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John M. and Rita K. Monahan v. Commissioner, 11062-95 (1997)

Court: United States Tax Court Number: 11062-95 Visitors: 25
Filed: Oct. 23, 1997
Latest Update: Nov. 14, 2018
Summary: 109 T.C. No. 11 UNITED STATES TAX COURT JOHN M. AND RITA K. MONAHAN, Petitioners v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent Docket No. 11062-95. Filed October 23, 1997. 1. Held: This Court may raise sua sponte the doctrine of issue preclusion, or collateral estoppel. 2. Held, further, interest payments that were credited to a partnership's bank account are taxable to Ps because P controlled partnership matters and benefited from and controlled the funds in that account. 3. Held, further, a
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                       109 T.C. No. 11



                UNITED STATES TAX COURT



     JOHN M. AND RITA K. MONAHAN, Petitioners v.
     COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent



Docket No. 11062-95.                     Filed October 23, 1997.



     1. Held: This Court may raise sua sponte the
doctrine of issue preclusion, or collateral estoppel.
     2. Held, further, interest payments that were
credited to a partnership's bank account are taxable to
Ps because P controlled partnership matters and
benefited from and controlled the funds in that
account.
     3. Held, further, a $25,000 payment that was
deposited in Ps' bank account is taxable to Ps because
Ps failed to prove that the payment represents
reimbursement of legal fees paid by P on behalf of a
corporation.
     4. Held, further, sec. 6662(a), I.R.C., accuracy-
related penalty imposed for substantial understatement
of income tax.
                                - 2 -




     F. Michael Kovach, Jr., for petitioners.

     Cathy A. Goodson, for respondent.



                               OPINION

     HALPERN, Judge:    By notice of deficiency dated April 14,

1995, respondent determined a deficiency in petitioners' Federal

income tax for 1991 of $161,055 and a penalty under section

6662(a) of $32,211.    Unless otherwise noted, all section

references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the

year in issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules

of Practice and Procedure.    In addition, all references to

petitioner are to John M. Monahan.

     After concessions by respondent, the issues for decision are

(1) whether certain interest payments that were credited to a

partnership's bank account are taxable to petitioners,

(2) whether a $25,000 payment that was deposited in petitioners'

bank account is taxable to petitioners, and (3) whether

petitioners are liable for the penalty.    The parties have

stipulated various facts, which we so find.    The stipulation of

facts, with accompanying exhibits, is incorporated herein by this

reference.   We need find few facts in addition to those

stipulated; accordingly, we shall not separately set forth our

additional findings of fact and shall include those findings in
                                     - 3 -

the discussion that follows.         Petitioners bear the burden of

proof on all questions of fact.         Rule 142(a).



I.    Background

       Petitioners resided in Seattle, Washington, when the

petition in this case was filed.

       Petitioner is a lawyer specializing in corporate and

international trade law with emphasis in tax planning and complex

corporate transactions.         Petitioner received an LL.M. (with

emphasis in taxation) from New York University School of Law.

       Petitioners are calendar year taxpayers.

II.    Interest Payments Credited to Aldergrove's Bank Account

       A.   Introduction

             1.    Aldergrove

       Aldergrove Investments Co. (Aldergrove), was a partnership

between Grove Management Ltd. (GML), see infra sec. II.A.2., and

petitioner.       Aldergrove's principal place of business was on

Anguilla (an island of the British West Indies).         Aldergrove did

not file a U.S. Partnership Return of Income for 1991.

Petitioners did not report any income from Aldergrove for 1991.

       Pursuant to the Aldergrove partnership agreement, effective

July 1, 1984, partnership interests and capital contributions

were as follows:
                                    - 4 -

                         Class A                Class B

     GML               10 percent             100 percent
                       $1,000                 $569,000

     Petitioner        90 percent             none
                       $9,000

Class B partnership units were nonvoting, and, in partnership

matters affecting both classes, partners voted in proportion to

their percentage ownership of Class A partnership units.

            2.   GML

     GML was a wholly owned subsidiary of Span Corp., Ltd.,

which, in turn, was wholly owned by Lynwood S. Bell (Mr. Bell), a

Canadian citizen residing in Anguilla.      Petitioner and GML

entered into an agreement, effective July 1, 1984, that required

petitioner to manage GML's investments and to provide investment

advice.    GML transferred assets to Aldergrove for management.

            3.   Jaguar Holdings/Ihatsu Fudosan and Hansa Finance

     Jaguar Holdings, Ltd. (Jaguar Holdings), was wholly owned

and controlled by Mr. Bell, and, on or about August 1, 1988, its

name was changed to Ihatsu Fudosan Capital, Ltd. (Ihatsu

Fudosan).

     Hansa Finance and Trust, B.V. (Hansa Finance), was owned and

operated by Mr. Bell.

            4.   Chestnut Grove and Group M

     During 1991, petitioner was a 45-percent shareholder of both

Chestnut Grove Investments, Inc. (Chestnut Grove), and Group M
                                   - 5 -

Construction, Inc. (Group M).      Petitioner's brothers, Timothy E.

Monahan and Peter J. Monahan, owned 45 percent and 10 percent,

respectively, of the outstanding stock of both Chestnut Grove and

Group M.    Those corporations were organized for the purpose of

acquiring and developing a 16-acre parcel located in Yakima,

Washington (the Yakima property).      That parcel was purchased in

March 1987 for $400,000.

     B.    Transactions in Issue

     A check that was drawn on an account held by Chestnut Grove

and made payable to “Ihatsu Fudosan or Aldergrove Investment” in

the amount of $116,000 for “interest” was endorsed “Dep only” to

account number 250-0132969 at Security Pacific Bank (SP Bank),

which account was held in the name of Aldergrove (the Aldergrove

account).    On December 26, 1991, SP Bank credited the Aldergrove

account in the amount of $116,000.

     A check that was drawn on an account held by Group M and

made payable to “Ihatsu Fudosan or Aldergrove Investment” in the

amount of $84,700 for “interest” was endorsed “Dep only” to the

Aldergrove account.    On December 26, 1991, SP Bank credited the

Aldergrove account in the amount of $84,700.

