T.C. Memo. 2014-99
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
RERI HOLDINGS I, LLC, HAROLD LEVINE, TAX MATTERS PARTNER,
Petitioner v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket No. 9324-08. Filed May 22, 2014.
LLC contributed a successor member interest in another LLC
to University. TMP moves for partial summary judgment that, as a
matter of law, the doctrines of "sham" and "lack of economic
substance" are not applicable to the determination of whether a
taxpayer's charitable contribution deduction is allowable under I.R.C.
sec. 170.
Held: TMP's motion will be denied.
Randall Gregory Dick and Rebekah E. Schechtman, for petitioner.
Travis Vance III, Kristen I. Nygren, John M. Altman, and Leon St. Laurent,
for respondent.
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[*2] MEMORANDUM OPINION
HALPERN, Judge: This is a partnership-level action brought in response to
a notice of final partnership administrative adjustment. The action involves RERI
Holdings I, LLC (RERI). On its 2003 income tax return RERI reported a
charitable contribution of property worth $33,019,000. Respondent determined
that RERI overstated the value of the contribution by $29,119,000. He also
determined that, on account of the overstatement, he would apply an accuracy-
related penalty to any resulting underpayment of income tax. Petitioner assigned
error to respondent's determinations. Respondent answered, supporting his
determination that RERI had overstated the value of the contribution with the
allegation that the transaction giving rise to RERI's charitable contribution "is a
sham for tax purposes or lacks economic substance, and therefore the transaction
should be disregarded for federal tax purposes and the deduction disallowed in its
entirety."
The case is presently before us on petitioner's motion for partial summary
judgment (motion). Petitioner moves for partial summary adjudication in his favor
"that the doctrines 'sham' and 'lack of economic substance' are not applicable to the
determination of whether a taxpayer's contribution to charity is allowable under
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[*3] I.R.C. § 170." Petitioner has, thus, raised an issue of law with respect to
which a partial summary judgment is appropriate. See Rule 121(a) and (b).1
Respondent objects to our granting the motion. We will deny the motion.
Background
Previously in this case we disposed by order of a motion by respondent for
partial summary judgment.2 In doing so we relied on certain facts that we believed
were not in dispute. The parties do not dispute any of those facts; in fact,
petitioner relies on a portion of those facts in support of the motion. We shall,
therefore, with minor modifications and additions as relevant to the motion, again
rely on those facts. The facts we rely on are as follows.
1
Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal
Revenue Code in effect for 2003, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court
Rules of Practice and Procedure.
2
Respondent moved for partial summary adjudication in his favor that, if the
valuation tables provided for in sec. 7520 are to be used in valuing the charitable
contribution in issue, the challenged contribution must be reduced by (1)
depreciation and (2) the entire amount of the mortgage indebtedness encumbering
the underlying property. By order dated May 5, 2011, we granted that motion with
respect to respondent's first prayer and denied it with respect to his second prayer.
We denied the motion with respect to respondent's second prayer on the ground
that there was a genuine dispute as to a material fact. See Rule 121(b).
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[*4] RERI
RERI was formed as a Delaware limited liability company on March 4,
2002. It was dissolved on May 11, 2004. RERI is classified as a partnership for
Federal income tax purposes. For 2003, RERI filed a Form 1065, U.S. Return of
Partnership Income (return).
The Charitable Contribution
RERI reported on the return as a charitable contribution its transfer to the
Regents of the University of Michigan (University) of what RERI described on the
return as "100% of the remainder estate in the membership interest in H.W.
Hawthorne Holdings, LLC" (Holdings). Holdings, RERI reported, "owns all of
the membership interest of a ['single purpose, single member'] Delaware limited
liability company". That Delaware LLC is RS Hawthorne, LLC (Hawthorne),
which RERI described on the return as owning "the fee simple absolute in a parcel
of land improved as a AT&T web hosting facility located at 2301 West 120th
Street, Hawthorne, California" (Hawthorne property).
Red Sea Tech I, Inc.
