IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
_______________________________
No. 00-60614
_______________________________
BEATRICE ELLEN JONES DUNN, Deceased, ESTATE
OF, JESSE L. DUNN III, Independent Executor,
Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE,
Respondent-Appellee.
_________________________________________________
Appeal from the Decision of the
United States Tax Court
_________________________________________________
August 1, 2002
Before SMITH, DUHÉ, and WIENER, Circuit Judges.
WIENER, Circuit Judge.
The sole issue presented by this appeal from the United States
Tax Court (the “Tax Court”) is the fair market value of a block of
common stock in Dunn Equipment, Inc. (“Dunn Equipment” or the
“Corporation”) owned by the late Beatrice Ellen Jones Dunn (the
“Decedent”) on the date of her death (the “valuation date”) for
purposes of calculating the estate tax owed by Petitioner-Appellant
Estate of Beatrice Ellen Jones Dunn, Deceased (the “Estate”). The
Tax Court valued the Decedent’s shares higher than had the Estate
on the Form 706 (the “estate tax return” or the “return”) filed by
Jesse L. Dunn III, the Decedent’s Independent Executor (the
“Executor”) but lower than had Respondent-Appellee Commissioner of
Internal Revenue (the “Commissioner”). We conclude that the Tax
Court erred as a matter of law in the valuation methodology that it
selected and applied to facts that are now largely uncontested by
virtue of stipulations, concessions, and non-erroneous findings of
that court. This legal error produced an incorrect valuation and
thus an erroneous final Tax Court judgment as to the Estate’s tax
deficiency, requiring remand to that court.
We hold that the correct methodology for determining the value
of Dunn Equipment as of the valuation date requires application of
an 85:15 ratio, assigning a weight of 85% to the value of the
Corporation that the Tax Court determined to be $1,321,7401 when
using its “earnings-based approach” and a weight of 15% to the
value that the court determines on remand using its “asset-based
approach” but only after recomputing the Corporation’s value under
this latter approach by reducing the market value of the assets2 by
34% of their built-in taxable gain —— not by the 5% as previously
applied by that court —— of the built-in gain (excess of net sales
value before taxes over book value) of the assets, to account for
the inherent gains tax liability of the assets.
1
If need be, this figure can be fine tuned on remand to
reconcile the slight discrepancy between the Tax Court’s figure and
that of the Estate.
2
$8,278,342 according to the Tax Court; $8,268,345 according
to the Commissioner’s appellate brief.
2
We therefore remand this case to the Tax Court for it to (1)
redetermine the asset-based value using a 34% reduction for built-
in tax liability; (2) recalculate the fair market value of the
Corporation based on that 85:15 weighting ratio; (3) calculate the
value of the Estate’s ratable portion of the total value of the
Corporation as thus redetermined; (4) discount the value of that
ratable portion by 22.5% for lack of market and lack of super-
majority; (5) based on that result, redetermine the estate tax
liability of the Estate as well as any resulting overpayment of
such taxes by the Estate; and (6) render a final judgment
consistent with this opinion and our judgment.
I. Facts and Proceedings
A. Proceedings
In November, 1994, approximately three and one-half years
after the Decedent’s death and two and one-half years after her
estate tax return was filed, the Commissioner issued a notice of
deficiency, assessing additional estate taxes of $238,515.05. This
litigation ensued. In an amended answer filed in the Tax Court,
the Commissioner increased the asserted estate tax deficiency to
approximately $1,100,000. This deficiency was predicated on the
Commissioner’s contention that the Decedent’s 492,610 shares of
common stock in Dunn Equipment, a closely-held, family-operated
corporation, was undervalued in the estate tax return. The
Commissioner argued that such stock should be valued solely on the
basis of the fair market value of its assets, discounted only for
3
lack of a market and lack of a super-majority, and with no
reduction for built-in tax liability of those assets and no
consideration whatsoever of an earnings or cash flow-based approach
to valuation.
In June, 1996, trial was held in the Tax Court to determine
the fair market value of Decedent’s block of stock in Dunn
Equipment. Approximately three and one-half years after trial, the
Tax Court issued its Memorandum Findings of Fact and Opinion (“the
Tax Court opinion”). The court concluded that the subject block of
stock, which constituted 62.96% of the issued and the outstanding
shares of Dunn Equipment’s capital stock, was worth $2,738,558 on
the valuation date. After the Tax Court entered its final judgment
some six months later, the Estate timely filed a notice of appeal.
B. Facts
Based in principal part on stipulations, uncontested
evidence,3 and concessions, the Tax Court found the following
facts. Decedent, a longtime resident of Texas, died there on June
8, 1991 at the age of 81. The Executor, Decedent’s son, is also a
Texas resident, and the Estate was administered there.
3
We do not refer here to the testimony and documents
submitted by the opposing parties’ dueling experts as being
uncontested. The Commissioner contested the methodology of the
Estate’s expert appraisers, and the Estate took issue with the
assertions of the Commissioner’s accounting (not appraisal) expert;
but the Tax Court was not required to credit such testimony and in
fact disregarded or disagreed with much of it from both camps.
Like the Tax Court, we are not bound to rely on expert testimony
proffered by the Estate or the Commissioner.
4
Dunn Equipment was incorporated in Texas in 1949. It had been
family owned and operated throughout its entire existence. The
Corporation actively operated its business from four locations in
Texas and, on the valuation date, employed 134 persons, three of
whom were executives and eight of whom were salesmen.
Dunn Equipment owned and rented out heavy equipment, and
provided related services, primarily in the petroleum refinery and
petrochemical industries. The personal property rented from the
Corporation by its customers consisted principally of large cranes,
air compressors, backhoes, manlifts, and sanders and grinders. The
Corporation frequently furnished operators for the equipment that
it rented to its customers, charging for both equipment and
operators on an hourly basis. For example, the Corporation’s
revenues resulted in significant part from the renting of large
cranes, with and without operators. For the four fiscal years
preceding the valuation date, equipment rented with operators
furnished by the Corporation produced between 26.3% and 32.7% of
the Corporation’s revenues. On the valuation date, Dunn
Equipment’s assets comprised the aforedescribed heavy equipment,
plus industrial real estate valued at $1,442,580 and a townhouse
valued at $35,000, prepaid expenses of $52,643, and prepaid
interest of $671,260.
