used to offset the gain
on the exchange of the BIG stock. Petitioner testified that the
reason the members decided to enter into the transaction in 2001
was the tax benefit even though Zurich Bank could not evaluate
real estate.
Further, Mr. Miller testified that the members had hoped to
revisit the CARDS transaction in 2003 in regard to the second BIG
business line. The members were interested in revisiting the
CARDS transaction to generate additional losses in 2003 if the
subsequent valuation of BIG’s second business line, discussed
supra page 4, had resulted in additional payments from HUB to the
BIG shareholders, resulting in additional gains.
Country Pine Finance and the members engaged in a
transaction in order to create a tax loss. The transaction had
no profit potential and was cashflow negative. Even if we accept
that real estate could be substituted as collateral and that
Country Pine Finance would earn a profit on that real estate, the
artificial loss would remain. This artificial loss would be
unrelated to the hypothetical real estate financing arrangement.
See Coltec Indus., Inc. v. United States,
454 F.3d 1340, 1358
(Fed. Cir. 2006); see also Kornman & Associates, Inc. v. United
- 38 -
States,
527 F.3d 443, 456 (5th Cir. 2008) (“The Trust
acknowledges that it only suffered a $200,000 economic loss in
connection with these transactions, yet it claimed a $102.6
Million tax loss on its return.”); Cemco Investors, LLC v. United
States,
515 F.3d 749, 750-751 (7th Cir. 2008); New Phoenix
Sunrise Corp. & Subs. v. Commissioner, 132 T.C. ___ (slip op. at
33); Maguire Partners-Master Invs., LLC v. United States, 103
AFTR 2d 2009-763, at 2009-772, 2009-1 USTC par. 50,215, at 87,444
(C.D. Cal. 2009) (“First, the claimed basis is fictional, because
* * * [taxpayers] paid only $1.5 million and $675,000, * * * but
gained an increased basis of $101,500,000 and $45,675,000,
respectively.”); Klamath Strategic Inv. Fund, LLC v. United
States,
472 F. Supp. 2d 885, 894 (E.D. Tex. 2007), affd. in part
and vacated in part
568 F.3d 537 (5th Cir. 2009). This is not
the case of a business decision with only two possible outcomes,
gain or loss, having resulted in a loss. Rather, a real estate
investment would not make legitimate the loss incurred on the
CARDS transaction. Although petitioner asks us to evaluate the
transaction as if real estate could have been substituted as
collateral we must look at the transaction giving rise to the tax
loss at issue; an illegitimate loss cannot be grafted onto a
hypothetical legitimate transaction.
- 39 -
B. Subjective Analysis
The claimed loss is also disallowed because the members did
not have a nontax business purpose for entering into the CARDS
transaction. Although the members testified that the decision
was made to secure financing for future real estate investments,
that testimony is not credible. There is substantial evidence
that the decision to enter into the CARDS transaction was solely
tax motivated.
The members knew or had reason to know in October 2001 that
real estate could not be substituted at that time but decided to
enter into the CARDS transaction anyway. The decision to go
ahead even without real estate as viable collateral was driven by
the desire for a tax loss. Petitioner testified that the
decision to enter into the transaction in 2001 was to take
advantage of the tax benefits. Notes taken by the members during
the Chenery presentations focused on the tax benefits, and the
members never researched or evaluated an investment in real
estate.
The members repeatedly testified that they did not read any
of the relevant documents but only signed the signature pages.
Jan Blick, Stephen Adams, Thomas Reitan, Edward, James, and David
Burnham, John Bromley, Thomas Kolassa, John Avery, and James
Harvin all testified that they did not remember and in any event
would not have bothered to read any of the transaction documents.
- 40 -
Further, most of the members testified that they had no knowledge
of Zurich Bank, Fairlop Trading, or CARDS in general. The
members’ lack of due diligence in researching the CARDS
transaction indicates that they knew they were doing nothing more
than purchasing a tax loss and not entering into a legitimate
business or financing transaction with any nontax objectives.
See Pasternak v. Commissioner,
990 F.2d 893, 901 (6th Cir. 1993),
affg. Donahue v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1991-181.
The members’ claim to have a nontax motive for Country Pine
Finance’s serving as a financing vehicle and their becoming
jointly and severally liable for 16,613,000 in exchange for only
2,997,640 is undercut by the fact that none of the members
performed any research into the CARDS transaction, performed any
economic analysis of a possible real estate investment, or read
any of the documents memorializing the transaction. The members
all had business backgrounds and had owned or coowned their own
businesses before joining BIG. In spite of these backgrounds,
the members entered into the transaction without bothering to
read any of the documents they signed, even though they were
purportedly becoming liable for 16,613,000. It is not credible
that the members would voluntarily make themselves liable for
that amount without reading any of the memorializing documents.
The fact that the members never bothered to verify that real
estate could be substituted as collateral for the loan proceeds
- 41 -
undercuts the claimed reason for the CARDS transaction in the
first place.
Most of the members were involved in the purchase of the 300
Country Pine Lane building by Country Pine Enterprises. Had the
members really been interested in financing possible real estate
purposes, their collective business experiences should have shown
how contrived the CARDS transaction was. Wayne Sharp testified
that he entered into the CARDS transaction even though he was not
interested in financing real estate. The other members testified
in only the most general terms that the purpose behind Country
Pine Finance was to finance real estate. However, none of the
members ever truly investigated how such financing would work.
The record shows that the members entered into the CARDS
transaction solely for the tax loss and did not have a legitimate
business purpose. Accordingly, Country Pine Finance likewise
fails the subjective requirement of Rose v. Commissioner,
868
F.2d 851 (6th Cir. 1989).
C. Conclusion
The CARDS transaction lacked economic substance and stood no
chance of earning a profit. The members did not have a nontax
business purpose for entering into the CARDS transaction.
Because we find that the CARDS transaction lacked economic
substance, it is disregarded for tax purposes and Country Pine
Finance’s claimed loss is disallowed.
- 42 -
To reflect the foregoing,
Decision will be entered
for respondent.