1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 37">*37
Based in part on information furnished by an informant, respondent determined that petitioner received a $ 100,000 labor racketeering payoff in 1965, which he failed to report as income. Respondent also determined that the per-share fair market value of 22,500 shares of stock received by petitioner in 1968 as a labor racketeering payoff, but not reported by him as income, was $ 4.875.
83 T.C. 269">*270 In these consolidated cases, respondent determined income tax deficiencies and additions to tax as follows:
Docket | Additions to tax under | ||||
No. | Petitioner | Year | Deficiency | Sec. 6653(b) | Sec. 6654(a) |
5895-77 | Aniello Dellacroce | ||||
and Mary Dellacroce | 1968 | $ 80,109.47 | 1 $ 40,054.74 | ||
5896-77 | Aniello Dellacroce | 1965 | 54,731.00 | 27,366.00 | $ 1,533 |
1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 37">*39 Respondent has now conceded the addition to tax for fraud under section 6653(b) for the year 1965. After this concession and other concessions by the parties, the primary issues remaining for decision are the following:
(1) Whether petitioner, Aniello Dellacroce, received $ 100,000 of unreported income during 1965 for services rendered in connection with the settlement of labor problems and insuring labor peace;
(2) Whether petitioner, Aniello Dellacroce, is liable for the
(3) What was the fair market value of 22,500 shares of common stock of Yankee Plastics, Inc., constructively received by petitioner, Aniello Dellacroce, on April 2, 1968, for services rendered in assisting the merger of Yankee Plastics, Inc., and Mr. Hanger, Inc., and in insuring labor peace for the latter corporation.
1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 37">*40 83 T.C. 269">*271 FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. The stipulation of facts, together with the exhibits attached thereto, is incorporated herein by this reference.
The petitioners in docket No. 5895-77 are Aniello Dellacroce and his wife, Mary Dellacroce. Aniello Dellacroce is also the petitioner in docket No. 5896-77. The petitioners' legal residence at the time they filed their petitions herein was 232 Mulberry Street, New York, NY. Petitioners did not file a Federal income tax return for 1965. They did file a joint Federal income tax return for 1968 with the appropriate office of the Internal Revenue Service. The amounts here in dispute relate to the activities of Aniello Dellacroce, and when used hereafter in the singular, "petitioner" will refer to him alone.
Petitioner had been under criminal investigation for a number of years and remained so in 1982 at the time of the trial in this case. Petitioner was convicted of criminal conspiracy to evade income taxes due from him for 1968 and was additionally found guilty of false filing and tax evasion for 1968 in
Respondent determined that petitioner received a similar labor racketeering payoff in 1965 in the amount of $ 100,000, which petitioner failed to report. Respondent based this determination, in part, on information provided by one Frank Terranova, who acted as a Government informant in the
1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 37">*43
On their joint Federal income tax return for 1968, petitioners reported $ 10,400 of "wages, salaries, and tips" and total tax of $ 1,401.80.
The parties have stipulated that, as a result of his conviction in
In the criminal case, the Government valued the 22,500 shares at approximately $ 123,000, or approximately $ 5.50 per share. The jury in that case did not determine the value of the stock, but the jurors were instructed that, in order to find a defendant guilty of conspiracy, they must find that "a conspiracy existed to evade and defeat a large part of the income taxes due and owing * * * by * * * Dellacroce." They were further 83 T.C. 269">*273 instructed that they could not convict on the tax evasion count unless they found beyond a reasonable doubt "that1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 37">*44 there was a substantial amount of federal income tax due and owing from the defendant." They were finally instructed that they could not convict on the false filing count unless they found beyond a reasonable doubt "that the understatement was large and substantial."
Yankee Plastics, Inc., was formed in January 1957. The corporation was engaged in the business of manufacturing plastic hangers. In August 1965, Yankee Plastics, Inc., went into chapter 11 bankruptcy, from which it emerged on December 19, 1967. It subsequently suffered a further bankruptcy in the late 1970's and went out of business.
The consolidated financial report of Yankee Plastics, Inc., for the fiscal year ended January 31, 1968, reflects a deficit in earnings of $ 217,379 and indicates a book value of approximately $ 0.14 per share of stock.