In addition to the shares owned by the Decedent, shares in
Dunn Equipment constituting 31.12% of the issued and outstanding
common stock were owned individually by Jesse L. Dunn III (the
5
Decedent’s son and executor), who also held title to an additional
2.61% as a trustee. Shares representing the remaining 3.31% of the
Corporation’s issued and outstanding stock were owned in
combination by other family members and employees of the
Corporation.
The Corporation’s Board of Directors consisted of the
Decedent; her son and executor, Jesse; and her grandson, Peter Dunn
(Jesse’s son). Jesse was President, Peter was Vice President, and
the Decedent was Secretary-Treasurer. The Tax Court found that
compensation paid to the officers of Dunn Equipment was lower than
that paid to officers of similarly situated companies.
Over the course of its 42 years of operation preceding the
valuation date, Dunn Equipment had emerged as the largest heavy
equipment rental business in its part of Texas, holding a
substantial share of that market. By virtue of its market
dominance and reputation for dependable service, the Corporation
was historically able to command rates above the market average.
From 1987 through the valuation date, a decline in the worldwide
price of feed stock for the oil refining and petrochemical
industries created a favorable business climate for the
Corporation’s principal customers, and Dunn Equipment’s gross
revenues increased during that period.
During the same period, however, the heavy equipment rental
market became increasingly competitive, as equipment such as cranes
became more readily available and additional rental companies
6
entered the field. This in turn caused hourly rental rates to
decline and flatten. In fact, increased competition prevented Dunn
Equipment from raising its rental rates at any time during the
period of more than ten years preceding the valuation date. These
rates remained essentially flat for that 10-year period. The same
competitive factors forced the Corporation to replace its equipment
with increasing frequency, reaching an average new equipment
expenditure of $2 million per annum in the years immediately
preceding the valuation date.
In addition to the increased annual cost and frequency of
replacing equipment during the years of flat rental rates that
preceded the Decedent’s death, the Corporation’s operating expenses
increased significantly, beginning in 1988, and continued to do so
thereafter: The ratios of direct operating expenses to revenue
escalated from 42% in 1988 to 52% in the 12-month period that ended
a week before the Decedent’s death. The effect of the increase in
direct operating expenses on the Corporation’s cash flow and
profitability was exacerbated by a practice that Dunn Equipment was
forced to implement in 1988: meeting its customers’ demands by
leasing equipment from third parties and renting it out to the
Corporation’s customers whenever all of its own equipment was
rented out to other customers. Although this practice, which
continued through the valuation date, helped Dunn Equipment keep
its customers happy and retain its customer base, the Corporation
7
was only able to break even on these re-rentals, further depressing
its profit margin.
Based on the foregoing factors, the Tax Court concluded that
the Corporation had no capacity to pay dividends during the five
years preceding the death of the Decedent. In fact, it had paid
none.
As of the valuation date, no public market in the stock of
Dunn Equipment existed, and no recent private transactions in its
stock had occurred. There was no current or pending litigation
that could have had a material effect on the value of the stock,
but large annual capital expenditures for equipment replacement
coupled with shrinking profit margins resulting from the
combination of increased operating expenses and flat or reduced
rental rates, essentially eliminated net cash flow available for
debt reduction or dividend payment. On the valuation date, the
Corporation had outstanding debt of $7,343,161, producing a debt-
to-equity ratio in excess of 6.5 to 1. The Corporation’s average
net annual cash flow for the 4-year period ending with the
valuation date was only $286,421. Given the Tax Court’s finding
regarding the underpayment of compensation to its officers, the
Corporation’s cash flow —— and thus its income-based valuation ——
is actually overstated.
On the basis of these extensive factual findings and
reasonable inferences from them, the Tax Court concluded that, as
of the valuation date, Dunn Equipment was “a viable operating
8
company...and earned a significant part of its revenues from
selling services as well as renting equipment”; that between one-
fourth and one-third of the Corporation’s gross operating revenue
was produced by charges for labor, parts, and equipment rentals
with operators supplied; and that there were “significant active
operational aspects to the company as of the valuation date.”4
The Tax Court also found that, even though the Decedent’s
62.96% of stock ownership in the Corporation gave her operational
control, under Texas law she lacked the power to compel a
liquidation, a sale of all or substantially all of its assets, or
a merger or consolidation, for each of which a “super-majority”
equal to or greater than 66.67% of the outstanding shares is
required.5 The Court further concluded that, in addition to
lacking a super-majority herself, the Decedent would not have been
likely to garner the votes of additional shareholders sufficient to
constitute the super-majority required to instigate liquidation or
sale of all assets because the other shareholders were determined
to continue the Corporation’s independent existence and its
operations indefinitely. The court based these findings on
evidence of the Corporation’s history, community ties, and
4
Dunn v. Comm’r, 79 T.C.M. (CCH) 1337, 1339 (2000).
5
Id. at 1340 (citing TEX. BUS. CORP. ACT ANN. art 6.03 (West
1991)).
9
relationship with its 134 employees, whose livelihoods depended on
Dunn Equipment’s continuing as an operating business.6
We perceive no clear error in any of the foregoing findings or
in the inferences and conclusions that the Tax Court derived from
them.