     On December 31, 1991, SP Bank credited the Aldergrove

account in the amount of $140.66 for interest earned by the

account.
                                - 6 -

     C.   Analysis

           1.   Issue

     The issue is whether the interest payments that were

credited to the Aldergrove account in the amounts of $116,000,

$84,700, and $140.66 (the 1991 interest payments), are taxable to

petitioners (the 1991 interest issue).




           2.   Arguments of the Parties

     Petitioners argue that Mr. Bell and his wholly owned

corporations provided the financing that allowed Chestnut Grove

and Group M to acquire the Yakima property.     Petitioners argue

that the checks in the amounts of $116,000 and $84,700, both made

payable to Ihatsu Fudosan or Aldergrove (the Yakima interest

payments), represent interest payments to Mr. Bell for the Yakima

property loans and were held in trust for Mr. Bell by Aldergrove

until those funds were transferred to a Bank of Bermuda account

over which petitioner did not exercise any control, and,

therefore, Mr. Bell is taxable on those payments, “regardless of

whether Aldergrove Investments Co. was Petitioner's alter ego.”

     Alternatively, petitioners argue that petitioner lacked

sufficient dominion and control over the Aldergrove account to be

taxable on the 1991 interest payments.     Petitioners argue that
                               - 7 -

petitioner has received no benefit from any of the 1991 interest

payments and that those funds were transferred to a Bank of

Bermuda account over which petitioner did not exercise any

control.

     Lastly, petitioners assert that, even if the Court were to

find that Aldergrove must recognize the 1991 interest payments as

income, petitioners are taxable only on petitioner's distributive

share of that income.

     Respondent asserts that this Court in Monahan v.

Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1994-201 (Monahan I), affd. without

published opinion 
86 F.3d 1162
 (9th Cir. 1996),1 found that, in

1991, petitioner controlled Aldergrove partnership matters and

benefited from and controlled the funds in the Aldergrove

account.   Relying on the doctrine of collateral estoppel,

respondent argues that petitioner is precluded from relitigating

those issues.   Since the 1991 interest payments were deposited in

the Aldergrove account in 1991, respondent argues that those

payments are taxable to petitioner.




1
     It should be noted that 9th Cir. R. 36-3 provides that
dispositions other than opinions or orders designated for
publication shall not be regarded as precedent and shall not be
cited to or by the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit or any
district court of the Ninth Circuit, except when relevant under
the doctrines of law of the case, res judicata, or collateral
estoppel.
                                   - 8 -

     Respondent argues alternatively that, if the Court finds the

doctrine of collateral estoppel to be inapplicable, the 1991

interest payments are taxable to petitioners because petitioner

made acquisition and development loans for the Yakima property to

Chestnut Grove and Group M and benefited from and exercised

control over the 1991 interest payments.

          3.     Relevant Legal Principles

          a.     Interest Income

     Section 61(a)(4) provides that gross income means all income

from whatever source derived, including interest.      “Generally,

interest earned on investment is taxable to the person who

controls the principal.”     P.R. Farms, Inc. v. Commissioner, 
820 F.2d 1084
, 1086 (9th Cir. 1987) (citing Helvering v. Horst, 
311 U.S. 112
, 116-117 (1940)), affg. T.C. Memo. 1984-549.

“`[C]ommand over property or enjoyment of its economic benefits

* * *'”, which is the mark of true ownership, is a question of

fact to be determined from all of the attendant facts and

circumstances.    See Hang v. Commissioner, 
95 T.C. 74
, 80 (1990)

(quoting Anderson v. Commissioner, 
164 F.2d 870
, 873 (7th Cir.

1947), affg. 
5 T.C. 443
 (1945)).      Mere legal title is not

determinative of beneficial ownership.       See Serianni v.

Commissioner, 
80 T.C. 1090
, 1104 (1983), affd. 
765 F.2d 1051

(11th Cir. 1985).
                                - 9 -

           b.   The Doctrine of Issue Preclusion

     The doctrine of issue preclusion, or collateral estoppel,

provides that, once an issue of fact or law is “actually and

necessarily determined by a court of competent jurisdiction, that

determination is conclusive in subsequent suits based on a

different cause of action involving a party to the prior

litigation.”    Montana v. United States, 
440 U.S. 147
, 153 (1979)

(citing Parklane Hosiery Co. v. Shore, 
439 U.S. 322
, 326 n.5

(1979)).   Issue preclusion is a judicially created equitable

doctrine whose purposes are to protect parties from unnecessary

and redundant litigation, to conserve judicial resources, and to

foster certainty in and reliance on judicial action.   See, e.g.,

id. at 153-154; United States v. ITT Rayonier, Inc., 
627 F.2d 996
, 1000 (9th Cir. 1980).   This Court in Peck v. Commissioner,

90 T.C. 162
, 166-167 (1988), affd. 
904 F.2d 525
 (9th Cir. 1990),

set forth the following five conditions that must be satisfied

prior to application of issue preclusion in the context of a

factual dispute (the Peck requirements):

          (1) The issue in the second suit must be identical
     in all respects with the one decided in the first suit.
          (2) There must be a final judgment rendered by a
     court of competent jurisdiction.
          (3) Collateral estoppel may be invoked against
     parties and their privies to the prior judgment.
          (4) The parties must actually have litigated the
     issues and the resolution of these issues must have
     been essential to the prior decision.
                               - 10 -

          (5) The controlling facts and applicable legal
     rules must remain unchanged from those in the prior
     litigation. [Citations omitted.]

See also Clark v. Bear Stearns & Co., 
966 F.2d 1318
, 1320 (9th

Cir. 1992) (highlighting conditions (1) and (4) above).

           4.   Discussion

           a.   Preliminary Matters

     By order of this Court dated April 8, 1996, respondent's

motion for leave to file an amended answer to raise the

affirmative defense of collateral estoppel in this case was

granted.   Respondent now bears the burden of proving the

applicability of that defense.   Rule 142(a).

     The jurisdictional competency of this Court in Monahan I is

not contested by the parties in this case.    In addition, decision

in Monahan I was entered by this Court on August 29, 1994, and

was affirmed on appeal without modification by the Court of

Appeals for the Ninth Circuit on May 31, 1996.    Cf. Hudson v.

Commissioner, 
100 T.C. 590
, 593-594 (1993) (refusing to apply the

doctrine of collateral estoppel when an appellate court affirms a

trial court's judgment on different grounds).    No petition for

certiorari having been duly filed, decision in Monahan I has

become final under section 7481(a)(2)(A).    Lastly, there is

complete identity of parties between Monahan I and this case.