The Hawthorne property had come to be owned by Hawthorne on February
6, 2002, pursuant to Hawthorne's execution of a real estate contract that
Hawthorne had received from Red Sea Tech I, Inc. (Red Sea). Hawthorne
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[*5] purchased the Hawthorne property for $42,350,000. To fund that purchase,
Hawthorne borrowed $43,671,739 from Branch Banking & Trust Co., securing its
repayment obligation by, among other things, a deed of trust and an "Absolute
Assignment of Rents and Lease". AT&T occupied the Hawthorne property
pursuant to a triple net lease. That lease had commenced in December 2000 and
was for a term of 15½ years, with three renewal options of 5 years each.
The Temporal Interests
Initially, Red Sea was the sole member of Holdings. On February 7, 2002,
Red Sea created two temporal interests in Holdings--a possessory term of years
member interest (TOYS interest) and a future, successor member interest (SMI).
The TOYS interest commenced in February 2002 and is to run almost 18 years,
through December 31, 2020. The SMI becomes possessory on January 1, 2021, on
termination of the TOYS interest.
Sale to RJS and Purchase by RERI
RJS Realty Corp. (RJS) is a Delaware corporation. On February 7, 2002,
RJS purchased the SMI for $1,610,000.
On March 25, 2002, RJS sold the SMI to RERI for $2,950,000, RERI
paying $1,880,000 in cash and executing a nonrecourse promissory note for the
balance.
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[*6] The Gift Agreement
On August 27, 2003, RERI's principal investor, Stephen M. Ross, pledged
that he would make a gift of $4 million (later increased to $5 million) to the
University for the benefit of its Department of Athletics (gift agreement).
Under the gift agreement, Mr. Ross pledged and agreed "to transfer, or to
have transferred" the SMI to the University no later than December 31, 2003.
Upon receiving the SMI, the University was to hold it at a nominal value of $1 and
credit Mr. Ross' pledge in the amount of $1. The University agreed to hold the
SMI for a minimum of two years, "after which the University shall sell" the SMI
and credit Mr. Ross' account "to a value equal to the net proceeds received by the
University" for the SMI. RERI's donation of the SMI to the University was
completed on the same day as the gift agreement, August 27, 2003. Consistent
with the gift agreement, the agreement embodying RERI's donation of the SMI to
the University required the University to hold the SMI "for a period of two years".
Appraisal of the Hawthorne Property
In September 2003, RERI retained Howard C. Gelbtuch of Greenwich
Realty Advisors to appraise a remainder interest in the Hawthorne property. Mr.
Gelbtuch concluded that the fair market value of "the leased fee interest in the
* * * [Hawthorne] property as of August 28, 2003, is US $55,000,000", and that
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[*7] the "investment value" of a remainder interest in that property vesting on
January 1, 2021, was $32,935,000.3 Mr. Gelbtuch determined that value by
multiplying his determined value of the underlying leased fee interest by an
actuarial factor taken from the tables promulgated under sections 2031 and 7520.
See sec. 20.2031-7(d)(1), Estate Tax Regs. (2003); sec. 1.7520-1(a) (1), Income
Tax Regs. (2003).4
3
The appraisal and professional fees were calculated as $84,000, for a total
reported charitable contribution by the partnership of $33,019,000.
4
Mr. Gelbtuch was asked to and did, in fact, appraise a remainder interest in
the Hawthorne property, not the SMI. Petitioner defends Mr. Gelbtuch's appraisal
of an interest in the Hawthorne property on the ground that both Holdings and its
wholly owned subsidiary Hawthorne, which owned the Hawthorne property, were
LLCs wholly owned by Red Sea. Therefore, he argues, they were "disregarded
entities" pursuant to sec. 301.7701-3(b)(1)(ii), Proced. & Admin. Regs. He argues
that our decision in Pierre v. Commissioner, 133 T.C. 24 (2009), in which we held
that an LLC constituting a disregarded entity under the foregoing regulation may
not be disregarded in valuing an interest in the LLC for Federal gift tax purposes,
is applicable only for Federal gift tax purposes. Respondent states: "Inasmuch as
this Court applied the willing buyer-willing seller test for fair market value to
determine the value of the LLC interest transferred in Pierre, respondent accepts
[and would apply to this case] the result in Pierre." Because it is not germane to
the motion, we need not, and do not, address herein this dispute between the
parties. We note, however, that that issue does reappear in connection with
respondent's pending motion for partial summary judgment in which he argues that
Mr. Gelbtuch failed to derive a value for the SMI and improperly applied the sec.