The consolidated financial statement of Yankee Plastics, Inc., for the fiscal year ended January 31, 1969, reflects a deficit in earnings of $ 45,067 and indicates a book value of approximately $ 0.40 per share of stock. A note appended to the report states that on January 31, 1969, there were outstanding options to acquire 27,500 shares of common stock at $ 4.25 per share, 1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 37">*45 exercisable at any time between October 31, 1969, and October 31, 1971, and that in February 1969, the company granted options to two employees to acquire 3,500 common shares at $ 6 per share, exercisable ratably over the next 5 years. Further, the report states that in April 1969, the company sold for $ 2,000 a nontransferable warrant to purchase 50,000 common shares at $ 4.25 per share, exercisable during the 1-year period beginning October 31, 1970. Finally, the report states that in May and June 1969, the company sold 37,000 shares of its common stock at $ 4.25 per share to six persons, each of whom was a principal of an enterprise supplying the company with materials or services.
By agreement dated March 15, 1968, Yankee Plastics, Inc., agreed to deliver 837,000 shares of its common stock to Mr. Hanger, Inc., in return for substantially all of the latter corporation's assets, provided that at the closing, the net value of those assets was $ 150,000, a value of approximately $ 0.18 per share.
83 T.C. 269">*274 On and around April 2, 1968, the date petitioner received 22,500 shares of Yankee Plastics, Inc., stock, the corporation's stock was not listed in Moody's, Standard & Poor's, 1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 37">*46 or any of the other usual financial information reference sources. However, the National Daily Quotation Service (pink sheets) did list the stock. During the period February 21, 1968, to April 18, 1968, the pink sheets indicated a rising trend in Yankee Plastics stock. The pink sheets for April 2, 1968, reflect a listing of the stock by three brokers, Russell & Saxe; Weinberg, Ost & Hayton; and J.W. Gould. Russell & Saxe quoted a bid price of 5 1/2, and an asked price of 6 1/2. Weinberg, Ost & Hayton quoted a bid price of 5 1/2, and an asked price of 6 1/4. J.W. Gould quoted no bid price, and an asked price of 6 7/8.
On August 18, 1981, respondent served written interrogatories upon petitioner to be answered by him in accordance with
On December 21, 1981, petitioner filed a motion for summary judgment pursuant to Rule 121 with respect to docket No. 5896-77, involving the year 1965. The thrust of petitioner's motion was that respondent's determination of petitioner's tax liability for 1965 was based solely on hearsay evidence and was, therefore, arbitrary, entitling petitioner to a decision as a matter of law.
83 T.C. 269">*275 Respondent's motion for order to compel and petitioner's motion for summary judgment were1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 37">*48 heard on February 22, 1982. In
Petitioner sent supplementary answers to respondent's interrogatories, dated June 14, 1982, in response to the May 7, 1982, order. However, he again refused to answer questions pertaining to his alleged involvement in 1965 with organized crime. This time his refusal was based on his constitutional privilege under the
At the trial of this matter the Court heard testimony1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 37">*49 from two witnesses, petitioner and revenue agent Harvey Dratman, with respect to the alleged $ 100,000 labor racketeering payoff at issue in docket No. 5896-77. Dratman, at petitioner's request, was called to the stand first and testified to the basis underlying the issuance of the deficiency notice. At the completion of this examination, petitioner's attorney advised the Court that there was "ample evidence that there wasn't one shred of substantive proof upon which the Government relied * * * to issue the statutory notice, and I state now the burden of going forward is on the Government with respect to the year 1965"; whereupon, after respondent cross-examined Dratman, the Court suggested that respondent go forward with the evidence. Petitioner was respondent's sole witness. Other than a specific denial of having received the $ 100,000 payoff in 1965, petitioner, over respondent's objections, claimed the
OPINION
Petitioner contends that respondent's determination, that he received a $ 100,000 labor racketeering payoff in 1965, is arbitrary, because it was based solely on hearsay evidence and, therefore, is not entitled to the presumption of correctness. Since the determination was arbitrary, petitioner's position, in essence, is that he is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Respondent raises several contentions. First, he contends that dismissal of the petition for lack of prosecution is an appropriate sanction where petitioner, on constitutional grounds, refused to answer relevant interrogatories prior to the trial and relevant questions put to him at trial. Second, respondent contents that his determination of the deficiency for 1965 was not arbitrary and that his determination is established by the preponderance of the evidence in the record. Finally, respondent contends that, even if his determination was arbitrary, he has adduced sufficient evidence in the form of adverse inferences from petitioner's
The instant case places us squarely within the middle of what has been described as "a muddy track * * * [of] decided cases regarding the so-called presumption of correctness and its impact on the burden of proof and the burden of going forward with evidence."