The Tax Court found further that, for Dunn Equipment, the
process of liquidation would be expensive and time-consuming,
involving sales costs, transportation costs, reduced equipment
sales prices because of the increased short-term supply of such
equipment that would result from a liquidation’s flooding of the
market, and the risk of loss of customers during the course of a
lengthy liquidating process if that were to be attempted. These
findings too are free of clear error. (Again, the Court did not
list among Dunn Equipment’s costs of liquidation, however, the
adverse tax results that would be incurred, particularly the 34%
federal income tax on gains to be realized by the Corporation on
the sale of its equipment, whether ultimately deemed ordinary
income or capital gains.7)
6
Although not mentioned by the court, we speculate that the
specter of incurring a 34% tax on the multimillion dollar amount by
which the selling price of the assets in liquidation would have
exceeded the Corporation’s basis for tax purposes was also a
deterrent to liquidation.
7
The taxable gain on any sale of used heavy equipment
presumably would result from reduction in basis produced by
substantial depreciation deductions previously taken, not from
appreciation in value of these assets, as age, use, and
obsolescence generally produce sales prices for such used equipment
substantially below its original cost.
10
Having painted this clear and detailed valuation-date portrait
of Dunn Equipment, the Tax Court proceeded to confect its valuation
methodology. The court selected two different approaches to value,
one being an income-based approach driven by net cash flow8 and the
other being an asset-based approach driven by the net fair market
value of the Corporation’s assets.9 The court calculated the
Corporation’s “earnings-based value” at $1,321,740 and its net
“asset-based value” at $7,922,892, as of the valuation date. The
latter value was calculated using a 5% factor for built-in gains
tax liability, not the actual rate of 34% that the Corporation
would have incurred on sale to a willing buyer.
As the next step in its methodology, the Tax Court assigned
dissimilar weights to the two valuations, expressly rejecting (1)
the Estate’s expert’s method, which assigned equal weight to each,
and (2) the Commissioner’s contention that no weight whatsoever
should be given to earnings or cash flow and that the Corporation
8
The Estate’s expert proffered the use of a capitalization-
of-earnings rather than a capitalization-of-net-cash-flow approach
to an earnings-based valuation, but the results of these two
methods produced similar results, and the Estate does not press the
issue on appeal.
9
We note in passing that the court did not include dividend-
paying capacity as a factor despite its customary inclusion in
multifaceted valuation methodology for closely held corporations.
See, e.g., Rev. Rul. 59-60, 1959-1 C.B. 237, § 4.01(e) (1959).
Although factoring in a “zero” dividend-paying capacity would have
further reduced the value of Dunn Equipment, the Estate has not
complained to us of that omission so we do not examine it as a
possible error in the valuation methodology employed by the Tax
Court.
11
be valued entirely on asset value undiminished by any built-in tax
liability. Despite having concluded that “the hypothetical
investor would give earnings value substantial weight” and
acknowledging “that, as a general rule, earnings are a better
criterion of value for operating companies [which Dunn Equipment
is] and net assets a better criterion of value for holding or
investment companies [which Dunn Equipment is not],”10 the Tax Court
confected the weighting factor of its valuation method by assigning
a weight of 35% to earnings-based value and 65% to asset-based
value (which the court calculated by, inter alia, reducing the
value of assets by 5% for built-in gains tax liability).11 After
applying its weighted average to the results of its two valuation
approaches to reach the fair market value of the entire
Corporation, the Tax Court calculated the Decedent’s percentage of
ownership (62.96%) to ascertain the pro rata value of her block of
stock.
The final step in the Tax Court’s methodology involved the
determination and application of discounts. In the discount step,
the court concluded that the gross pro rata value of Decedent’s
block of stock should be reduced 15% for lack of marketability and
10
Dunn, 79 T.C.M. (CCH) at 1340.
11
For over 40 years, Rev. Rul. 59-60 has counseled against
assigning finite percentages to relative weights of the various
valuation methods employed by appraisers of stock in closely held
businesses; yet that admonition is largely honored in its breach ——
as exemplified by both the Tax Court and the Estate’s appraiser in
this case.
12
7.5% for lack of super-majority control, producing a total discount
of 22.5%. This is not contested on appeal.
The Executor had returned the Decedent’s block of stock at
$1,635,465. The Estate’s expert appraiser’s 50:50 weighting
approach produced a minimally lower value of $1,582,185. The
Commissioner originally contended that the value was $2,229,043 but
ultimately claimed the value to be $4,430,238. And the Tax Court
found the value to be $2,738,558.
On appeal, the Estate has stipulated that it is not contesting
the Tax Court’s determination of the value of Dunn Equipment “under
the earnings based approach, or [the Tax Court’s] application of a
15% discount for lack of marketability and a 7.5% discount for lack
of super-majority control” to the Decedent’s pro rata ownership of
the issued and outstanding stock of the Corporation.12 This reduces
our chore to one of reviewing only the aspects of the Tax Court’s
methodology that the Estate does continue to challenge, i.e., the
method employed to determine (1) the appropriate discount to apply
to the value of the Corporation’s assets to account for built-in
tax liability in determining its asset-based value and (2) the
relative weights to assign to the two disparate values, income-
based and asset-based.
II. Analysis
12
Neither has the Estate contested the Tax Court’s finding of
the market value of the Corporation’s assets, before discount for
built-in tax liability, of $8,278,342.
13
A. Standard of Review
We review opinions and judgments of the Tax Court under the
same standards that we apply when reviewing those of other trial
courts: Factual determinations are reviewed for clear error, and
conclusions of law are reviewed de novo.13 We have held that
determination of fair market value is a mixed question of fact and
law for which “the factual premises [are] subject to review on a
clearly erroneous standard, and the legal conclusion[s are] subject
to de novo review.”14 The mathematical computation of fair market
value is an issue of fact, but determination of the appropriate
valuation method is an issue of law that we review de novo.15
B. Burden of Proof
On the estate tax return, the Decedent’s block of stock in
Dunn Equipment was valued at $1,635,465. The Commissioner’s
deficiency notice stated a value of $2,229,043. Subsequently, the
Commissioner’s amended answer upped the value to $4,430,238,
roughly doubling the deficiency notice value and increasing the
asserted estate tax deficiency by $861,485 for a total of
13
See, e.g., McIngvale v. Comm’r, 936 F.2d 833, 836 (5th Cir.