7520 tables to the fair market value of the leased fee interest in the Hawthorne
property rather than to the fair market value of Holdings.
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[*8] Sale of the SMI
On or about December 23, 2005, after the expiration of the required
two-year holding period, the University sold the SMI for $1,940,000 to HRK Real
Estate Holdings, LLC (HRK), a Delaware LLC indirectly owned by petitioner and
an associate.5
HRK had pre-sold the SMI to a third-party individual for $3 million on or
about December 20, 2005. On December 26, 2005, that third party donated the
SMI to another charitable organization and claimed a charitable contribution
deduction of $29,930,000 in connection therewith, again on the basis of an
appraisal by Mr. Gelbtuch.
Discussion
I. Introduction
Respondent would adjust RERI's reported charitable contribution from a
little over $33 million to zero on the ground that the "transaction giving rise to the
* * * [contribution] is a sham for tax purposes or lacks economic substance, and
5
As a result of (1) petitioner's donation of the SMI to the University and (2)
other donations to the University of similar properties arranged by Mr. Ross, the
University realized $4,276,604 from sales of the donated properties which it
credited to Mr. Ross' $5 million pledge. Respondent alleges that, at least with
respect to some of those sales, the amounts realized by the University were far less
than the appraisals of the properties for which the donors, presumably, claimed
sec. 170 deductions.
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[*9] therefore the transaction should be disregarded". Petitioner moves that we
summarily rule that "sham" and "lack of economic substance" are unavailable
arguments in determining whether a taxpayer's charitable contribution qualifies for
deduction pursuant to section 170(a).6
Generally speaking, the term "economic sham" (as opposed to the term
"factual sham", i.e., a transaction that did not occur) describes a transaction that
actually occurred but that exploits a feature of the Internal Revenue Code without
any attendant economic risk. See, e.g., Horn v. Commissioner, 968 F.2d 1229,
1236 n.8 (D.C. Cir. 1992), rev'g Fox v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1988-570.
Respondent also cites Horn v. Commissioner, 968 F.2d at 1237-1238, for the
proposition that a transaction lacks economic substance if the transaction had no
reasonable prospect of earning a profit and was undertaken for no business
purpose other than to obtain tax benefits.
Respondent does not argue that RERI did not in fact transfer property to the
University or that the gift was not in fact a charitable contribution. Indeed, he
states: "Respondent does not dispute whether RERI made a contribution or gift
6
A partnership computes its taxable income without the deduction for
charitable contributions provided for in sec. 170. Sec. 703(a)(2)(C).
Nevertheless, each partner takes into account his distributive share of the
partnership's charitable contributions. Sec. 702(a)(4).
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[*10] within the meaning of section 170(c) when it assigned the successor member
interest to the University on August 27, 2003." Nevertheless, respondent argues:
"[T]he 'economic substance', 'sham', and 'substance over form' doctrines may be
applied to disallow a charitable contribution deduction when the tax benefits
claimed by a sham entity run counter to the legislative goals underlying section
170."
While the parties have voluminously briefed their positions, they have, for
the most part, talked past each other. Petitioner, relying principally on our
Opinion in Skripak v. Commissioner, 84 T.C. 285 (1985), argues that respondent,
having conceded that there was an unrequited gift to a qualified recipient (the
University), cannot freight section 170(a) with any inquiry into the bona fides of
the gift or into RERI's purpose in making the gift. Respondent, relying principally
on our Memorandum Opinion in Ford v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1983-556,
1983 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 227, takes RERI under fire: "RERI was organized
solely for tax avoidance purposes, lacked economic substance, was a sham, and is
not a valid partnership for tax purposes under Commissioner v. Culbertson, 337
U.S. 733 (1949)." Neither argument precludes the other, so both may be right.
