Filed: Oct. 29, 2018
Latest Update: Nov. 14, 2018
Summary: T.C. Memo. 2018-180 UNITED STATES TAX COURT MICHAEL A. GIUNTA AND JULIA A. GIUNTA, Petitioners v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent Docket No. 9249-17. Filed October 29, 2018. Richard Stephen Kestenbaum and Scott L. Kestenbaum, for petitioners. Marc L. Caine and Peggy Gartenbaum, for respondent. MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION LAUBER, Judge: With respect to petitioners’ Federal income tax for 2013, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS or respondent) determined a deficiency of $60
Summary: T.C. Memo. 2018-180 UNITED STATES TAX COURT MICHAEL A. GIUNTA AND JULIA A. GIUNTA, Petitioners v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent Docket No. 9249-17. Filed October 29, 2018. Richard Stephen Kestenbaum and Scott L. Kestenbaum, for petitioners. Marc L. Caine and Peggy Gartenbaum, for respondent. MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION LAUBER, Judge: With respect to petitioners’ Federal income tax for 2013, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS or respondent) determined a deficiency of $604..
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T.C. Memo. 2018-180
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
MICHAEL A. GIUNTA AND JULIA A. GIUNTA, Petitioners v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket No. 9249-17. Filed October 29, 2018.
Richard Stephen Kestenbaum and Scott L. Kestenbaum, for petitioners.
Marc L. Caine and Peggy Gartenbaum, for respondent.
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
LAUBER, Judge: With respect to petitioners’ Federal income tax for 2013,
the Internal Revenue Service (IRS or respondent) determined a deficiency of
$604,267 and an accuracy-related penalty of $120,854. The issues for decision are
whether respondent (1) properly disallowed a $2,998,850 loss deduction allegedly
attributable to an “overseas investment” that petitioners contend became worthless
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[*2] during 2013 or (alternatively) gave rise to a theft loss deduction and (2) prop-
erly determined a substantial understatement penalty under section 6662(a) and
(b)(2).1 We resolve both issues in respondent’s favor.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. The stipulations of
facts and the attached exhibits are incorporated by this reference. Petitioners, who
are husband and wife, resided in New York when they filed their petition.
Michael Giunta (petitioner) received a bachelor’s degree in marketing and
spent most of his career with the McDonald’s Corp. He purchased his first
McDonald’s franchise in 1989 and by 2013 owned five McDonald’s restaurants in
the New York metropolitan area. Each restaurant was held by a separate S
corporation, one of which was named Mijul, Inc. (Mijul). Another of petitioner’s
wholly owned S corporations, QSC Management, Inc. (QSC), acted as a
management company for the restaurants, consolidating check writing, payroll,
and other functions.
Petitioner began selling his restaurants in 2013, realizing gain of $3,541,479
for that year alone. On their Form 1040, U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, for
1
All statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code (Code) in effect
for the year in question, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Prac-
tice and Procedure. We round all monetary amounts to the nearest dollar.
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[*3] 2013, petitioners offset against this gain a purported loss of $2,998,850
attributable to an asset described as an “overseas investment.” On Form 8949,
Sales and Other Dispositions of Capital Assets, petitioners reported that they had
acquired this “overseas investment” on October 1, 2007, and had disposed of it on
December 31, 2013, for consideration of zero.
The story begins in 2004 when petitioner’s neighbor, John Kristie, allegedly
pitched an investment concept to him. Petitioner testified that he had no idea what
this investment involved, but he believed it had something to do with “mid-term
notes.” According to petitioner, interest rates were rather low at the time, and he
thought this investment would provide an “opportunity for us to basically leverage
* * * bank funds.”
Petitioner submitted into evidence some promotional materials, including
part of a document captioned “Term Sheet Concepts,” which he purportedly
reviewed before investing. According to the Term Sheet Concepts, Mr. Kristie
and an associate would fly to London and secure a $132 million loan, using the
investors’ $3.5 million startup money to establish their creditworthiness. They
would then use that loan to secure a “bank guarantee” with a “face value of
$165,000,000 and a maturity date of 10 years after * * * issuance.” Nine days
after securing the initial loan, the “bank guarantee” would somehow be used to
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[*4] repay the startup money with a hefty return to the investors who had supplied
those funds. An attached “joint venture agreement” was accompanied by a
nondisclosure agreement resembling the sort often used by tax shelter promoters.