1991).
14
In re T-H New Orleans, Ltd. P’ship, 116 F.3d 790, 799 (5th
Cir. 1997).
15
Estate of Palmer v. Comm’r, 839 F.2d 420, 423 (8th Cir.
1988)(citing Powers v. Comm’r, 312 U.S. 259, 260 (1941))(“The
ultimate determination of fair market value is a finding of fact.
... The question of what criteria should be used to determine
value is a question of law subject to de novo review.”).
14
$1,100,000. The Tax Court correctly observed that the Estate has
the burden of refuting the value asserted in the Commissioner’s
original notice of deficiency, but that the Commissioner has the
burden of proving any value in excess of that initial amount.16
C. The Commissioner’s Disparate Positions: Trial Vis-à-Vis
Appeal
1. Position On Appeal
As appellee, the Commissioner supports the Tax Court’s
treatment of each aspect of the case and asks us to affirm the
court’s judgment. Specifically, the Commissioner urges us to
accept, inter alia, the Tax Court’s dual approach to value; the
court’s treatment of built-in tax liability; the relative weights
assigned by the court to the results of each approach; and the
court’s discounts for lack of market and lack of supermajority
control.
2. Pre-Trial and Trial Position
The Commissioner’s posture on appeal is a stark departure from
his pre-trial and trial position: amending his answer to quadruple
the Estate’s tax deficiency as originally assessed, urging the Tax
Court to disregard totally the built-in tax liability of the
Corporation’s assets, insisting that the Corporation be valued
solely on asset values, and urging that no consideration whatsoever
be given the earnings or cash-flow based approach to valuation.
Indeed, at trial, the Commissioner did not favor the Tax Court with
16
See Dunn, 79 T.C.M. (CCH) at 1338.
15
testimony of an expert appraiser, even though the Commissioner had
affirmatively proposed his own, geometrically higher value for the
Decedent’s block of stock —— values that started out higher than
the ones reported on the estate tax return and that were then
multiplied, by virtue of the Commissioner’s amended answer, to
almost four times the Estate’s figures. Yet, instead of supporting
his own higher values (for which he had the burden of proof) by
proffering professional expert valuation testimony during the
trial, the Commissioner merely engaged in guerilla warfare,
presenting only an accounting expert to snipe at the methodology of
the Estate’s valuation expert. The use of such trial tactics might
be legitimate when merely contesting values proposed by the party
opposite, but they can never suffice as support for a higher value
affirmatively asserted by the party employing such a trial
strategy. This is particularly true when, as here, that party is
the Commissioner, who has the burden of proving the expanded value
asserted in his amended answer.
Using such tactics remains the prerogative of the Commissioner
and his trial counsel, at least up to a point. But when his choice
of tactics is viewed in the framework of the substantive valuation
methodology urged by the Commissioner in the Tax Court, his posture
at trial is seen to be so extreme and so far removed from reality
as to be totally lacking in probative value.
To keep this in perspective, it must be remembered that this
case had been under the scrutiny of the Commissioner for many years
16
before trial, during which time he had to have learned essentially
all of the discrete attributes of Dunn Equipment that were
eventually stipulated by the parties or found by the Tax Court:
its operating history, its sources of income, the nature of its
assets and their use in its operations, the status of the industry,
and so on ad infinitum. Thus, as of the commencement of trial, the
Commissioner must be held to the knowledge that Dunn Equipment was
and had always been, as the Tax Court concluded, “a viable
operating company” which “earned a significant part of its revenues
from selling services as well as renting equipment” and that there
were “significant active operational aspects to the company as of
the valuation date.”17 When the nature of the Corporation’s assets
—— primarily heavy equipment held not for investment or production
of passive income, like interest and dividends, but for active
hourly rental (frequently with operators furnished by the
Corporation), in the heavy construction and maintenance of chemical
plants and petroleum refineries, rapidly depreciating with use and
requiring constant maintenance, repair, and replacement —— are
viewed in pari materia with the myriad specific attributes of the
Corporation, the untenability of the Commissioner’s trial position
in the Tax Court is plain.
Consequently, the Commissioner’s insistence at trial that the
value of the subject stock in Dunn Equipment be determined
17
Dunn, 79 T.C.M. (CCH) at 1339.
17
exclusively on the basis of the market value of its assets,
undiminished by their inherent tax liability —— coupled with his
failure to adduce affirmative testimony of a valuation expert ——
was so incongruous as to call his motivation into question. It can
only be seen as one aimed at achieving maximum revenue at any cost,
here seeking to gain leverage against the taxpayer in the hope of
garnering a split-the-difference settlement —— or, failing that,
then a compromise judgment —— somewhere between the value returned
by the taxpayer (which, by virtue of the Commissioner’s eleventh-
hour deficiency notice, could not effectively be revised downward)
and the unsupportedly excessive value eventually proposed by the
Commissioner. And, that is precisely the result that the
Commissioner obtained in the Tax Court.
Any remaining doubt that the Commissioner’s pretrial and trial
tactics in this case could conceivably evidence a bona fide
disagreement over the value of Dunn Equipment is dispelled by the
element of timing. In an estate tax situation, the statute of
limitations for assessment and collection by the IRS is generally
three years, as specified in Internal Revenue Code (“I.R.C.”) §
6501. When the IRS presents a deficiency notice in close proximity
to the expiration of I.R.C. § 6501's 3-year time bar, it creates a
tactical advantage for itself: Once the statute of limitation
expires, the taxpayer can no longer claim a refund even if he then
concludes that he was too conservative in his original valuation.
This is so because the ability of the taxpayer to claim a refund is
18
controlled by I.R.C. § 6511, which provides that the taxpayer has
until the later of three years from the time the return was filed
or two years from the time the tax was paid to assert such a claim.