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[*11] II. The Parties' Arguments
A. Petitioner's Argument
As stated, petitioner relies principally on Skripak. In Skripak, the taxpayers
participated in a book contribution program under which high-tax-bracket
individuals purchased portions of a book publisher's excess inventory and, after
holding the books for more than six months (the then long-term capital gains
holding period), contributed them to various small, rural, public libraries. The
book contribution program was carried out with the assistance of a corporation,
formed solely for that purpose, which located the individual donors and the donee
libraries, purchased the books from the publisher, and resold them to the donors,
each of whom, pursuant to an "offering memorandum" circulated among the
potential donors, was "free to dispose of books * * * at any time, in any manner
and to any person or entity selected by him * * * [with the expectation that]
purchasers will use the books for the support of institutions in need by donating
them to * * * [the libraries]." The corporation offered to "arrange for and execute
donations on behalf of * * * [the individual purchasers]." The offering
memorandum contemplated that participants would claim charitable contribution
deductions equal to the publisher's "catalog retail list price", triple what they
would pay for the books. Skripak v. Commissioner, 84 T.C. at 293-297.
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[*12] The Skripak taxpayers participated in the program, and the Commissioner
denied their charitable contribution deductions, arguing that the "various
documents purporting to evidence * * * [the taxpayers'] acquisition and
disposition of the books * * * merely constitute a transaction wholly lacking in
economic substance and reality, a sham transaction that should be completely
disregarded for Federal tax purposes." Id. at 314. The Commissioner further
argued that the individual taxpayers "neither owned nor contributed books to the
libraries, and that any contributions * * * [were by the corporation, not the
taxpayers]." Id. The Commissioner concluded that the taxpayers "purchased tax
deductions, not books." Id. We rejected the Commissioner's argument that the
taxpayers had "no chance of realizing an economic profit" under the program on
the ground that such facts, even if true, were "not pertinent to our inquiry." Id. at
314-315. We stated the pertinent legal principles as follows:
The deduction for charitable contributions provided by section 170 is
a legislative subsidy for purely personal (as opposed to business)
expenses of a taxpayer. Accordingly, doctrines such as business
purpose and an objective of economic profit are of little, if any,
significance in determining whether petitioners have made charitable
gifts. We think that the various documents in fact comport with the
economic substance and reality of these transactions, and we
conclude that the petitioners did in fact own and contribute the books
to the various libraries. [Id. at 315; citations omitted.]
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[*13] We further noted that, because "the deduction for charitable contributions
was intended to provide a tax incentive for taxpayers to support charities[,] * * * a
taxpayer's desire to avoid or eliminate taxes by contributing cash or property to
charities cannot be used as a basis for disallowing the deduction for that charitable
contribution." Id. at 319. Therefore, we held that the taxpayers were entitled to
deductions for their contributions of the purchased books to the libraries. Id. at
320.7
In further support of his argument that business purpose and economic
substance are irrelevant with respect to the allowance of a charitable contribution
deduction, petitioner also relies upon the following statement in Scheidelman v.
Commissioner, 682 F.3d 189, 200 (2d Cir. 2012), vacating and remanding T.C.
Memo. 2010-151: "It is true the taxpayer hoped to obtain a charitable deduction
for her gifts, but this would not come from the recipient of the gift. It would not
be a quid pro quo. If the motivation to receive a tax benefit deprived a gift of its
charitable nature under Section 170, virtually no charitable gifts would be
deductible." Petitioner argues that, because the partnership received nothing from
7
We concluded, however, that the fair market value of the contributed books
"was no more than 20 percent of the * * * [publisher's] catalog retail list prices",
and we reduced the taxpayers' deductions accordingly. Skripak v. Commissioner,
84 T.C. 285, 329 (1985).
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[*14] the University in exchange for its contribution, there was no quid pro quo
and, hence, no basis for the complete disallowance of the deduction. Cf.