After petitioner refused to answer questions put to him at trial, respondent made his motion to dismiss docket No. 5896-77. The Court declined to rule on the motion at that time. On brief, respondent continues to pursue his argument that dismissal is the appropriate means by which to dispose of this case. In support thereof, respondent argues that the purpose of some of the interrogatories and the questions 83 T.C. 269">*277 propounded at trial was an attempt to show that petitioner was engaged in the illegal business giving rise to the determined income and that respondent had a sufficiently rational1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 37">*52 basis for believing petitioner had received $ 100,000 of illegal income in 1965. Respondent believes that he has a substantial need for the information, and he is unable to suggest a less drastic measure than dismissal that would remedy his inability to procure the needed information and, at the same time, protect petitioner's privilege. In addition, respondent asserts that petitioner's claim was not made in good faith and demonstrates an attempt to use the privilege as a sword rather than a shield. Although respondent acknowledges that petitioner has been under continuous criminal investigation for most of his adult life and that there was an ongoing grand jury investigation at the time of trial herein, respondent, alleges that the desired information pertaining to 1965 has a patently negligible incriminating potential in any open prosecution year. According to respondent, the criminal investigative authorities already possess the answers to the questions propounded regarding petitioner's background and connections with organized crime and, therefore, petitioner's responses would not have provided any additional leads in a criminal investigation.
Petitioner counters that his 1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 37">*53 assertion of his
There is no question but that the
Even in cases where the validity of a
Our disposition of respondent's motion to dismiss is discretionary.
83 T.C. 269">*279 (b) Disposition of Motions. A motion may be disposed of in one or more of the following ways,
* * * *
(3) The Court may take such action
[Emphasis added.]
Under the circumstances of this case, we decline to grant respondent's motion to dismiss docket No. 5896-77.
While we harbor reservations about whether petitioner's refusal to answer some of the questions propounded was actually based on good-faith
It is well settled that a deficiency determination ordinarily carries with it a 1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 37">*58 presumption of correctness.
In asking this Court to find that the notice of deficiency is arbitrary, petitioner is asking us to explore the underpinnings of that notice. As a 1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 37">*59 general rule, this Court will not look behind the statutory notice to examine the evidence used in making the determination.
On rare occasions, we have recognized an exception to the foregoing rule and have looked behind the notice of deficiency in cases involving unreported illegal income where the respondent introduced no substantive evidence but rested on the presumption of correctness and the petitioner challenged the1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 37">*60 notice of deficiency.
In
In
In
1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 37">*63 The deficiency determination in
The Second Circuit disagreed with our conclusion in
Agent Hernandez [the undercover agent] never testified to having participated in a cocaine sale involving Llorente. The mere fact that Llorente was heard to say that a particular shipment of cocaine had not yet arrived does not constitute evidence that he ever made expenditures for or sales of cocaine. Nor is the informant's story that Llorente inspected a shipment of 83 T.C. 269">*283 damp cocaine sufficient1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 37">*65 to support the Commissioner's determination since this was hearsay, in [sic] inadmissible to establish the truth of the facts asserted, to which Llorente's counsel properly objected * * * 6 Finally, Llorente's indictment of conspiracy and guilty plea to a charge of attempted conspiracy to criminally possess a controlled substance do not more than place him on the fringes of illegal activity. They hardly demonstrate that Llorente ever actually purchased or sold cocaine. [Fn. 7 ref. omitted.]
The main thrust of the Second Circuit's opinion, it seems to us, is that the court will view the deficiency determination as arbitrary if the1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 37">*66 evidence of record, whatever that evidence may be, hearsay or otherwise, merely places the taxpayer in an unlawful activity, but does not link the taxpayer to some tax-generating actions. If this were as far as the Second Circuit had gone, we might well have been able to distinguish
1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 37">*68 In the instant case, it is clear to us that the deficiency determination for 1965 was based entirely on hearsay evidence, specifically, on information garnered from a special agent's report and a personal interview with informant Terranova. In fact, double hearsay is involved. An agent testified that he was told by an informer, who did not testify, that he (the informer) was in turn told that petitioner received a $ 100,000 payment. 7 In essence, we have already suggested in
1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 37">*69 Initially we note that, even assuming it were permissible to draw negative inferences in this case, some of those inferences would not necessarily assist respondent's attempt to show that the deficiency determination was rationally based, because the unanswered questions, for the most part, were aimed at linking petitioner to organized crime, in general, and the Carlo Gambino "Family," in particular. Such a linkage would not satisfy the Second Circuit's mandate that the evidence provide a linkage to a tax-generating act. However, some of the unanswered questions arguably were intended to elicit responses that would establish the relevant linkage. For example, at one point petitioner was asked: "Did you receive a share of income from labor racketeering which in your, [sic] to the 83 T.C. 269">*285 Carlo Gambino criminal organization during the taxable year 1965?" In response to this question, petitioner, on the advice of his attorney, asserted his
Thus, we find it necessary to address the delicate issue of whether we should draw negative inferences from petitioner's
While at one time it may have been questionable whether a negative inference1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 37">*70 could ever be drawn from a
Thus, it is clear from the foregoing that the
Here, Palmigiano remained silent at the hearing
The difficultly we have in elevating petitioner's refusal to testify herein to the level of competent and admissible evidence is that respondent would have us do so for the very purpose of rectifying his absence of any probative evidence offered against petitioner. Thus, the prevailing rule referred to by the Supreme Court in
The effect of our finding that the notice of deficiency was arbitrary is to end our inquiry in the case at bar. It is true that the Second Circuit in
Since it lacks adequate evidentiary support the Commissioner's assessment of income tax liability against Llorente based on expenditures for cocaine must be eliminated from the Notice of Deficiency. [
1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 37">*75 We take the above language as a mandate, faced with the posture of this case, to eliminate from the statutory notice for 1965 its single issue, the alleged receipt of a $ 100,000 income payment.