Both petitioners and respondent were parties in Monahan I and are
                              - 11 -

bound by that decision.   In sum, conditions (2) and (3) of the

Peck requirements are satisfied.

          b.   The 1991 Interest Issue

     The ultimate issue with respect to the 1991 interest

payments is whether those payments constitute gross income to

petitioners.   That issue was not litigated in Monahan I.   Thus,

petitioners are not precluded from contesting respondent's

determination that the 1991 interest payments are taxable to

petitioners.   Although this Court in Monahan I found that “funds

held in Aldergrove were used by and benefited petitioner

personally”, including funds credited to the Aldergrove account

on December 26, 1991, see infra sec. II.C.4.c., and command over

property or enjoyment of its economic benefits determines the

incidence of taxation, see supra sec. II.C.3.a., the Court did

not find that all interest payments credited to the Aldergrove

account in 1991 are taxable to petitioners.   Certainly, this

Court in Monahan I did not decide the 1991 interest issue.   The

equitable doctrine of issue preclusion requires that petitioners

be given an opportunity to litigate the 1991 interest issue.2


2
     That may simply be a different way of saying that the
doctrine of claim preclusion does not apply. In this context,
the scope of the issue preclusion analysis blurs the distinction
between claim preclusion and issue preclusion. See McClain v.
Apodaca, 
793 F.2d 1031
, 1033 (9th Cir. 1986) (“The concept of res
judicata embraces two doctrines, claim preclusion and issue
                                                   (continued...)
                               - 12 -

     Respondent directs our attention to this Court's holding in

Monahan I that interest income earned by Aldergrove on certified

deposit accounts in 1985 constituted income to petitioners.   It

is unclear whether respondent believes that that determination is

dispositive of the 1991 interest issue.   We believe, however,

that our holding in Monahan I with respect to the 1985 interest

income does not preclude petitioners from litigating the 1991

interest issue.    The doctrine of issue preclusion must be applied

carefully so that fairness to litigants is not compromised for

efficiency and economy.3   Some courts have advised narrow

application of the doctrine in the context of tax litigation.

See, e.g., Kennedy v. Commissioner, 
876 F.2d 1251
, 1257 (6th Cir.

1989), affg. Gray v. Commissioner, 
88 T.C. 1306
 (1987); 18 Moore,

Moore's Federal Practice, par. 132.02, at 132-38 (3d ed. 1997).

That approach appears to be a product of the “separable facts”

doctrine, first enunciated in Commissioner v. Sunnen, 
333 U.S. 591
, 601 (1948).   Although it is unclear whether the separable


2
 (...continued)
preclusion (or collateral estoppel), that bar, respectively, a
subsequent action or the subsequent litigation of a particular
issue because of the adjudication of a prior action.” (fn. ref.
omitted)).
3
     See United States v. Silliman, 
167 F.2d 607
, 614 (3d Cir.
1948) (“Such a rule of public policy [collateral estoppel] must
be watched in its application lest a blind adherence to it tend
to defeat the even firmer established policy of giving every
litigant a full and fair day in court.”).
                               - 13 -

facts doctrine is still good law in the tax context, see United

States v. Stauffer Chem. Co., 
464 U.S. 165
, 172 n.5 (1984); Peck

v. Commissioner, 
904 F.2d 525
, 527-528 (9th Cir. 1990), affg.

90 T.C. 162
 (1988),4 we believe, in any event, that denying a

party the opportunity to litigate an issue is a matter that

requires circumspection.   This Court will not use the doctrine of

issue preclusion as a blunt instrument for summarily denying

petitioners an opportunity to litigate the 1991 interest issue.

Instead, we prefer the approach that follows.

          c.    The Aldergrove Issue

     Issue preclusion may operate to preclude relitigation of

evidentiary facts determined in a prior proceeding.    See, e.g.,

Meier v. Commissioner, 
91 T.C. 273
, 286 (1988).    Thus, facts that

a party is precluded from relitigating in conjunction with other

facts established by evidence in the latter proceeding may

provide a basis to sustain a deficiency determination by the

Commissioner.    Id. at 288-289.   The parties agree that the 1991

interest payments are interest payments that were credited to the

Aldergrove account in 1991.   To establish that the 1991 interest


4
     It should also be noted that the Court of Appeals for the
Ninth Circuit, to which an appeal in this case would likely lie,
stated that the Supreme Court limited the application of
Commissioner v. Sunnen, 
333 U.S. 591
 (1948), to cases where there
has been a significant change in the legal climate. See, e.g.,
Peck v. Commissioner, 
904 F.2d 525
, 527 (9th Cir. 1990), affg.
90 T.C. 162
 (1988).
                              - 14 -

payments are taxable to petitioners, respondent asserts that, in

1991, petitioner controlled Aldergrove partnership matters and

that petitioner benefited from and controlled the funds in the

Aldergrove account.   Respondent relies on Monahan I and the

doctrine of issue preclusion to establish those underlying facts.

     In Monahan I, this Court considered the Commissioner's

determination of deficiencies in and additions to petitioners'

Federal income tax for 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, and 1988.   This

Court, among other things, found that petitioner's purported

repayment of his negative capital account in a partnership, Span

Services, lacked economic substance and that petitioner, thus,

recognized gain on the termination of his interest in that

partnership.   In rejecting petitioner's assertion that he had an

obligation to repay Aldergrove for its payment of an obligation

incurred to repay the negative capital account, this Court

stated:

          Petitioners contend that petitioner then had an
     obligation to “contribute” to or repay Aldergrove as a
     result of its satisfaction of the joint $400,000
     obligation. However, there was no written agreement
     regarding such an obligation. Petitioner's purported
     payments to Aldergrove on that “obligation” also lacked
     economic substance or remained in petitioner's control
     by virtue of his control over Aldergrove. Petitioner's
     first payment was made 2 years later, on February 25,
     1988, when he transferred $125,000 to an Aldergrove
     account over which he had signature authority. On the
     same day, pursuant to petitioner's instructions
     Aldergrove transferred $110,200 to Hansa Finance and
     Trust, B.V. (Hansa Finance), an entity wholly owned and
                        - 15 -

controlled by Mr. Bell. On March 2, 1988, Hansa
Finance transferred $110,000 to Group M Construction,
Inc., a Washington corporation owned by petitioner
(from 45 to 50 percent during the years at issue) and
his brothers (from 50 to 55 percent during the years at
issue). On March 7, 1988, Hansa Finance transferred
$17,084.46 back to Aldergrove.