The investment as described in the Term Sheet Concepts set forth no coherent
business or investment strategy.
Despite his decades of business experience, petitioner did not seek advice
about this investment from his long-time accountant, Mark Perlson, C.P.A., who
was also a wealth manager. Nor did petitioner seek advice from anyone else. He
testified that he was persuaded to invest because Mr. Kristie had a good reputation
and was a member of his church.
Despite having little understanding of the investment, petitioner testified
that he agreed to invest $2.5 million. He submitted into evidence a copy of a
purported “Investment Agreement” dated October 30, 2004. By investing $2.5
million, petitioner would supposedly get a 50% interest in a New York limited
liability company named BPG-LBK (BPG). The investment agreement says that
petitioner was to send $2.5 million to an escrow account at a law firm named
Honig, Mongoi, Monahan, and Sklavos (HMMS).
Apart from petitioner’s testimony, which we did not find credible, there is
no evidence that he ever made the supposed $2.5 million investment. He testified
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[*5] that the source of funds for the investment was a $2.5 million loan that his
restaurants secured from GE Capital. The restaurants do appear to have secured
such a loan, and the loan proceeds were allocated among them as shown in their
QuickBooks entries. But there is no evidence that the S corporations disbursed
any of these funds to HMMS or to petitioner for transmission to HMMS. And
there is no evidence, in the form of bank statements, wire transfer cover sheets,
receipts from HMMS, or any other document, to show that petitioner transferred
$2.5 million (or any smaller sum) to HMMS in October 2004. Petitioner did not
call anyone from HMMS to testify.
Five months later, on February 18, 2005, Mijul received a wire transfer of
$1.9 million from the HMMS escrow account. There is nothing on the wire
transfer cover sheet to indicate what this payment covered or why it was being
made. The wire transfer cover sheet contains no “re” line and makes no reference
to any sort of investment. Petitioner testified that this $1.9 million transfer
represented a payout on his $2.5 million “overseas investment.” We did not find
this testimony credible.
Petitioner testified that he subsequently contributed another $542,500 to his
“overseas investment.” He submitted into evidence documents showing:
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[*6] (1) a $300,000 wire transfer in April 2005 from Mijul to the HMMS escrow
account, (2) a $75,000 wire transfer in June 2005 from Mijul to BPG, and (3) a
$32,500 cashier’s check dated February 23, 2007, from petitioner’s personal
account to Mr. Kristie.
Petitioner also submitted a “Transaction Journal” for QSC and invited the
Court’s attention to three QuickBooks entries recorded in it. The first entry, from
November 2007, shows a transfer of $100,000 to Susan Kristie, John Kristie’s
wife. The other two entries, dated May 2008 and November 2010, show wire
transfers to Mr. Kristie for $25,000 and $10,000, respectively. The memo lines
next to the first two of these entries indicate that these transfers were made “per
Mike,” which the Court understands to mean under instructions from petitioner.
Petitioner testified that these entries reflected additional investments that he made
in BPG.
At a time not disclosed by the record, Mr. Kristie allegedly created another
investment vehicle, Optimus Partners Trust, LLC (OPT). The documents describ-
ing OPT do not disclose any coherent business or investment strategy. Petitioner
allegedly invested in OPT although he produced no evidence to establish the fact
or amount of his investment. He also mentioned OPT to friends from his church,
and five of them allegedly chose to invest large sums.
-7-
[*7] Two of petitioner’s friends, Messrs. Raciborksi and Vigliotta, testified at
trial. Mr. Vigliotta testified to making a $200,000 investment in OPT; Mr. Raci-
borski testified to making an $800,000 investment at a time when his total net
worth was only $850,000. Neither supplied any evidence to establish the fact or
amount of his investment. Each allegedly received a membership interest in OPT,
supposedly memorialized in a “joint venture agreement.” But this agreement, if
genuine, was obviously unfinished: It stated that each investor had an ownership
interest of “X%.”
Petitioner testified that OPT never made any distributions. As a result, his
friends allegedly became worried about their investments and asked petitioner to
bail them out. He allegedly complied, directing QSC to make 40 separate wire
transfers, ranging from $5,000 to $180,000, to his five friends between June 2006
and July 2014. The total amount thus transferred was $2,028,350. There is no
documentary evidence to establish why any of these payments were made.
