Decision will be entered for respondent, and an appropriate order will be issued regarding petitioner's second motion to dismiss.
KROUPA,
We must decide whether respondent may retroactively revoke the determination letter issued to petitioner. We hold that respondent may retroactively revoke the determination letter. 22010 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 210">*211
The parties have stipulated the administrative record under
Dr. R. Scott Yarish (Dr. Yarish), a successful plastic surgeon, owned five medical practice entities. 3 They were R. Scott Yarish, M.D. PA, Crystal Outpatient Surgery Center, Inc. (Houston), Crystal Outpatient Surgery Center, Inc. (Lake Jackson), Skin Enrichment, Ltd., and Gulf Coast Plastic 2010 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 210">*212 Surgery, PA (Gulf Coast). In 2000 Dr. Yarish received an offer from Dr. Gregory Pisarki (Dr. Pisarki) to purchase Gulf Coast. Dr. Yarish consulted with his attorney Michael C. Riddle (Mr. Riddle) about the sale. Mr. Riddle devised a plan for Dr. Yarish to receive significant tax savings from his business income. He advised Dr. Yarish to form an S corporation to manage his four medical practice entities as well as the medical practice Dr. Pisarki sought to purchase. The medical practice entities would pay a "consulting fee" to the S corporation and then deduct the fees as management services.
Mr. Riddle further recommended that the S corporation sponsor an ESOP to defer income earned by the S corporation. 4 It was intended that the income of the S corporation would pass through to the ESOP, and, because the ESOP would be tax exempt, it would pay no tax on the income until it was distributed to the ESOP participant. Dr. Yarish would be the sole ESOP participant. In effect, Dr. Yarish's medical practice entities would divert money to an entity 2010 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 210">*213 owned by a tax-exempt trust, creating a substantial cash and property benefit solely for Dr. Yarish.
Dr. Yarish approved of the plan Mr. Riddle presented. He formed Yarish Consulting, Inc. (petitioner) as an S corporation and the ESOP in 2000. He also required Dr. Pisarki, as a condition of acquiring Gulf Coast, to sign a consulting agreement with petitioner that obligated Gulf Coast to pay consulting fees to petitioner. Dr. Yarish also caused the other four medical entities to sign agreements to pay consulting fees to petitioner. Dr. Yarish was named the ESOP's beneficiary, and Mr. Riddle served as the ESOP's trustee. Dr. Yarish was the sole shareholder of petitioner, and shortly after forming the ESOP, Dr. Yarish owned 10 percent of the stock with the ESOP owning the remaining 90 percent. 52010 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 210">*214 Dr. Yarish was the sole participant in the ESOP.
Petitioner submitted an application to respondent for a determination that the ESOP was a qualified employee benefit plan (application) in 2000. Petitioner was listed as the plan's sponsor and employer. Petitioner marked in its application that it was not a member of an affiliated service group or a controlled group of corporations under common control. Respondent issued the determination letter in 2001 that allowed the ESOP to be treated as an exempt trust under
Petitioner filed an annual return for the ESOP (annual return) for each year from 2000 to 2004. Dr. Yarish was the sole participant in the ESOP during those years. Petitioner's annual return for 2004 failed to alert respondent that a resolution had been adopted to terminate the plan. The ESOP terminated on December 31, 2004, and petitioner rolled over the ESOP's assets totaling $2,439,503.05 into an individual retirement account (IRA) for Dr. Yarish.
Respondent 2010 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 210">*215 audited the ESOP after the ESOP terminated. Respondent's examination concerned whether all eligible employees of Dr. Yarish and his medical entities participated in the ESOP. Respondent sought documents from petitioner regarding the ESOP. Petitioner provided respondent with, among other things, a list of related entities and a census of employees in the controlled group or affiliated group. These documents contradicted petitioner's statement in its application that it was not a member of an affiliated service group or a controlled group of corporations under common control.
Respondent issued a summons to Mr. Riddle as the ESOP's trustee and also sent Mr. Riddle a letter and first version of his "Explanation of Items Report." Mr. Riddle responded by letter stating that the failure to disclose potential control group issues on the ESOP's application was a "scrivener's error" and that the ESOP was not part of an affiliated service group at the time it filed its application. Mr. Riddle requested that petitioner be considered under respondent's employee plans compliance resolution system (EPCRS). 6 Respondent informed petitioner that he considered the ESOP to be a Management S corporation 2010 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 210">*216 ESOP that was not eligible for EPCRS. Respondent identified the Management S corporation ESOP as an abusive tax avoidance transaction. See "Abusive Transactions that Affect Availability of Programs Under EPCRS," Internal Revenue Service Retirement Plans Community,
Respondent discovered on audit that Dr. Yarish was the only employee participating in the ESOP. Respondent therefore took the position that the ESOP violated the coverage requirements. See
Petitioner filed this declaratory judgment action challenging respondent's retroactive revocation of the ESOP's qualification.