The tax due is normally paid with the tax return, by or before the
due date. As a result, the only amount that the taxpayer could
recover would be for taxes paid in response to the deficiency
notice. Consequently, by holding off the filing of a notice of
deficiency until more than two years following payment of tax or
three years following the filing of the return, the IRS is able to
manufacture an advantage with no downside risk: The taxpayer is
precluded from claiming a refund except for any taxes paid with the
deficiency notice, and the Commissioner is able to assert an
excessive value and then use it for leverage in negotiations or at
trial.
The Commissioner’s abrupt change of position on appeal is so
inconsistent and unreconcilable with his pretrial and trial
positions that all of his urgings to us are rendered highly
suspect. We keep this duplicity in mind as we proceed to examine
the Tax Court’s valuation methodology.
D. Determination of Fair Market Value
The definition of fair market value is as universally
recognized as its determination is elusive: Fair market value is
“‘the price at which the property would change hands between a
willing buyer and a willing seller, neither being under any
compulsion to buy or to sell and both having reasonable knowledge
19
of relevant facts.’”18 As a broad generality, appraising
corporations or blocks of corporate stock involves consideration of
three approaches: income, market, and assets-based.19 When, as
here, the corporation being appraised is closely held, is not
regularly traded on an exchange, has not been traded at arm’s
length in close proximity of the valuation date, and is not
comparable to other corporations engaged in the same or similar
businesses of which there is evidence of recent sales of stock, the
market approach is inapposite, leaving only the income and assets-
based approaches as candidates for analysis. Thus, in cases like
this, such features as net worth, prospective earning power and
dividend-paying capacity, good will, position in the industry,
management, economic outlook of the industry, and the degree of
control represented by the block of stock in question must be
looked to in the appraisal process.20
As is apparent from the essentially uncontested operative
facts and inferences of this case, most of the heavy lifting
required to reach the ultimate conclusion of fair market value of
Decedent’s block of stock had been accomplished by the time the
18
United States v. Cartwright, 411 U.S. 546, 551
(1973)(quoting Treas. Reg. § 20.2031-1(b)).
19
See SHANNON P. PRATT ET AL., VALUING A BUSINESS: THE ANALYSIS AND
APPRAISAL OF CLOSELY HELD COMPANIES 45 (4th ed. 2000) [hereinafter VALUING
A BUSINESS].
20
See Treas. Reg. § 20.2031-2(f); see also Rev. Rul. 59-60,
1959-1 C.B. 237, § 4.01.
20
question reached us. In addition, most of the penultimate
conclusions regarding valuation methodology are conceded or
uncontested on appeal: the pre-discount value of the Corporation
under the earnings-based approach ($1,321,740); its debts
($7,343,161); the market value of its assets before adjustment for
built-in tax liability ($8,278,342); the discount for lack of
marketability (15%); and the discount for lack of super-majority
control (7.5%). That is why only two contested questions remain,
both of which implicate valuation methodology: Did the Tax Court
err as a matter of law in the methodology that it chose for (1)
dealing with the assets’ built-in tax liability when determining
the Corporation’s asset-based value, and (2) assigning relative
weights to the asset-based and earnings-based values? The parties
to this appeal agree with the Tax Court’s starting point that
“[t]he dispute in the instant case concerns the proper method for
valuing an interest in a company in which asset-based value and
earnings-based value are widely divergent.”21 We therefore begin
by examining de novo the method employed by the Tax Court for
dealing with the built-in tax liability of assets in connection
with the asset-based approach to value. We then review de novo the
method employed by the court in determining the relative weights to
be given to Dunn Equipment’s “widely divergent” asset-based and
earnings-based values.
21
Dunn, 79 T.C.M. (CCH) at 1338 (emphasis added).
21
1. Adjustment for Built-In Tax Liability of Assets
None can dispute that if Dunn Equipment had sold all of its
heavy equipment, industrial real estate, and townhouse on the
valuation date, the Corporation would have incurred a 34% federal
tax on the gain realized, regardless of whether that gain were
labeled as capital gain or ordinary income.22 The question, then,
is not the rate of the built-in tax liability of the assets or the
dollar amount of the inherent gain, but the method to employ in
accounting for that inherent tax liability when valuing the
Corporation’s assets (not to be confused with the ultimate task of
valuing its stock).
The Estate’s expert took the position that, when determining
the asset-based value to be used in calculating the fair market
value of the Corporation, its assets must be treated as though they
had in fact been sold, in which event the Corporation would have
incurred federal income tax equal to 34% of the gain realized on
the sale. This in turn would have instantly reduced the
Corporation’s fair market value, dollar for dollar, for taxes
payable. But, if the willing buyer were to purchase the Decedent’s
block of stock with the assets still owned by the Corporation, then
regardless of whether thereafter that buyer could and would cause
all or essentially all of the Corporation’s assets to be sold,
either in the ordinary course of business or globally in
22
Id. at 1344, n.9 (referring in its analysis to I.R.C. §§
1245, 11, and 1201).
22
liquidation, the value to the Corporation of its assets qua assets
would still be the amount that the Corporation could realize on
disposition of those assets, net of all costs (including gains
tax). The Estate contends that, like advertising and
transportation costs, commissions, and other unavoidable expenses
of disposition of these assets accepted by the Tax Court, the
assets’ gross value must be reduced by their built-in gains tax
liability to reach their net fair market value for purposes of
calculating the asset-based value of the Corporation.
In diametric opposition, the Commissioner argued to the Tax
Court that no reduction for built-in tax liability should be
allowed. He grounded this contention solely on the assertion that
liquidation was not imminent or even likely.