     Petitioner made no additional payments to
Aldergrove on the $400,000 “obligation” prior to filing
his petition in this case on July 8, 1991. He made two
additional payments after this time. On December 26,
1991, petitioner transferred $25,000 to Aldergrove. On
December 18, 1992, petitioner issued a check for
$250,000 to Aldergrove and a check for $212,369 to
“Ihatsu Fudosan, Ltd. or Aldergrove Investment”. Both
checks were deposited into an Aldergrove account over
which petitioner had signature authority.

     Neither of these additional payments had economic
substance. At this time, petitioner's right to
exercise his SAR's [stock appreciation rights] in GML
was unrestricted. The contribution to Aldergrove
increased the value of both petitioner's and GML's
partnership interest in Aldergrove. Thus, it also
increased the fair market value of GML's stock and
petitioner's SAR's. Petitioner exercised control over
all Aldergrove partnership matters by virtue of his
90-percent voting interest. Numerous other
transactions also support the conclusion that funds
held in Aldergrove were used by and benefited
petitioner personally, including other “loans” to
Group M Construction and Chestnut Grove Investments
(also partially owned by petitioner) made through Hansa
Finance. We find, therefore, that none of the payments
made by petitioner to Aldergrove in “repayment” of a
purported $400,000 loan had economic substance.

     Petitioner argued at trial and on brief that
Mr. Bell had the ability to remove principal from GML
or Aldergrove, thus reducing the value of petitioner's
SAR's and placing Aldergrove funds beyond petitioner's
control. Mr. Bell apparently did make such a transfer
only once. However, even in this instance, the bulk of
the funds removed were immediately transferred to
Group M Construction and later back to Aldergrove. As
                              - 16 -

     we have already discussed, petitioner was clearly in
     control of the activities of both GML and Aldergrove.
     The money held by Aldergrove was part of petitioner's
     asset protection plan and primarily benefited
     petitioner. The allocation of Aldergrove's profits was
     subject to a partner vote, over which petitioner had
     control. Moreover, GML assigned its interest in the
     principal, issues, and profits of Aldergrove to
     petitioner as security for payment upon any exercise by
     petitioner of his SAR's. Finally, as discussed above,
     the formation of Span/Hansa Management, an integral
     part of petitioner's asset protection plan, provided an
     additional device by which petitioner obtained the
     benefits of funds flowing between Aldergrove, Span
     Corp., and GML. Petitioner was, in fact, the primary
     beneficiary of transactions between all these entities.
     [Monahan I; fn. ref. omitted.]

The Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit agreed with this Court

and stated that the “taxpayers had ultimate control of the monies

involved in all of the transactions at issue.”   Monahan v.

Commissioner, 77 AFTR 2d 96-2340, at 96-2340, 96-2 USTC par.

50,386, at 85,271-85,272 (9th Cir. 1996).

     In sum, this Court examined petitioner's relationship with

Aldergrove Investments Co., the same partnership in issue in this

case, and determined that certain payments made to Aldergrove,

including a payment in the amount of $25,000 on December 26, 1991

(the $25,000 Aldergrove payment), lacked economic substance

because petitioner exercised control over all Aldergrove

partnership matters and benefited from and controlled the funds

held by Aldergrove.   The $25,000 Aldergrove payment considered in

Monahan I was deposited in account number 250-0132969 at SP Bank,
                              - 17 -

the same account in which the 1991 interest payments were

deposited.   Indeed, the $25,000 Aldergrove payment was credited

to the Aldergrove account on the same day as the Yakima interest

payments were credited to that account.   Thus, petitioner's

control over Aldergrove partnership matters on December 26, 1991,

and his benefit from and control over funds in the Aldergrove

account on December 26, 1991 (together, the Aldergrove issue), is

an issue that was decided in Monahan I and is identical to a

factual issue relevant to respondent's determination of a

deficiency in this case.5

     In addition, the Aldergrove issue was actually litigated in

Monahan I, and resolution of that issue was essential to the

decision in Monahan I.   Petitioners do not dispute satisfaction

of that condition of the Peck requirements.   Also, petitioners do

not claim that the applicable legal rules have changed; however,

they assert that issue preclusion does not apply because the



5
     Although respondent seeks to preclude petitioners from
relitigating petitioner's control over Aldergrove partnership
matters in 1991 and his benefit from and control over funds in
the Aldergrove account in 1991, we believe that petitioner's
control over Aldergrove partnership matters on Dec. 26, 1991, and
his benefit from and control over funds in the Aldergrove account
on Dec. 26, 1991, are the only facts that are necessarily
established by this Court's finding in Monahan I that the $25,000
Aldergrove payment lacked economic substance. That is not to say
that this Court in Monahan I found that petitioner's relationship
with Aldergrove was any different on dates other than Dec. 26,
1991. See infra secs. II.C.4.d., e., and f.
                              - 18 -

controlling facts have changed.   In particular, petitioners

assert that petitioner and Mr. Bell were no longer on friendly

terms in 1991 because Mr. Bell was being audited by the same

revenue agent who audited petitioners for the taxable years in

issue in Monahan I.   As a result, petitioners claim that Geoffrey

Briant, a Canadian citizen, became involved as a mediator with

control over distributions from the Aldergrove account in 1991.

That purported change in the controlling facts, however, would

have been relevant to this Court in deciding Monahan I because

the Aldergrove issue was critical to the Court's conclusion that

petitioner's purported repayment of his negative capital account

in Span Services lacked economic substance, but petitioners

failed to raise Mr. Briant's alleged involvement in Aldergrove

despite the opportunity to present evidence on that issue in

Monahan I.   The observation of the Court of Appeals for the Tenth

Circuit in Jones v. United States, 
466 F.2d 131
, 136 (10th Cir.

1972), is apt:

          Evidence of this type is not the result of a
     different factual situation or changed circumstances.
     It is, instead, historical in nature and could have
     been admitted at the first trial if properly submitted.
     If the taxpayers' case was not effectively presented at
     the first trial it was their fault; affording them a
     second opportunity in which to litigate the matter,
     with the benefit of hindsight, would contravene the
     very principles upon which collateral estoppel is based
     and should not be allowed. * * *
                              - 19 -

See also Yamaha Corp. of Am. v. United States, 
961 F.2d 245
, 257

(D.C. Cir. 1992) (quoting Jones v. United States, supra).