Hernandez v. Commissioner, 490 U.S. 680, 690-691 (1989); United States v. Am.
Bar Endowment, 477 U.S. 105, 116 (1986).
Lastly, petitioner notes that, on numerous occasions, the Court has affirmed
that a taxpayer who acquires property for the sole purpose of making a charitable
contribution is entitled to a section 170 deduction for the contribution. See, e.g.,
Maysteel Prods., Inc. v. Commissioner, 33 T.C. 1021, 1024-1025 (1960), rev'd on
another issue, 287 F.2d 429 (7th Cir. 1961); Weitz v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo.
1989-99, 1989 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 99, at *25-*26; Hunter v. Commissioner,
T.C. Memo. 1986-308, 1986 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 305, at *14.
B. Respondent's Argument
Respondent retorts:
Consistent with Skripak, respondent does not apply the economic
substance or any other judicial doctrine in determining whether RERI
made a charitable gift to the University. Nevertheless, this Court's
opinion in Skripak does not preclude the respondent from relying on
the "sham" and "lack of economic substance" doctrines in the instant
case to disallow the $33,019,000 tax benefit RERI claimed on its
2003 Form 1065."
As stated, respondent relies principally on the analysis in our Memorandum
Opinion in Ford v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1983-556. In Ford, the taxpayer
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[*15] husband was a limited partner in a partnership that indirectly (through a
corporation) leased an underwater habitat, the Aegir, to the University of Hawaii
(UH) for a nominal rent. The partnership later decided to donate the Aegir to UH
and, to that end, it transferred the Aegir to a newly formed corporation (Makai) in
exchange for all of Makai's outstanding stock. On the day of the transfer of the
Aegir to Makai, the partnership donated its Makai shares to UH. On that day, the
fair market value of the Aegir was $600,000, but, because the Aegir had by then
been fully depreciated, it had a zero basis in the hands of the partnership. Thus,
the partnership's outright contribution of the Aegir would have afforded it (or,
more accurately, its partners) a zero charitable contribution deduction pursuant to
section 170(e)(1)(A), which provides that a charitable contribution of property
must be reduced by the amount of gain (in this case, section 1245 depreciation
recapture) that would not be long-term capital gain on a fair-market-value sale of
the property. On the basis of the partnership's contribution of the Makai stock to
UH, the taxpayers claimed a charitable contribution deduction for the taxpayer
husband's pro rata share of the partnership's contribution of the Makai stock
(worth $600,000), subject only to the provisions of section 170(b)(1)(C), limiting
the deduction to 30% of the taxpayers' "contribution base", as defined in section
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[*16] 170(b)(1)(E).8 Makai conducted no business while it was owned by the
partnership, and the Aegir was its sole asset. See Ford v. Commissioner, 1983 Tax
Ct. Memo LEXIS 227, at *1-*11.
On the basis of those facts, we made the following "ultimate findings of
fact": "The transfer of the Aegir by the partnership to Makai Corporation was
carried out for the sole purpose of tax avoidance in order to gain a tax deduction
for its partners through the donation of the Aegir to the University. Makai
Corporation was a sham and acted solely as a conduit for the tax avoidance
purpose." Id. at *12. On the basis of those findings, we held that the partnership
made a direct gift of the Aegir to the University (resulting in a zero contribution
deduction for the taxpayers and the other partners in the partnership). Id. at *18.
We also found that Makai "was utilized for the sole purpose of tax avoidance and
was without substance", citing caselaw standing for the proposition that "the tax
8
The fair market value deduction was, presumably, premised on (1) sec.
1223(1), which permitted the "tacking" of the partnership's holding period for the
Aegir onto its holding period for the stock, thereby making the stock a long-term
capital asset, and (2) the nonapplication of sec. 170(e)(1)(A) to the donation of the
Makai stock because a sale of that stock would have produced $600,000 of long-
term capital gain. We noted that the transaction was motivated by the
partnership's need for a large deduction to offset $193,500 of debt forgiveness
income arising out of the bargain settlement of a $200,000 debt secured by a
mortgage on the Aegir. See Ford v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1983-556, 1983
Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 227, at *7.