Although the Tax Court accepted the 34% rate and acknowledged
that the value of the Corporation had to be reduced by some factor
to account for inherent tax liability of its assets, the court
followed the Commissioner’s “no imminent liquidation” red herring
and concluded that only if the hypothetical willing buyer of the
Decedent’s block of stock intended to liquidate the Corporation in
the short term —— which the holder of that block of stock, acting
alone, could not force —— would that buyer seek a substantial
reduction for built-in capital gain. The Tax Court then proceeded
to discuss such a postulational buyer’s alternatives to liquidation
and to calculate the present value (actually, negative value) of
future tax liability. The court concluded that the asset-based
23
value of Dunn Equipment should be reduced by only 5% for potential
tax costs, not by the full 34% gains tax that the Corporation would
have to pay when and if its assets were sold, whether in globo or
seriatim.
The Tax Court’s fundamental error in this regard is reflected
in its statement that —— for purposes of an asset-based analysis of
corporate value —— a fully-informed willing buyer of corporate
shares (as distinguished from the Corporation’s assemblage of
assets) constituting an operational-control majority would not seek
a substantial price reduction for built-in tax liability, absent
that buyer’s intention to liquidate. This is simply wrong: It is
inconceivable that, since the abolition of the General Utilities
doctrine and the attendant repeal of relevant I.R.C. sections, such
as §§ 333 and 337, any reasonably informed, fully taxable buyer (1)
of an operational-control majority block of stock in a corporation
(2) for the purpose of acquiring its assets, has not insisted that
all (or essentially all) of the latent tax liability of assets held
in corporate solution be reflected in the purchase price of such
stock.
We are satisfied that the hypothetical willing buyer of the
Decedent’s block of Dunn Equipment stock would demand a reduction
in price for the built-in gains tax liability of the Corporation’s
assets at essentially 100 cents on the dollar, regardless of his
subjective desires or intentions regarding use or disposition of
the assets. Here, that reduction would be 34%. This is true “in
24
spades” when, for purposes of computing the asset-based value of
the Corporation, we assume (as we must) that the willing buyer is
purchasing the stock to get the assets,23 whether in or out of
corporate solution. We hold as a matter of law that the built-in
gains tax liability of this particular business’s assets must be
considered as a dollar-for-dollar reduction when calculating the
asset-based value of the Corporation, just as, conversely, built-in
gains tax liability would have no place in the calculation of the
Corporation’s earnings-based value.24
The Tax Court made a more significant mistake in the way it
factored the “likelihood of liquidation” into its methodology, a
quintessential mixing of apples and oranges: considering the
likelihood of a liquidation sale of assets when calculating the
23
This is easily illustrated by a simplified example: Buyer
B wants an assemblage of assets identical to Corporation C’s
assets. Those assets are worth $1 million on the open market but
are depreciated on C’s books to a tax basis of $500,000. B has two
options: (1) He can buy the assets from C for $1 million and
depreciate them to zero over, e.g., seven years (or buy them on the
open market and have the same cash flow and tax experience),
leaving C to pay its own 34% tax ($170,000) on its gain; or (2) he
can buy C’s stock, get no depreciation deductions other than, at
the corporate level, to the extent the assets are further
depreciable, and have a 34% built-in corporate tax liability at
sale of the assets. Surely a buyer of the stock rather than the
assets would insist on a price reduction to account for the full
amount of the built-in gain tax and the loss of the depreciation
opportunity.
24
PRATT ET AL., VALUING A BUSINESS, at 47 (“[T]ax consequences of
ownership and/or transfer of stock ... usually are quite different
from those of ownership and/or transfer of direct investment in
underlying assets. These tax implication often have a significant
bearing on value.”).
25
asset-based value of the Corporation. Under the factual totality
of this case, the hypothetical assumption that the assets will be
sold is a foregone conclusion —— a given —— for purposes of the
asset-based test.25 The process of determining the value of the
assets for this facet of the asset-based valuation methodology must
start with the basic assumption that all assets will be sold,
either by Dunn Equipment to the willing buyer or by the willing
buyer of the Decedent’s block of stock after he acquires her stock.
By definition, the asset-based value of a corporation is grounded
in the fair market value of its assets (a figure found by the Tax
Court and not contested by the estate), which in turn is determined
by applying the venerable willing buyer-willing seller test. By
its very definition, this contemplates the consummation of the
purchase and sale of the property, i.e., the asset being valued.
Otherwise the hypothetical willing parties would be called
something other than “buyer” and “seller.”
In other words, when one facet of the valuation process
requires a sub-determination based on the value of the company’s
assets, that value must be tested in the same willing buyer/willing
seller crucible as is the stock itself, which presupposes that the
25
Id. at 34 (“[I]f valuing a minority ownership interest, one
would normally adopt the premise of ‘business as usual....’”).
Compare id. at 443 (“[T]he asset-based approach tends to be more
appropriate when valuing a controlling ownership interest than a
noncontrolling ownership interest.”). The Decedent’s non-
supermajority interest is a hybrid, somewhere between minority and
full control, so neither approach trumps the other totally.
26
property being valued is in fact bought and sold. It is axiomatic
that an asset-based valuation starts with the gross market (sales)
value of the underlying assets themselves, and, as observed, the
Tax Court’s finding in that regard is unchallenged on appeal: When
the starting point is the assumption of sale, the “likelihood” is
100%!
This truism is confirmed by its obverse in today’s dual,
polar-opposite approaches (cash flow; assets). The fundamental
assumption in the income or cash-flow approach is that the assets
are retained by the Corporation, i.e., not globally disposed of in
liquidation or otherwise. So, just as the starting point for the
asset-based approach in this case is the assumption that the assets
are sold, the starting point for the earnings-based approach is
that the Corporation’s assets are retained —— are not sold, (other
than as trade-ins for new replacement assets in the ordinary course
of business) —— and will be used as an integral part of its ongoing
business operations. This duly accounts for the value of assets ——
unsold —— in the active operations of the Corporation as one
inextricably intertwined element of the production of income.