     Petitioners also assert the following as another change in

the controlling facts:

     [W]hen the case [Monahan I] was tried in January of
     1993, Lyn Bell had not yet caused Grove Management
     Limited to be stricken from the Registry of Companies.
     His demonstrated and undisputed ability to dissolve
     Grove Management demonstrates his control over that
     company and proves that Aldergrove was not Petitioner's
     alter ego.

That purported change in controlling facts, according to

petitioners, is sufficient to prevent application of issue

preclusion.   Petitioners' assertion appears to be a variation of

an argument made in a memorandum in support of their motion for

reconsideration of Monahan I, filed June 13, 1994 (the

reconsideration motion).   In that memorandum, petitioners argued

as follows:

          When the case [Monahan I] was tried in January of
     1993, Grove Management Limited was a solvent entity.
     The Court might reasonably conclude, as it did, that
     petitioner's SAR's in Grove Management, Ltd., were
     valuable assets. In December of 1993, however,
     petitioners were advised by Anguillan counsel that GML
     was listed as an inactive corporation and was to be
     stricken from the Anguillan Register of Companies.
     Petitioners' SAR's were rendered worthless by the
     striking, and the Court's conclusion that the Monahans'
     retained control over funds placed in GML by virtue of
     those SAR's became untenable.

The Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, in reviewing this

Court's denial of the reconsideration motion, rejected that
                              - 20 -

argument by stating that this Court “relied on evidence clearly

showing that during the relevant time period taxpayers retained

control over the funds.   That they lost their investments many

years later is not relevant to their tax liabilities for the

years at issue.”   Monahan v. Commissioner, 77 AFTR 2d 96-2340, at

96-2341, 96-2 USTC par. 50,386, at 85,272 (9th Cir. 1996).

     Similarly, we believe that this Court in Monahan I

determined that, on December 26, 1991, petitioner controlled

Aldergrove partnership matters and benefited from and controlled

the funds in the Aldergrove account, upon consideration of

evidence relating to the relevant time period.     The fact that

Mr. Bell may have exercised control over GML in 1993 is

insufficient to deny preclusive effect to this Court's finding on

the Aldergrove issue in Monahan I.     Essentially, petitioners

question the propriety of that finding by claiming the existence

of new evidence, but fail to show that the controlling facts

underlying the Aldergrove issue have changed.     This Court, in

Monahan I, was presented with evidence and argument relating to

Mr. Bell's purported control over GML, but, upon consideration of

that evidence and countervailing evidence, the Court rejected

petitioners' assertion.   New evidence of Mr. Bell's purported

control over GML would be cumulative only and does not alter the

controlling facts underlying the Aldergrove issue during the
                               - 21 -

relevant time period.   Cf. Klein v. Commissioner, 
880 F.2d 260
,

263-264 (10th Cir. 1989) (this Court did not err in concluding

that new expert testimony regarding the taxpayer's mental

incompetency did not change the controlling facts for purposes of

collateral estoppel when similar evidence had been presented and

considered in the prior proceeding), affg. T.C. Memo. 1984-392.

     In conclusion, we find that all five conditions of the Peck

requirements have been satisfied with respect to the Aldergrove

issue, and, therefore, petitioners are precluded from

relitigating that issue.   Thus, we find that, on December 26,

1991, petitioner controlled Aldergrove partnership matters and

benefited from and controlled the funds in the Aldergrove

account.

           d.   Petitioners Attempt To Cast Doubt on the
                Sufficiency of the Aldergrove Issue

     We shall now turn to an examination of the evidence in this

case in light of the Aldergrove issue established in Monahan I.

There is no dispute that the 1991 interest payments are interest

payments that were credited to the Aldergrove account on

December 26, 1991, and December 31, 1991.   That fact in

conjunction with our finding that, on December 26, 1991,

petitioner controlled Aldergrove partnership matters and

benefited from and controlled the funds in the Aldergrove account

permits this Court to infer that petitioner had control over and
                              - 22 -

benefited from the 1991 interest payments.   That inference would

lead this Court to conclude that petitioners are taxable on the

1991 interest payments.   See supra sec. II.C.3.a.

     In an attempt to rebut the inference that petitioner had

control over and benefited from the Yakima interest payments

portion of the 1991 interest payments, petitioners assert the

following:   (1) on March 1, 1987, petitioner borrowed $200,000

from Mr. Bell, through Hansa Finance, and loaned those funds to

Chestnut Grove and Group M to make the initial downpayment on the

Yakima property; (2) on March 1, 1987, Chestnut Grove and Group M

executed notes to petitioner for $23,382 and $176,618,

respectively; (3) on March 1, 1988, petitioner borrowed $110,000

from Mr. Bell, through Hansa Finance, and loaned those funds to

Group M to make a second payment for the Yakima property; (4) on

March 1, 1988, Group M executed a note to petitioner for

$110,000; (5) on August 1, 1988, Mr. Bell assigned petitioner's

promissory notes to Jaguar Holdings (which became Ihatsu

Fudosan); (6) on March 1, 1989, Group M borrowed $150,000 from

Ihatsu Fudosan to make the final payment on the Yakima property

and to maintain working capital; and (7) on November 1, 1991,

Chestnut Grove and Group M executed assumption of liabilities

agreements for the notes originally made by petitioner to Hansa

Finance.   On the basis of those alleged facts, petitioners argue
                              - 23 -

that the Yakima interest payments represent interest payments to

Mr. Bell for the Yakima property loans and were held in trust for

Mr. Bell by Aldergrove until those funds were transferred to a

Bank of Bermuda account over which petitioner did not exercise

any control, and, therefore, petitioners are not taxable on those

payments.