During the examination of petitioners’ 2013 return, petitioner submitted to
the IRS substantially identical signed statements by Messrs. Vigliotta and Raci-
borski. Each statement was dated August 25, 2015, and each asserted that peti-
tioner had wired money to each of them “as a reimbursement of * * * [their]
investment in BPG.” At trial each witness was asked why this statement referred
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[*8] to an investment in BPG when each had allegedly invested in OPT. Neither
had a plausible response, and we did not find the testimony of either witness
credible.
By making these payments to his friends, petitioner testified that he
gradually “bought out” their interests in OPT. But he presented no documentary
evidence to establish that he ever had an ownership interest in OPT to start with.
And he presented no documentary evidence to establish that he acquired additional
ownership interests in OPT by virtue of the 40 wire transfers he made to his
friends. Petitioner’s friends did not execute any document transferring ownership
of their alleged OPT interests to him. And no one informed the principals of OPT
(if it actually existed) that any change in share ownership had occurred.
Although petitioner was supposed to receive monthly and annual payouts
from BPG, he testified that he received no payment of any kind after February
2005. And although he allegedly began bailing his friends out of their failing
investments in 2006, he asserted that he did not realize that his own investment
had become worthless until 2013. He drew this inference not from any significant
discovery or event but, as his accountant explained, from the fact that his “corres-
pondence with Mr. Kristie was less regular and they weren’t as upbeat.” Petitioner
testified that Mr. Kristie, beginning in October 2013, had become angrier and
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[*9] more irrational in their exchanges. The record includes several inconclusive
emails from late 2013 from which petitioner allegedly inferred that his investments
in BPG and OPT had lost all value.
Petitioner took no action of any kind in an effort to recover on his alleged
$3 million investment. He knew the identity of several key players in this scheme,
including Mr. Kristie, HMMS, and two individuals: Sandip (in London) and Surin
(in New York). Petitioner took no legal action against any of these individuals or
entities and did not (as far as the record reveals) even investigate the possibility of
doing so. And despite his professed belief that his investment had become worth-
less, he continued to direct payments to friends who had allegedly invested in
OPT. QSC wired $119,500 to Mr. Vigliotta in November 2013 and $45,000 to
Mr. Raciborski in July 2014, allegedly to buy out their OPT interests.
On their Federal income tax return for 2013 petitioners reported a long-term
capital gain of $3,541,479 from the sale of the McDonald’s restaurants. Against
this gain they offset a long-term capital loss of $2,998,850. On the Form 8949,
their accountant listed “overseas investment” in the box captioned “description of
property,” stated that petitioners had acquired this investment on October 1, 2007,
stated that their “cost or other basis” was $2,998,850, and stated that the proceeds
of sale were zero.
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[*10] Neither petitioner nor Mr. Perlson, his accountant, offered a plausible
explanation as to how the claimed cost basis of $2,998,850 was calculated or why
October 1, 2007, was listed as the “acquisition date.” Mr. Perlson stated that he
had chosen that date arbitrarily to indicate that the loss “was long term.” He stated
that he came up with the term “overseas investment” and listed December 31,
2013, as the date of disposition on the basis of a conversation with petitioner.
The IRS selected petitioners’ 2013 return for examination. During the
examination petitioners submitted a spreadsheet showing a basis calculation of
$3,170,850 for the alleged investment. This sum was calculated as follows:
Alleged original investment $2,500,000
Less 02/05 payout (1,900,000)
Alleged buyout of friends’ interests in OPT 2,028,350
04/05 wire from Mijul to HMMS 300,000
06/05 wire from Mijul to BPG 75,000
Checks/wires from QSC to Mr. Kristie/Mrs. Kristie 167,500
Total 3,170,850
The IRS examination team concluded that petitioner had not substantiated
that he had made an investment, what his basis in that alleged investment was, or
that the investment had become worthless during 2013. On November 7, 2016,
IRS Officer Marianne Brennan completed Form 300, Civil Penalty Approval
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[*11] Form, recommending the imposition of a penalty under section 6662(d) for
an underpayment attributable to a substantial understatement of income tax. Her
supervisor approved this recommendation on November 21, 2016. On February 1,
2017, the IRS mailed petitioners a notice of deficiency determining the tax
deficiency and penalty set forth supra p. 1. Petitioners timely petitioned this Court
for redetermination.
OPINION
The IRS’ determinations in a notice of deficiency are generally presumed
correct, and taxpayers bear the burden of proving them erroneous. Rule 142(a);
Welch v. Helvering,
290 U.S. 111, 115 (1933). Petitioners do not contend (and
could not plausibly contend) that they have satisfied the requirements of section
7491 for shifting the burden of proof. See Rule 142(a). Accordingly, the burden
of proof for all factual issues remains with them.