Bottom Line: The likelihood of liquidation has no place in
either of the two disparate approaches to valuing this particular
operating company. We hasten to add, however, that the likelihood
of liquidation does play a key role in appraising the Decedent’s
block of stock, and that role is in the determination of the
relative weights to be given to those two approaches: The lesser
27
the likelihood of liquidation (or sale of essentially all assets),
the greater the weight (percentage) that must be assigned to the
earnings(cash flow)-based approach and, perforce, the lesser the
weight to be assigned to the asset-based approach.
Belabored as our point might be, it illustrates the reason
why, in conducting its asset-based approach to valuing Dunn
Equipment, the Tax Court erred when it grounded its time-use-of-
money reduction of the 34% gains tax factor to 5% on the assumption
that the corporation’s assets would not likely be sold in
liquidation. As explained, the likelihood of liquidation is
inapposite to the asset-based approach to valuation.
In our recent response to a similarly misguided application of
the built-in gains tax factor by the Tax Court, we rejected its
treatment as based on “internally inconsistent assumptions.”26 In
that case we reversed and remanded with instructions for the Tax
Court to reconsider its valuation of the subject corporation’s
timber property values by using a more straightforward capital
gains tax reduction. Similarly, because valuing Dunn Equipment’s
underlying corporate assets is not the equivalent of valuing the
Company’s capital stock on the basis of its assets, but is merely
one preliminary exercise in that process, the threshold assumption
in conducting the asset-based valuation approach as to this company
must be that the underlying assets would indeed be sold. And to
26
Estate of Jameson v. Comm’r. 267 F.3d 366, 372 (5th Cir.
2001).
28
whom? To a fully informed, non-compelled, willing buyer. That is
always the starting point for a fair market value determination of
assets qua assets. That determination becomes the basis for the
company’s asset-based value, which must include consideration of
the tax implications of those assets as owned by that company.
We must reject as legal error, then, the Tax Court’s treatment
of built-in gains tax liability and hold that —— under the court’s
asset-based approach —— determination of the value of Dunn
Equipment must include a reduction equal to 34% of the taxable gain
inherent in those assets as of the valuation date.27 Moreover, the
factually determined, “real world” likelihood of liquidation is not
a factor affecting built-in tax liability when conducting the
asset-based approach to valuing Dunn Equipment stock.28 Rather, the
probability of a liquidation’s occurring affects only (but
significantly) the relative weights to be assigned to each of the
two values once they have been determined under the asset-based and
27
We observe a slight discrepancy between the amount of the
built-in gain mentioned by the Tax Court in its opinion
($7,109,000) and the gain referred to in the Estate’s appellate
brief ($7,117,638) to which a 34% tax should be applied. We are
satisfied that this minor difference can be resolved by the court
and the parties on remand or, alternatively, ignored on the maxim
de minimis non curat lex, the net difference to the taxable value
of the subject block of stock being roughly $1,200.
28
The likelihood of liquidation is also taken into account in
another way, albeit indirectly and implicitly: in the court’s
assignment of a 7.5% discount to the Decedent’s block of Dunn
Equipment stock for lack of supermajority control. For it is
liquidation that, absent supermajority, the operational majority
stockholder alone cannot force. Thus this discount is grounded in
inter alia, the block’s inability to make liquidation happen.
29
income-based approaches, respectively —— which brings us to the
second methodology issue presented in this appeal.
2. Assignment of Weight to Values
a. Cash Flow Vis-à-Vis Earnings
Prior to determining the appropriate method of valuing Dunn
Equipment, the Tax Court reviewed the factors that bear on the fair
market value of a block of stock in a closely-held, non-traded,
operating corporation and concluded that
the value of Dunn Equipment is best
represented by a combination of an earnings-
based value using capitalization of net cash-
flow and an asset-based value using fair
market value of assets, with an appropriate
discount for a lack of marketability and lack
of super-majority control.29
In so doing, the Tax Court rejected the approach of the Estate’s
expert, who used capitalized net earnings to determine the income-
based value of the Corporation, and went instead with a capitalized
net cash-flow method. As the Estate is not contesting the Tax
Court’s choice of the cash-flow approach over the earnings
approach, we too accept the court’s choice.
b. The Tax Court’s Determination of Value
To its credit, the Tax Court flatly rejected the
Commissioner’s legally and factually absurd contention at trial
that no weight should be given to the Corporation’s earnings-based
value and that its value should be based entirely in an asset-based
29
Dunn, 79 T.C.M. (CCH) at 1339 (emphasis added).
30
approach, with no consideration of built-in tax liability. In so
doing, the Tax Court concluded that the Commissioner “puts too much
emphasis on the fair market value of assets”30 —— to us, a classic
understatement —— and stated correctly that “because Dunn Equipment
was an operating company, the better question is not whether we
should disregard the earnings-based value, but whether we should
disregard the asset-based value.”31 The Tax Court went on to voice
agreement with the basic position urged by the Estate’s valuation
expert that substantial weight should be given to both the asset-
based value and the earnings-based value of the Corporation.
Although we wholeheartedly endorse the point made by the Tax
Court’s rhetorical question whether any weight at all should be
given to the asset-based value —— and see little hyperbole in it ——
we are constrained to proceed, as proposed by the Estate and as
done by the Tax Court, with a methodology that assigns some weight
to each of the values generated by those two disparate approaches.
The final determination required to complete the pre-discount
valuation methodology in this case, then, is the selection of the
respective weights (percentages) to be assigned to each of the
Corporation’s theoretical values, asset-based and earnings-based.
As observed in our discussion of the potential effects (or lack
thereof) of the likelihood of liquidation and latent gains tax
30
Id.
31
Id. at 1340 (boldface ours).
31
liability on the value of the Corporation’s assets, it is in the
exercise conducted to determine the relative weights to be accorded
to each of the two differently calculated values of the Corporation
—— and only in that exercise —— that the likelihood of liquidation
vis-à-vis the likelihood of indefinitely retaining and using the
assets, comes into play.