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[*17] aspects of a particular transaction depend upon its substance and not the
form in which it is embodied." See id. at *12-*13 (citing, among other cases,
Commissioner v. Court Holding Co., 324 U.S. 331, 334 (1945), and Higgins v.
Smith, 308 U.S. 473, 476 (1940)).
Respondent states that, at trial, he "will present evidence that RERI's
acquisition and donation of the successor member interest lacked economic
substance because the transaction did not have a non-tax business purpose"; also
that "the members invested in RERI to obtain an inflated charitable contribution
deduction, which had no effect on their economic positions, other than to reduce
taxes in the year of donation."
III. Analysis
In Skripak and in the other, similar cases following Skripak upon which
petitioner relies, e.g., Weitz v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1989-99; Hunter v.
Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1986-308, we were faced with taxpayers who
participated in tax avoidance programs that, in a nutshell, involved buying
tangible personal property at distress prices for the sole purpose of contributing
the property to a qualified charitable recipient. In those cases, we held that the
taxpayer's lack of any nontax purpose in entering into the transactions (i.e., the
transactions' lack of "economic substance") was not a deterrent to the taxpayer's
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[*18] entitlement to a charitable contribution deduction. The taxpayer's deduction,
however, was limited to the fair market value of the contributed property, which,
in Skripak, we determined to be less than the distress price the taxpayer paid for
the property. Ford, on the other hand, did not involve a taxpayer's direct purchase
and subsequent contribution of property. In Ford, the issue was whether the
formation of a corporate shell should be respected for Federal tax purposes where
the sole purpose of the corporation was to enable the taxpayers (and others
similarly situated) to obtain a charitable contribution deduction that would
otherwise have been unavailable to them. We held that, because the corporation
was formed solely for tax avoidance purposes and was without economic
substance, its separate existence must be disregarded for tax purposes. We recast
the transaction (a contribution of the corporation's stock) as the partnership-
shareholder's direct contribution to UH of the property that it had previously
contributed to the corporation. As recast, the transaction gave rise to no charitable
contribution deduction.
Skripak and its progeny are distinguishable from Ford, which embodies the
longstanding and, therefore, unremarkable judicial principle that an entity
organized and used for the sole purpose of participating in a tax avoidance
transaction (e.g., to metamorphose ordinary income property into a capital asset)
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[*19] will be disregarded for Federal tax purposes. See, e.g., Moline Props., Inc.
v. Commissioner, 319 U.S. 436, 438-439 (1943); Gregory v. Helvering, 293 U.S.
465, 469-470 (1935).
Because, in Ford, we did no more than apply well-established legal
principles to the facts before us, it was appropriately issued as a Memorandum
Opinion rather than as a published Tax Court Opinion. The only unusual feature
of Ford was its application of the economic substance or business purpose doctrine
to disregard an entity in the context of a purported charitable contribution. But
although it may have been unusual, it was not a unique application of that
doctrine. In Torney v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1993-385, 1993 WL 325063,
the principal issue was whether shares of stock that the taxpayers contributed to a
charitable organization constituted a long-term capital asset (i.e., property held by
the taxpayers for more than six months before the contribution). We held that the
shares had not been held for more than six months and, also, that the contributed
shares had no value on the contribution date. Additionally, we denied the
charitable contribution deduction on the ground that "the transaction lacked
economic substance". Torney v. Commissioner, 1993 WL 325063, at *8. The
transaction consisted of the issuance to the taxpayers of shares in a corporation
controlled by an individual (Yeaman) who, through a close friend of the
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[*20] taxpayers', suggested to them that they donate the shares to a charitable
organization supported by Yeaman. The taxpayers made the suggested charitable
contribution. We determined that "[t]he substance of the case before us is
transfers of stock between related entities with * * * [the taxpayers] acting as a
conduit." We noted that the taxpayers "never exercised any control over the
stock" and that the charitable organization "never benefited from ownership of the
stock". We then held that the taxpayers' "donation of the stock lacked economic
substance and, therefore, was not a charitable contribution within the meaning of
section 170(a)." Id. at *7-*8. Simply on the basis of our decisions in Ford and
Torney, we must deny petitioner's motion for a judgment that the doctrines of
sham and lack of economic substance "are not" (i.e., can never be) applicable or
relevant to the determination of whether a taxpayer's contribution to a charitable
organization is deductible under section 170.