     Petitioners present the testimony of petitioner and of

Timothy Monahan, petitioner's brother and president of both

Chestnut Grove and Group M, and numerous documents to support

their assertion that the Yakima interest payments represent

interest paid to Mr. Bell.   In response, respondent essentially

relies on the Aldergrove issue and petitioners' concession that

the funds allegedly loaned to petitioner by Hansa Finance were

previously transferred to Hansa Finance from Aldergrove

(petitioners' concession).   Respondent asserts:   “Hansa Finance

should be considered a mere `straw man': Aldergrove advanced at

least $200,000 of the money to Hansa before Hansa provided

$310,000 to Petitioner.”   Petitioners respond as follows:

          When Respondent ominously intones that John
     Monahan “acknowledges on cross examination that Hansa
     first received the initial land acquisition funds
     ($200,000) from Aldergrove,” * * * she forgets that
     $570,000 of Aldergrove Investments [sic] initial
     $579,000 of capital was contributed to Aldergrove by
     Bell acting through Grove Management Ltd., the wholly
     owned subsidiary of his wholly owned Span Corp., Ltd.
     * * *. Lynwood S. Bell shifted those funds from
     Aldergrove to Hansa Finance for the purpose of loaning
                                - 24 -

     the money to John Monahan, whose own $9,000 capital
     contribution to Aldergrove Investments played no
     significant part in the transaction. Although
     Respondent argues that Petitioner made the loans to
     Group M and Chestnut Grove Investments, * * * the
     partnership agreement reflects that Bell, and not John
     Monahan, is the ultimate source of the funds used by
     Group M and Chestnut Grove Investments to purchase the
     16-acre Yakima parcel. Accordingly, Bell, and not
     petitioners, is taxable on the interest paid by those
     corporations regarding the loans.

     We agree with petitioners that the Aldergrove issue and

petitioners' concession do not necessarily undermine petitioners'

assertion that the Yakima interest payments represent interest

paid to Mr. Bell because respondent has not established that

Aldergrove was anything other than what it purported to be when

funds were transferred to Hansa Finance.   In other words, the

Aldergrove issue relates to petitioner's relationship with

Aldergrove on December 26, 1991, and may provide reasonable

inferences regarding petitioner's relationship with Aldergrove

during the entirety of 1991, but does not provide a sufficient

basis to undermine petitioners' contention that Mr. Bell was the

“ultimate source” of the funds loaned to Chestnut Grove and

Group M in 1987 and 1988.

          e.    Other Factual Issues Established in Monahan I

          (1)    Introduction

     In respondent's brief, respondent asserts that this Court

     should give effect to the unambiguous findings of
     Monahan I and find that Petitioner is collaterally
                              - 25 -

     estopped from relitigating the factual determinations
     that the Petitioner controlled Aldergrove partnership
     matters in 1991 and that the Petitioner benefitted from
     and controlled the funds in the Aldergrove account in
     1991.

Although respondent's affirmative defense is broad in one

respect, see supra note 5, respondent restrictively frames the

issue that respondent seeks to preclude petitioners from

relitigating.   Since respondent directs our analysis of that

affirmative defense to the facts relating to 1991 and also bears

the burden of proving the applicability of the defense, we must

assume that respondent does not seek to preclude petitioners from

relitigating this Court's findings in Monahan I regarding

petitioner's relationship with Aldergrove and other entities

prior to 1991 (the pre-1991 issues).

          (2)   The Authority of This Court To Raise Issue
                Preclusion Sua Sponte

     Issue preclusion is an affirmative defense that must be

pleaded, Rule 39, otherwise, it is deemed to be waived.    See,

e.g., Jefferson v. Commissioner, 
50 T.C. 963
, 966-967 (1968).

Whether a party is precluded from relitigating an issue requires

particularized analysis, and, thus, respondent must be deemed to

have waived the defense of issue preclusion with respect to the

pre-1991 issues even though respondent has properly raised that

defense with respect to the Aldergrove issue.   This Court,

however, need not always accept waivers of the defense of issue
                               - 26 -

preclusion.   This Court may raise the doctrine of issue

preclusion sua sponte.    Cf. Holloway Constr. Co. v. United States

Dept. of Labor, 
891 F.2d 1211
, 1212 (6th Cir. 1989) (a district

court may raise the doctrine of res judicata sua sponte); McClain

v. Apodaca, 
793 F.2d 1031
, 1033 (9th Cir. 1986) (a bankruptcy

court may raise the doctrine of res judicata sua sponte when it

allowed the parties to submit posttrial briefs on the

applicability of the doctrine); Alyeska Pipeline Serv. Co. v.

United States, 
231 Ct. Cl. 540
, 
688 F.2d 765
, 771 (1982) (“when

necessary, the court may raise the question of claim or issue

preclusion sua sponte”); Fazi v. Commissioner, 
105 T.C. 436
, 444-

445 (1995) (this Court may raise the doctrine of judicial

estoppel sua sponte).    The purposes of the doctrine of issue

preclusion include the conservation of judicial resources and the

promotion of certainty in and reliance on judicial action.    See

supra sec. II.C.3.b.    Courts have an independent interest in

advancing those purposes, see United States v. Sioux Nation of

Indians, 
448 U.S. 371
, 433 (1980) (Rehnquist, J., dissenting),

and, therefore, respondent's, perhaps inadvertent, consent to

relitigation of the pre-1991 issues cannot divest this Court of

the authority to preclude petitioners from denying certain facts

established after full and fair litigation in Monahan I.
                              - 27 -

     Sua sponte consideration of issue preclusion generally

should be limited to circumstances where the parties are given an

opportunity to address the applicability of the doctrine to a

particular issue.   See Nevada Employees Association, Inc. v.

Keating, 
903 F.2d 1223
, 1225-1226 (9th Cir. 1990); McClain v.

Apodaca, supra at 1033; see also Blonder-Tongue Labs., Inc. v.

University of Ill. Found., 
402 U.S. 313
, 350 (1971) (“The purpose

of * * * [requiring claim preclusion and issue preclusion to be

pleaded] is to give the opposing party notice of the plea of

estoppel and a chance to argue, if he can, why the imposition of

an estoppel would be inappropriate.” (emphasis added)).   The

Court need not subject the issue preclusion decision to the

rigors of the adversarial process, however, if doing so would be

futile.   Cf., e.g., McKinney v. Oklahoma Dept. of Human Servs.,

925 F.2d 363
, 365 (10th Cir. 1991) (District Court may sua sponte

dismiss a complaint under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) without notice

and an opportunity to respond when it is “patently obvious” that

claimant could not prevail); Baker v. Director, U.S. Parole

Commn., 
916 F.2d 725
, 726-727 (D.C. Cir. 1990) (same); Omar v.