On their 2013 return petitioners reported a capital loss from the disposition
of a single “overseas investment.” At trial petitioner testified that this loss was
actually attributable to investments in two separate entities: BPG and OPT. Peti-
tioners contend that this loss was deductible under section 165(a) and (g) as a loss
from “worthless securities.” Alternatively, they contend that it was deductible un-
der section 165(a) and (c)(3) as a “theft loss.” We find no merit in either theory.
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[*12] A. Worthless Securities Loss
Section 165(g)(1) provides that, “[i]f any security which is a capital asset
becomes worthless during the taxable year, the loss resulting therefrom shall * * *
be treated as a loss from the sale or exchange, on the last day of the taxable year,
of a capital asset.” For purposes of section 165(g), the term “security” means “a
share of stock in a corporation,” the “right to subscribe for, or to receive, a share
of stock in a corporation,” or a bond or other evidence of indebtedness issued by a
corporation or governmental entity. See sec. 165(g)(2).
To be entitled to deduct a loss under section 165(g) a taxpayer must carry
his burden of proving three distinct facts. See Rule 142(a). First, he must
establish that he owned a “security” as defined by section 165(g)(2). Second, he
must establish his “adjusted basis” in that security. See sec. 165(b); Martin Ice
Cream Co. v. Commissioner,
110 T.C. 189, 220 (1998) (determining that taxpayer
had no basis in stock when he introduced no credible evidence to establish basis).
Third, the taxpayer must establish that the security “bec[ame] worthless during the
taxable year” for which the deduction is claimed. Sec. 165(g)(1). “Worthlessness
is a factual question and petitioner has the burden of proof to overcome respon-
dent’s determination” that the stock did not become worthless during the year in
question. Austin Co. v. Commissioner,
71 T.C. 955, 969 (1979).
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[*13] We find that petitioner has substantiated none of these facts. First, he has
not shown that he owned a “security” within the meaning of section 165(g)(2). He
does not contend that his overseas investment took the form of a bond or other
evidence of indebtedness. See sec. 165(g)(2)(C). And he has not established that
PMG or OPT actually existed, that either was a corporation, or that he made an
investment that took the form of “share[s] of stock in a corporation.” See sec.
165(g)(2)(A).
Second, petitioner has not established his basis (if any) in his investment.
There is no credible evidence, documentary or otherwise, to show that petitioner
made, in October 2004, an initial investment of $2.5 million in BPG. It appears
that petitioner or his S corporations wired a total of $467,500 to the HMMS
escrow account, Mr. Kristie, and/or Mrs. Kristie at various times between April
2005 and November 2010. But there is no credible evidence to show that these
payments were made to acquire shares of corporate stock. The $75,000 wire
transfer that Mijul directed to BPG in June 2005, see supra p. 6, may come closer
to establishing basis. But there is no credible evidence that this payment was
made to acquire corporate stock as opposed to being (for example) a transfer to
BPG as Mr. Kristie’s nominee. In no case did BPG furnish petitioner with an
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[*14] acknowledgment that it had received funds from him for investment or that
his ownership interest in BPG had changed.
Nor has petitioner established his basis by virtue of the 40 payments totaling
$2,028,350 that he or his S corporations made to his five friends (three of whom
did not testify). These payments were made over eight years in amounts ranging
from $5,000 to $180,000. There is no evidence that petitioner acquired stock in
OPT by making these payments.
To begin with, there is no credible evidence that any of petitioner’s friends
actually made any investment in OPT at the outset. Assuming arguendo that they
made investments, they executed no document(s) transferring any portion of their
ownership interest(s) to petitioner. And there is no evidence that petitioner or his
friends notified the principals of OPT (assuming it existed) that any change in
share ownership had occurred.
The record is devoid of reliable evidence as to why petitioner made these
transfers. Some of the transfers may have been gifts to Mr. Kristie, Mrs. Kristie,
or his friends, or the transfers may have been connected with other business
endeavors in which they were jointly engaged. But there is simply no credible
evidence that the payments were made to acquire shares of corporate stock.