The showing that the deficiency notice was arbitrary and not entitled to the presumption of correctness shifted to respondent the burden of going forward with the evidence.
Our sole inquiry with respect to petitioners' 1968 tax liability involves the valuation of the 22,500 shares of common stock of Yankee Plastics, 1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 37">*76 Inc., constructively received by petitioner on April 2, 1968, for services rendered in assisting 83 T.C. 269">*288 the merger of Yankee Plastics, Inc., and Mr. Hanger, Inc., and in insuring labor peace for the latter corporation.
The evidence in the record with respect to the valuation question consists largely of the conflicting opinions of petitioners' and respondent's expert witnesses. Petitioners' expert valued the stock at $ 0.18 per share. Respondent's expert valued the stock at $ 4.875 per share. Obviously, a considerable discrepancy exists.
This valuation issue is purely factual, and the burden of proof rests squarely on petitioners.
As a general proposition, fair market value is the price at which a willing buyer will purchase property from a willing seller, when neither part is acting under compulsion, and both parties are fully informed of all the relevant facts and circumstances.
1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 37">*78 In the instant case, Yankee Plastics, Inc., stock was traded in the over-the-counter market, and on and around the valuation date (April 2, 1968), the stock was quoted on a daily basis in the National Daily Quotation Service. Respondent's expert, Duane L. Krug, relied on the April 2, 1968, quotations as a starting point in valuing the stock at $ 4.875 per share. Specifically, he calculated the mean of the averaged bid-asked 83 T.C. 269">*289 prices, after eliminating the 6 7/8 asked price quoted by J.W. Gould. Krug eliminated the 6 7/8 asked price from his computations because he determined that J.W. Gould's quotations were consistently higher than those of the other two brokers listing the stock and, therefore, might not be reflective of the market. Krug then reduced the mean figure by an 18.5-percent blockage discount, computed on the basis of costs incurred by Yankee Plastics, Inc., in connection with a prior public offering. Krug attempted, but was unable, to ascertain whether there were in fact any sales at the quoted prices.
Petitioners contend that Krug's reliance on the quotation prices was erroneous because the facts and circumstances of this case indicate those quotations were1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 37">*79 not reflective of fair market value. In this connection, petitioners allege that the poor financial history of the corporation, together with the fact that the quotation prices related solely to a block of 100 shares of stock, requires that a lower value be assigned to the stock. Further, petitioners allege, without any supporting documentation, that the three brokers listed as handling the Yankee Plastics, Inc., stock on April 2, 1968, were of questionable character, had undergone continued investigation by the Securities and Exchange Commission, and in years subsequent to 1968 had either voluntarily withdrawn their dealer registrations or had them revoked. Petitioners' expert, Leon Lebensbaum, took the foregoing factors into consideration and rejected the quotation prices as determinative of fair market value. Instead, Lebensbaum relied on the book value of the stock as reflected in the January 31, 1968, and January 31, 1969, financial reports of the corporation as a starting point in valuing the stock at $ 0.18 per share. Specifically, he averaged the book value per share as of those respective dates, $ 0.14 and $ 0.40, and then reduced the average figure by a one-third blockage1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 37">*80 discount. Lebensbaum did not explain how he arrived at the blockage discount figure. Petitioners contend that Lebensbaum's opinion is supported by the exchange agreement dated March 15, 1968, whereby Yankee Plastics, Inc., agreed to exchange 837,000 shares of stock for approximately $ 150,000 worth of assets, a value of approximately $ 0.18 per share.