It is possible, however, to construe petitioner's motion more narrowly; viz,
petitioner is merely seeking a determination that, in the context of a charitable
contribution akin to the contributions considered in Skripak, the doctrines of sham
and lack of economic substance do not bear upon the deductibility of a
contribution under section 170. Petitioner does, indeed, argue that Skripak "is
* * * a case very similar to this one" and that our holding in Ford must be strictly
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[*21] limited to its facts, i.e., an attempt to organize a corporation for the sole
purpose of avoiding the section 170(e)(1)(A) limitation on contributions of
ordinary income property. While there is a surface similarity between the facts in
Skripak and the facts of this case (i.e., in both cases, the person making the
contribution purchased the contributed property solely for that purpose), that
similarity masks what may be a crucial difference between the two transactions.
In Skripak the persons (individuals) purchasing and contributing books to rural
libraries were the ones who realized the resulting tax benefit. Here, the person
(RERI) who purchased and contributed the SMI to the University is not the
taxpayer claiming a charitable contribution deduction on account of the gift. See
sec. 703(a)(2)(C). Those taxpayers are RERI's members. See sec. 702(a)(4).
Respondent is clear that he believes: "RERI was a sham partnership formed
for the sole purpose of acquiring the successor member interest and donating it to
a charity, and its members did not join together in good faith and act with a
business purpose in the present conduct of a business enterprise." He is also clear
that he intends at trial to "present evidence that RERI's acquisition and donation of
the successor member interest lacked economic substance because the transaction
did not have a nontax business purpose". And finally, he clearly states his
conclusion "that the 'economic substance', 'sham', and 'substance over form'
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[*22] doctrines may be applied to disallow a charitable contribution deduction
when the tax benefits claimed by a sham entity run counter to the legislative goals
underlying section 170." Respondent is not clear, however, in tying together those
three statements. Does he merely wish to prove that RERI is to be disregarded as
a business entity since it was not formed to jointly carry on a business venture?
See sec. 301.7701-1(a)(2), Proced. & Admin. Regs. If so, so what? Disregarding
RERI arguably results in a transaction which is, in substance, a direct purchase
and contribution of the SMI by RERI's members, a scenario that, presumably,
would be controlled by Skripak. After all, RERI's members did, in fact, put up the
funds that were actually used to purchase the SMI (from RJS) that was thereafter
contributed to the University. Also, if we were to find that the transaction by
which RERI acquired and then donated the successor member interest to the
University had no nontax business purpose, again: So what? Have we not said
sufficiently that gifts to charity need have no economic substance beyond the mere
fact of the gift? See, e.g., Skripak v. Commissioner, 84 T.C. 285; Weitz v.
Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1989-99; Hunter v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1986-
308. And what tax benefits from its charitable contributions does a passthrough
entity, even a sham passthrough entity, enjoy that might run afoul of the purpose
of section 170? Beyond generalities, respondent has not enlightened us as to how
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[*23] his allegations as to sham and lack of economic substance affect RERI's
members' entitlements to charitable contribution deductions on account of RERI's
contribution of the SMI to the University. Nor, apparently, has petitioner used the
tools of discovery to force respondent's hand. Without a better understanding of
the role RERI plays in each party's calculus, we think that it would be imprudent
for us to speculate that this case is more Skripak-like than Ford-like and to grant
the motion on that basis.
IV. Conclusion
Whether RERI was organized solely for tax avoidance purposes and lacked
economic substance may be a relevant issue in determining whether its
contribution of the SMI to the University entitled its members to charitable
contribution deductions on account thereof. It remains to be seen whether that is
the case. Therefore, as stated, we will deny the motion.
An appropriate order will be issued
denying petitioner's motion for partial
summary judgment.