Sea-Land Serv., Inc., 
813 F.2d 986
, 991 (9th Cir. 1987) (where

counterclaimant cannot possibly win relief because its theory was

the same as its defense to a claim, which defense was rejected

after a hearing, the trial court did not err in effectively
                               - 28 -

dismissing counterclaim without notice and an opportunity to

oppose).   But cf. Cochran v. Morris, 
73 F.3d 1310
, 1320-1321,

1321 n.2 (4th Cir. 1996) (Michael, J., dissenting) (argues for an

absolute prohibition against dismissals on the merits that are

entered without notice and an opportunity to respond).

           (3)   Application of Issue Preclusion Sua Sponte

     This Court has been apprised of the decision in Monahan I

and finds it appropriate to consider sua sponte the preclusive

effect of facts established in that proceeding, which facts are

relevant to an issue in dispute in this case; i.e., whether

Mr. Bell was the ultimate source of the funds loaned to Chestnut

Grove and Group M.   Petitioners are precluded from denying that,

on February 26, 1987, and December 22, 1988 (as will be explained

below, the dates on which Aldergrove received certain “interest”

payments), petitioner controlled Aldergrove partnership matters

and benefited from and controlled the funds held by Aldergrove

(the sua sponte issues).6   All five conditions of the Peck

requirements, see supra sec. II.C.3.b., are satisfied with

respect to the sua sponte issues, and, therefore, issue



6
     This Court sua sponte could preclude petitioners from
denying certain facts established in Monahan I relating to
petitioner's transfer of $125,000 to Aldergrove on Feb. 25, 1988,
and subsequent transfers, but for convenience we shall examine
facts relating to certain interest payments made in 1987 and
1988.
                              - 29 -

preclusion applies.   In addition, we believe that allowing

petitioners to examine and contest the application of issue

preclusion with respect to the sua sponte issues would be futile.

This Court's official file in Monahan I was admitted as evidence

for the purpose of deciding whether petitioners are precluded

from relitigating the Aldergrove issue, and posttrial briefs were

submitted by the parties to present their respective arguments.

The only difference between the Aldergrove issue and the sua

sponte issues is the date with respect to which this Court in

Monahan I examined petitioner's relationship with Aldergrove.

Under these circumstances, petitioners could add nothing to our

analysis of the sua sponte issues and, therefore, are not

prejudiced by the absence of notice and an opportunity to

respond.

     In Monahan I, this Court, among other things, sustained

respondent's disallowance of certain interest deductions claimed

by petitioners for 1987 and 1988.   Petitioners reported those

deductions as mortgage interest payments on an alleged loan of

$150,000 from Hansa Finance made in 1986.   After concessions,

petitioners argued that they were entitled to deduct a portion of

the interest payments as personal interest under section 163(h),

and respondent argued that the loan and the interest payments

lacked economic substance.
                             - 30 -

     This Court found the following facts:   (1) “the ultimate

source and resting place for the $150,000 was Aldergrove”,

(2) the interest payments made by petitioners on February 26,

1987, and December 22, 1988, on the purported loan were

immediately transferred to Aldergrove, and (3) those payments

lacked economic substance because petitioner controlled

Aldergrove partnership matters and benefited from and controlled

the funds held by Aldergrove when the payments were made.    We

stated:

          We find that these various payments by petitioners
     lacked economic substance. Petitioner testified that
     the “mortgage” on his home was part of his asset
     protection plan, and that by reducing his equity in his
     home, he hoped to replace an “unknown liability that
     could take the house away” with a “known liability that
     you know you can repay,” i.e., the “loan” note.
     Petitioner neglected to complete the picture in his
     testimony however. For any real protection to occur,
     petitioners would have also had to transfer the equity,
     or loan amount to a place unreachable by “unknown”
     creditors. From our analysis of the above
     transactions, it appears that petitioners did just that
     by transferring equity through Hansa Finance (or Ihatsu
     Fudosan) to Aldergrove. This fits squarely into
     petitioner's own testimony, since petitioner believed
     that assets held in Aldergrove were protected. Of
     course, petitioner had to have access and control over
     Aldergrove's assets to make the plan truly beneficial
     to him. He did, through his security interest in GML's
     Aldergrove capital and profits, and through his SAR's
     in GML. Thus, the purported loan amount was never
     outside of petitioner's dominion and control and the
     principal and interest payments made by petitioners
     were nothing more than transfers from one beneficially
     owned account to another. * * * [Monahan I; fn. ref.
     omitted.]
                               - 31 -

     As a preliminary matter, conditions (2) and (3) of the Peck

requirements are satisfied, and petitioners reasonably could not

have argued to the contrary.   See supra sec. II.C.4.a.    The sua

sponte issues are identical in all respects to factual issues

that were decided in Monahan I.7   The Court in Monahan I examined

petitioner's relationship with Aldergrove, the same partnership

in issue in this case, on February 26, 1987, and December 22,

1988, and determined that, on those dates, certain interest

payments made to Aldergrove lacked economic substance because

petitioner controlled Aldergrove partnership matters and

benefited from and controlled the funds held by Aldergrove.    In

addition, the sua sponte issues were actually litigated in

Monahan I, and resolution of those issues was essential to the

decision in Monahan I that the interest payments made in 1987 and

1988 were not deductible.   Therefore, conditions (1) and (4) of

the Peck requirements are satisfied with respect to the sua

sponte issues, and we believe that nothing petitioners could have

presented would change our conclusion.   Lastly, condition (5) of

the Peck requirements is satisfied; any potential argument

relating to a change in the applicable legal rules would not be

tenable, and any potential argument relating to a change in the


7
     That condition of the Peck requirements is, in fact,
satisfied because those factual issues decided in Monahan I are
relevant to the 1991 interest issue.
                               - 32 -

controlling facts would be dismissed in the same manner that

similar contentions of petitioners regarding the Aldergrove issue

were dismissed, see supra sec. II.C.4.c.

     In conclusion, petitioners are precluded from denying that,

on February 26, 1987, and December 22, 1988, petitioner

controlled Aldergrove partnership matters and benefited from and

controlled the funds held by Aldergrove.

           f.   Are the 1991 Interest Payments Taxable to
                Petitioners?