We must decide whether respondent may retroactively revoke the determination letter issued to petitioner regarding the ESOP. Petitioner argues that respondent may not retroactively revoke the determination letter because the ESOP had terminated and all its assets had been distributed when respondent issued his revocation. Essentially, petitioner argues that respondent must catch the ESOP scheme while the ESOP is still in existence. We disagree. We begin by discussing our jurisdiction in declaratory judgment actions regarding the qualification of retirement plans.
This Court is a court of limited jurisdiction and may exercise jurisdiction only if conferred by statute.
We are puzzled by petitioner's argument that no actual controversy exists because it was petitioner, as the plan sponsor, who filed the petition "with respect to an actual controversy" asking the Court to reverse respondent's revocation letter. We have already ruled that an actual controversy exists and that we have jurisdiction in this case. Order dated Oct. 5, 2009. We stand by our ruling. 92010 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 210">*220
We now consider whether respondent may revoke his prior determination letter retroactively. Generally, the Commissioner's administrative rulings have both prospective and retroactive effect.
We now focus on whether respondent's retroactive revocation of the ESOP's qualification was arbitrary or capricious. Taxpayers may request that the Commissioner limit a revoked ruling's retroactive effect by filing a technical advice request.
Here, petitioner failed to make a formal request for
The Commissioner has also prescribed certain limitations on his ability to retroactively revoke a determination. See
Petitioner concedes that it erroneously marked the box stating that it was not part of an affiliated service group or control group when it submitted its application. Petitioner continued to make the same misstatement on each of its four annual 2010 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 210">*224 returns. Petitioner claims nonetheless that these misstatements were inadvertent "scrivener's errors" and should be disregarded.
The "scrivener's error" defense is a common law doctrine that allows parties to reform an instrument that uses words that do not reflect the parties' clear agreement. See 7-28 Corbin on Contracts, sec. 28.39 (2010). The scrivener's error defense does not apply, however, where a mistaken term was added to the plan through a unilateral mistake by the drafter.
Accordingly, we hold that petitioner has not shown that respondent abused his discretion by retroactively revoking the ESOP's qualification. We find no requirement that respondent must catch the scheme while the ESOP is still in existence. Moreover, petitioner 2010 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 210">*225 has not shown that it is entitled to
We have considered all remaining arguments the parties made and, to the extent not addressed, we find them to be irrelevant, moot, or meritless.
To reflect the foregoing,
1. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code (Code), and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure, unless otherwise indicated.↩
2. Petitioner argued in its petition that the limitations period under
3. Dr. Yarish held a greater-than-80-percent interest in each of the five entities. The other owners included trusts for the benefit of Dr. Yarish.↩
4. Dr. Yarish's medical practice entities had to be owned by a doctor under State law and therefore could not have sponsored an ESOP.↩
5. Dr. Yarish sold 90 percent of petitioner's shares to the ESOP in exchange for a $900 promissory note and security agreement. The ESOP repaid the promissory note to Dr. Yarish, and the 900 shares of petitioner held by the ESOP were allocated to Dr. Yarish's account in the ESOP. All cash contributions to the ESOP were allocated to Dr. Yarish's account.
6. EPCRS consists of three correction programs taxpayers may use in certain circumstances to keep their retirement plans compliant.↩
7. ESOPs receive favorable tax treatment to permit a large percentage of the employees of a control group or affiliated service group to receive the benefits of being part of a qualified plan. See Weyher & Knott, ESOP, The Employee Stock Ownership Plan 12 (2d ed. 1985). All employees of all corporations in the group shall be treated as employed by a single employer.
8. There are three cases pending before this Court involving deficiencies related to the present case's declaratory judgment action regarding the ESOP's qualification. First, respondent determined a $473,340 deficiency in petitioner's income tax for 2004 and an accuracy-related penalty under
9. Petitioner filed a second motion to dismiss while this case was under advisement. We will similarly deny this second motion as our jurisdiction remains intact. See