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[*15] Third, petitioner has not carried his burden of proving that his alleged BPG
or OPT investments became worthless during 2013. To establish worthlessness in
a particular year the taxpayer must generally point to a “fixed and identifiable
event” that caused the security to lose all value. Dittmar v. Commissioner,
23 T.C.
789, 798 (1955) (quoting 875 Park Ave. Co. v. Commissioner,
217 F.2d 699, 701
(2d Cir. 1954), aff’g a Memorandum Opinion of this Court). Such an event may
include a corporate dissolution or similar occurrence that “clearly evidences
destruction of both the potential and liquidating values of the stock.” Austin Co.,
71 T.C. at 970. To establish that he has abandoned a security, the taxpayer “must
permanently surrender and relinquish all rights in the security and receive no
consideration in exchange.” Sec. 1.165-5(i)(1), Income Tax Regs. This
determination is made on the basis of “all the facts and circumstances.” Ibid.
Assuming arguendo that petitioner made an investment in BPG or OPT, he
has pointed to no identifiable event evidencing that his investment became worth-
less during 2013. See Austin Co., 71 T.C. at 970. He allegedly based his infer-
ence to that effect on the pessimistic tone of his communications with Mr. Kristie
and on yearend email exchanges with the supposed investment managers. But
these emails do not refer to any investment that petitioner had made in BPG or
OPT.
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[*16] In any event the most one can deduce from these emails is that an antici-
pated payout of some kind was not going to occur. Petitioner had been expecting,
but had not received, monthly payouts on his alleged BPG investment since
February 2005, i.e., during the preceding 106 months. He provided at trial no
reason to believe that his alleged investment had become worthless during 2013
rather than during one of the previous seven years. On the other hand he con-
tinued to make supposed investments: QSC wired $119,500 to Mr. Vigliotta in
November 2013 and $45,000 to Mr. Raciborski in July 2014, allegedly to buy out
their OPT interests. These transfers sit uncomfortably with petitioner’s assertion
that he viewed his investment as worthless in late 2013.
By the end of the trial the circumstances surrounding petitioner’s alleged
“overseas investment” were as mysterious as they had appeared on his 2013 tax
return. But assuming arguendo that he had made some sort of investment, he did
not carry his burden of proving that he had purchased a “security” as defined in
section 165(g)(2), what his basis was in that security, or that the security had
become worthless during 2013. We find that petitioner claimed a fictitious loss
deduction of $2,998,850 for 2013 because he wished to offset the $3,541,479 gain
that he was required to report upon his sale of the McDonald’s restaurants.
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[*17] B. Theft Loss
Petitioner alternatively contends that his purported investments gave rise to
a theft loss. In the case of an individual the Code allows a deduction for losses,
not compensated by insurance or otherwise, that “arise from fire, storm, ship-
wreck, or other casualty, or from theft.” Sec. 165(a), (c)(3). “[A]ny loss arising
from theft shall be treated as sustained during the taxable year in which the tax-
payer discovers such loss.” Sec. 165(e). A “theft” includes a loss of property
caused “by swindling, false pretenses, and any other form of guile.” Bellis v.
Commissioner,
61 T.C. 354, 357 (1973) (quoting Nichols v. Commissioner,
43
T.C. 842, 884 (1965)), aff’d,
540 F.2d 448 (9th Cir. 1976); see sec. 1.165-8(d),
Income Tax Regs.
To deduct a theft loss, the taxpayer must establish: (1) the occurrence of a
theft under the law of the relevant jurisdiction, (2) the amount of the loss, and
(3) the year in which he discovered the loss. See, e.g., Gerstell v. Commissioner,
46 T.C. 161, 175 (1966); Monteleone v. Commissioner,
34 T.C. 688, 692 (1960);
McKinley v. Commissioner,
34 T.C. 59, 63 (1960); Mowry v. Commissioner, T.C.
Memo. 2018-105, at *20-*21. For the reasons set forth above in connection with
the worthless securities loss, we conclude that petitioners have not established the
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[*18] fact or the amount of the loss or that 2013 was the year in which they
discovered the loss.
Nor have petitioners proven that a theft occurred under the law of the rele-
vant jurisdiction.2 They contend that, under New York law, Mr. Kristie perpe-
trated a theft by false pretenses when he encouraged petitioner to invest in an
apparent Ponzi scheme. See N.Y. Penal Law sec. 155.05 (McKinney 2018);
People v. Luongo,
391 N.E.2d 1341, 1345-46 (N.Y. 1979) (finding that a promoter
of a Ponzi scheme was guilty of larceny by false promise). But petitioner’s
“overseas investment” had an alleged nexus with England as well as New York.