Respondent detects three major fallacies in petitioners' valuation approach. First, he contends that petitioners did not 83 T.C. 269">*290 adduce any evidence to prove that a viable market did not exist on April 2, 1968, and to show that the Court should depart from the quotation figures. Second, he alleges that petitioners' reliance on book value is patently defective in that petitioners' expert did not attempt to appraise the corporation's assets. Finally, respondent contends that the $ 0.18 per share valuation figure ignores the obviously great value placed on the shares by petitioner, by company officials who transferred the stock for services rendered by petitioner in settling labor problems, and by the jury who were variously instructed that they could not convict in the criminal case unless they found "that there was a substantial1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 37">*81 amount of Federal income tax due and owing" and that the Government "must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the understatement was large and substantial."
We have considered the testimony of both the expert witnesses as well as other evidence before us, and we conclude that petitioners have failed to prove that respondent's determination of the value of stock is erroneous. Petitioners have offered no persuasive evidence that the market quotations relied on by respondent were somehow contrived and not properly reflective of the stock's fair market value on the valuation date. If the quotations were not contrived, as we must assume in the lack of any persuasive evidence to the contrary, then those quotations should reflect public knowledge of the prior financial history of the corporation, and, thus, the prior financial history of the corporation should not, standing alone, require a departure from respondent's use of the quotations. Further, the fact that the quotations related only to a block of 100 shares of stock was recognized and taken into account by respondent's expert, who reduced his valuation figure derived from those quotations by a blockage discount.
Petitioners' 1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 37">*82 own evidence, as much as anything else, leads us to reject the value claimed by them. As stated, petitioners' expert valued the stock at $ 0.18 per share by averaging the stock's book value as reflected on the January 31, 1968, and January 31, 1969, financial statements, $ 0.14 per share and $ 0.40 per share, respectively, and then reducing the average figure by a one-third blockage discount. However, the note appended to the January 31, 1969, financial statement with 83 T.C. 269">*291 respect to stock options and warrants outstanding on January 31, 1969, or granted within 3 months thereafter, and sales of stock in May and June of 1969, although clearly not determinative of the fair market value of the stock on April 2, 1968, certainly casts considerable doubt on petitioners' expert's use of the book value of the stock to determine its fair market value. We find it difficult to believe that the fair market value of the stock on January 31, 1969, was $ 0.40 per share, while the exercise price of the options or warrants outstanding on that date or granted within a relatively short period thereafter ranged from $ 4.25 per share to $ 6 per share. We further note that there was brief testimony1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 37">*83 by petitioners' own expert to the effect that 4,000 shares of stock were issued in the early part of 1969 at $ 15 per share. Suffice it to say that we are not inclined to accept the $ 0.18 per share valuation figure based on book value computations in the face of these substantial discrepancies.
We must confess some bewilderment over the terms of the exchange agreement dated March 15, 1968, which would seem to support petitioners' expert's opinion. As we have indicated, ordinarily an arm's-length sale or exchange of the stock within a reasonable time before or after the valuation date is the best evidence of the stock's value. Whether or not the exchange contemplated was at arm's length we will not speculate. We simply conclude that the other evidence of record, meager as it may be, is more compelling in this case than the isolated exchange transaction.
In sum, we conclude that petitioners have failed to carry their burden of proving respondent's determination erroneous and, therefore, we sustain that determination.
1. Respondent has determined that no part of the alleged underpayment of tax for 1968 was due to fraud on the part of Mary Dellacroce and, accordingly, seeks to impose the sec. 6653(b) addition to tax against Aniello Dellacroce, alone.↩
2. Martin Goldman was convicted of conspiracy to evade income taxes in 1968, along with petitioner, in
3. All Rule references herein are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
4. See also
5.
6.
6.
7. If the informer had testified, at least the Court could have formed some judgment as to the reasonableness of the informer's accepting the information he received from his informant; such testimony would have been relevant in making a determination whether the statutory notice was arbitrary and excessive.↩
8. The above is not intended to imply an acceptance of the legal position stated by the Second Circuit in
9. It is interesting that the court did not address this issue, given its dictum in
"Naturally, if the taxpayer overcomes the presumption by presenting evidence sufficient to establish that the Commissioner's determination was erroneous it disappears from the case and the burden of proving the correct amount of tax liability shifts to the Commissioner.
This shifting of the burden of proof is not accepted by all the circuits. The First Circuit's position is that the taxpayer always has the burden of proving the Commissioner's determination erroneous. See