     Promissory notes in evidence indicate that petitioner loaned

the following amounts to Chestnut Grove and Group M, and we so

find:




    Date                       Maker                 Amount

March 1, 1987              Chestnut Grove            $23,382
March 1, 1987              Group M                   176,618
March 1, 1988              Group M                   110,000
January 19, 1989           Group M                   200,000

Petitioners present numerous documents and other evidence to

explain the fate of the first three of those notes and to support

their assertion that the Yakima interest payments represent

interest paid to Mr. Bell.   The findings, however, that, on

February 26, 1987, and December 22, 1988, petitioner controlled

Aldergrove partnership matters and benefited from and controlled
                             - 33 -

the funds held by Aldergrove, in conjunction with petitioners'

concession that Aldergrove was the source of the funds allegedly

loaned to petitioner by Hansa Finance, $200,000 ($23,382 +

$176,618) on March 1, 1987, and $110,000 on March 1, 1988, cast

doubt on petitioners' version of the loan transactions.

     A reasonable inference to be drawn from the sua sponte

issues is that petitioner's relationship with Aldergrove did not

change between February 26, 1987, and December 22, 1988, which

would mean that petitioner controlled Aldergrove partnership

matters and benefited from and controlled the funds held by

Aldergrove when Aldergrove likely transferred to Hansa Finance

the funds that were loaned back to petitioner.   Therefore,

petitioners would have us believe that petitioner (1) in

substance, transferred funds to Hansa Finance, (2) borrowed those

funds back from Hansa Finance, (3) made loans with those funds to

Chestnut Grove and Group M, (4) removed himself from the loan

transactions by means of certain agreements, (5) received

interest payments from Chestnut Grove and Group M by means of his

relationship with Aldergrove on December 26, 1991, but (6) held

the interest in trust for Mr. Bell because Mr. Bell was the

ultimate source of the funds loaned to Chestnut Grove and

Group M.
                                - 34 -

       We simply do not believe petitioners' paper trail of

promissory notes, deeds of trust, assignment agreements, and

assumption of liabilities agreements tells the whole story

because the funds that were loaned to Chestnut Grove and Group M

in 1987 and 1988 previously traveled a circuitous route, which

begins and ends with petitioner, in direct contradiction to

petitioners' assertion that Mr. Bell was the ultimate source of

those funds.     In sum, we have considered all of the evidence

presented by petitioners, but, because the Yakima interest

payments were credited to the Aldergrove account on December 26,

1991, and, on that date, petitioner controlled Aldergrove

partnership matters and benefited from and controlled the funds

in the Aldergrove account, we are not persuaded that the Yakima

interest payments represent anything other than interest paid to

petitioner on account of loans made by petitioner.

       D.   Conclusion

       We hold that the 1991 interest payments are taxable to

petitioners.

III.    $25,000 Deposit

       A.   Introduction

       In the notice of deficiency, respondent determined that

$317,160 was deposited in bank accounts held in the name of

petitioners during 1991 and that those deposits were unexplained.
                               - 35 -

Respondent increased petitioners' taxable income accordingly.

After concessions by respondent, a single $25,000 deposit remains

in dispute.    The issue is whether that deposit is taxable to

petitioners.

     B.   Analysis

     On December 26, 1991, petitioner transferred $25,000 from an

account held by Group M at SP Bank to an account held by

petitioners at the same bank (the payment).    Petitioners, citing

Ingalls v. Patterson, 
158 F. Supp. 627
, 641-642 (N.D. Ala. 1958),

argue that the payment “represents a reimbursement of legal fees

paid by Petitioner on behalf of Group M Construction so that the

reimbursement is not income to Petitioner.”    Respondent argues

that petitioners have failed to substantiate their explanation of

the payment.    The parties' presentation of the issue with respect

to the $25,000 deposit requires this Court to examine only the

facts relating to the payment.    Respondent does not contest the

legal basis upon which petitioners exclude that payment from

their income for 1991.

     Timothy Monahan testified that, although petitioner did not

present any documents to Group M demonstrating the amount of the

legal expenses to be reimbursed, he was convinced that petitioner

spent at least $25,000 and, thus, authorized the payment.    At

trial, petitioner stated that he did not remember the exact
                               - 36 -

amount paid for legal expenses on behalf of Group M, but stated

that the amount was substantially more than $25,000.    There are

no documents in evidence that substantiate petitioners' claim

that petitioner incurred legal expenses on behalf of Group M.

Petitioners contend that the testimony of petitioner and his

brother “was straight forward and credible.”    We disagree.   The

self-serving testimony of petitioner, vaguely corroborated only

by the testimony of his brother, does not persuade us that the

payment represents reimbursement of legal fees paid by petitioner

on behalf of Group M.   Cf. Day v. Commissioner, 
975 F.2d 534
, 538

(8th Cir. 1992) (“The Tax Court is not required to give credence

to the self-serving testimony of interested parties.”), affg. in

part and revg. in part T.C. Memo. 1991-140; Geiger v.

Commissioner, 
440 F.2d 688
 (9th Cir. 1971) (this Court did not

err when it found that taxpayer's uncontradicted testimony plus

the testimony of her accountant, both unsubstantiated by any

documentary evidence, did not carry the burden of proof), affg.

T.C. Memo. 1969-159.    Petitioners have failed to carry their

burden of proof.   Therefore, we conclude that the $25,000 deposit

is taxable to petitioners.

IV.   Penalty

      Section 6662(a) provides for an accuracy-related penalty in

the amount equal to 20 percent of the portion of an underpayment
                                - 37 -

of tax attributable to, among other things, any substantial

understatement of income tax.    Sec. 6662(a), (b)(2).   In the

notice of deficiency, respondent determined that the entire

underpayment of tax for the 1991 taxable year was due to a

substantial understatement of income tax.    Petitioners bear the

burden of proving that respondent's determination is erroneous.

See Rule 142(a).   In their briefs, petitioners simply assert that

there is no substantial understatement of income tax.     On the

record before us, we find that respondent's determination of a

penalty under section 6662(a) is correct, except to the extent

that it relates to respondent's concessions regarding the

unexplained bank deposits discussed in supra section III.A.

V.   Conclusion

      Respondent's determinations of a deficiency in and penalty

on petitioners' Federal income tax for the 1991 taxable year are

sustained to the extent set forth in this report.


                                          Decision will be entered

                                     under Rule 155.

Source:  CourtListener

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