He has not shown that the wrongdoing that caused his alleged loss was perpetrated
by Mr. Kristie or by the London investment managers, or that the “theft” inquiry
would be governed by New York or U.K. law.
In any event petitioners have not established any facts of the sort normally
adduced to demonstrate a theft. The record contains only speculative testimony by
petitioner, which is insufficient to establish that a theft occurred. See Seaver v.
Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2009-270,
98 T.C.M. 493, 495 (denying a theft
2
Though a taxpayer need not demonstrate a criminal conviction, see Monte-
leone v. Commissioner,
34 T.C. 688, 694 (1960), he must prove by a preponder-
ance of the evidence that an actual theft occurred, see, e.g., Enis v. Commissioner,
T.C. Memo. 2017-222, at *18 (citing Allen v. Commissioner,
16 T.C. 163, 166,
(1951)).
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[*19] loss deduction where the taxpayers “provided only uncorroborated
testimony”); Frankel v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1988-1,
54 T.C.M.
1442, 1445-1446 (denying a theft loss deduction where the taxpayer could only
speculate about which of two persons might have committed the purported theft).
For all these reasons, we find that petitioners are not entitled to any theft loss
deduction for 2013.
C. Penalties
The Code imposes a 20% penalty upon the portion of any underpayment of
tax attributable to (among other things) “[a]ny substantial understatement of
income tax.” Sec. 6662(a), (b)(2). An understatement of income tax is
“substantial” if it exceeds the greater of $5,000 or 10% of the tax required to be
shown on the return. See sec. 6662(d)(1)(A). The understatement of tax that
respondent determined for 2013, and that we have sustained, is $604,267. That
amount comfortably exceeds $5,000 and 10% of the tax (roughly $760,000)
required to be shown on petitioners’ return.
Under section 7491(c) the Commissioner bears the burden of production
with respect to the liability of any individual for any penalty. See Higbee v. Com-
missioner,
116 T.C. 438, 446 (2001). Respondent has satisfied his burden of pro-
duction by showing that petitioners’ understatement of tax for 2013 exceeds 10%
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[*20] of the tax required to be shown on their return. Respondent also bears the
burden of showing that the penalty was “personally approved (in writing) by the
immediate supervisor of the individual making such determination.” Sec. 6751(b);
see Chai v. Commissioner,
851 F.3d 190, 221 (2d Cir. 2017), aff’g in part, rev’g in
part T.C. Memo. 2015-42. The record includes a copy of the Civil Penalty
Approval Form signed by the immediate supervisor of the revenue agent who
examined petitioners’ returns, approving imposition of a section 6662 substantial
understatement penalty. Respondent has thus satisfied his burden of production.
Section 6664(c)(1) provides an exception to the imposition of the accuracy-
related penalty if the taxpayer establishes that there was reasonable cause for, and
that he acted in good faith with respect to, the underpayment. “Generally, the
most important factor is the extent of the taxpayer’s effort to assess the taxpayer’s
proper tax liability.” Sec. 1.6664-4(b)(1), Income Tax Regs. If a taxpayer alleges
reliance on the advice of a tax professional, he must show that his adviser was
competent and that he supplied that person with all “necessary and accurate infor-
mation.” See Neonatology Assocs., P.A. v. Commissioner,
115 T.C. 43, 99
(2000), aff’d,
299 F.3d 221 (3d Cir. 2002); see also sec. 1.6664-4(b)(1), (c),
Income Tax Regs.
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[*21] Petitioners contend they relied in good faith on Mr. Perlson, their account-
ant, who they claim is a qualified tax professional. In preparing the Form 8949 on
which the $2,998,850 loss deduction was claimed, Mr. Perlson relied entirely on
oral representations by petitioner. By his own admission Mr. Perlson did not
know what the alleged investment was or when it had been acquired. We question
whether a competent tax professional would prepare a return claiming a loss of
this magnitude in the absence of any documentary evidence establishing the facts
surrounding the investment. Indeed, Mr. Perlson could not explain how he
derived the $2,998,850 basis number that he reported on the return. In any event it
is obvious that petitioners did not supply their accountant with all “necessary and
accurate information” concerning the alleged investment. See Neonatology
Assocs., P.A., 115 T.C. at 99. We accordingly sustain respondent’s determination
of an accuracy-related penalty.
To reflect the foregoing,
Decision will be entered for
respondent.