The Tax Court was of the opinion —— and we agree —— that the
hypothetical willing buyer of the Decedent’s block of stock would
be unlikely to provoke liquidation of the company, even if he
could. The Tax Court bolstered that conclusion with the
recognition that even though the Estate’s block of stock represents
day-to-day control, the buyer of that block would lack the power to
compel liquidation, merger, or consolidation.32 In this regard, the
court cogently emphasized that Dunn Equipment’s history, community
ties, and relationship with its employees would make it difficult
if not virtually impossible for the holder of the Estate’s block of
stock to secure the votes of additional shares sufficient to
institute liquidation. After concluding that the likelihood of
liquidation was slight, the Tax Court added:
A rapid liquidation would have flooded the market
with equipment, reducing the value obtained for
each piece. A lengthy, drawn-out liquidation (also
called a “creeping liquidation”) would have risked
the loss of customers who, at some point, would
have realized that Dunn Equipment no longer meant
32
See TEX. BUS. CORP. ACT ANN. art. 6.03 (Vernon 1991).
32
to stay in business and who would therefore have
sought other suppliers of equipment.33
Despite having asked rhetorically —— but, in our opinion,
insightfully —— whether the asset-based value of the Corporation
should not be disregarded altogether, the Tax Court simply
reiterated the factors that should be considered (largely
paraphrasing Rev. Rul. 59-60), then conclusionally completed its
pre-discount valuation methodology by assigning unequal percentages
of weight to the results of its two approaches to valuation.
Given the stipulated or agreed facts, the additional facts
found by the Tax Court, and the correct determination by that court
that the likelihood of liquidation was minimal, our expectation
would be that if the court elected to assign unequal weight to the
two approaches, it would accord a minority (or even a nominal)
weight to the asset-based value of the Corporation, and a majority
(or even a super-majority) weight to the net cash flow or earnings-
based value. Without explanation, however, the Tax Court baldly ——
and, to us, astonishingly —— did just the opposite, assigning a
substantial majority of the weight to the asset-based value. The
33
Dunn, 79 T.C.M. (CCH) at 1340. The Tax Court nevertheless
opined that the earnings value of the company appeared to be
understated because the earnings projections are based on a low
period in a cyclical business. We see this observation as clearly
erroneous: Dunn Equipment’s business and earnings had been flat
for over 10 years —— hardly a cycle —— and nothing known to the
Corporation or any hypothetical buyer as of the valuation date
predicted any kind of sustained upturn in the foreseeable future.
The Tax Court’s belief, grounded in that erroneous analysis of the
business cycle, that a hypothetical buyer and seller would give
asset value added weight, is likewise clearly erroneous.
33
court allocated almost two-thirds of the weight (65%) to the
results of the asset-based approach and only slightly more than
one-third (35%) to the results of the earnings-based approach. We
view this as a legal, logical, and economic non sequitur,
inconsistent with all findings and expressions of the court leading
up to its announcement of this step in its methodology. We also
note that the Tax Court’s ratio roughly splits the difference
between the 50:50 ratio advanced by the Estate and the 100:0 ratio
advocated by the Commissioner.
Irrespective of whether the crucial step in the Tax Court’s
methodology, the assignment of relative weights to the results of
the different valuation approaches, is deemed to be an issue of law
or a mixed question of fact and law, we review it de novo. Our
plenary review leads us inescapably to the conclusion that the Tax
Court’s 65:35 ratio in favor of its asset-based value constitutes
reversible error. How, we must ask, can the value of a corporation
that possesses all the attributes verbalized by the Tax Court
conceivably be governed essentially twice as much by its asset-
based value as by its earnings or cash flow-based value, when its
assets (1) are not susceptible of appreciation (except, possibly,
de minimis by the condo and the plant sites), (2) are physically
depreciated and depreciating as a result of their being used as
intended, (3) are being replaced constantly with newer models at
great cost, and (4) are virtually certain not to be put up for sale
34
because indefinite operation —— not liquidation —— is all that can
be predicted as the Corporation’s future, both long-term and short?
At this point we must emphasize the fact that the lion’s share
of the Corporation’s assets comprised heavy equipment which, to
such an operating company, is virtually indistinguishable from
consumable supplies —— and likely would be so regarded were it not
for the administratively necessary but economically unrealistic
artificiality of 12-month tax years. Those assets are constantly
depreciating from heavy use and obsolescence; they are being
replaced to the tune of $2 million annually; their highest and best
use is short-term rental, frequently impossible to accomplish
without the furnishing of operators by the Corporation; and the tax
effects of their unlikely sale to third parties would greatly
diminish their value to the Corporation. Indeed, it takes eight
salesmen and 123 common-law employees, working full time in this
highly competitive industry, to make these heavy-equipment assets
produce even moderately acceptable levels of profitability.
Throughout its comprehensive and logical background analysis,
the Tax Court recognized that Dunn Equipment is an operating
company, a going business concern, the Decedent’s shares in which
would almost certainly be purchased by a willing buyer for
continued operation and not for liquidation or other asset
disposition. For purposes of valuation, Dunn Equipment is easily
distinguishable from true asset-holding investment companies, which
own properties for their own intrinsic, passive yield and
35
appreciation —— securities, timberland, mineral royalties,
collectibles, and the like. For the Tax Court here to employ a
valuation method that, in its penultimate step of crafting a
weighting ratio assigns only one-third weight to this operating
company’s income-based value, defies reason and makes no economic
sense.34 Our conclusion is all the more unavoidable when viewed in
the light of the Tax Court’s disregard of the ubiquitous factor of
dividend paying capacity —— in this case, zero —— which, if applied
under customarily employed weighting methods, would further dilute
the weight of the asset-value factor and reduce the overall value
of the Corporation as well. The same can be said for the effect on
cash flow of the underpayment of officers’ compensation.
When we review the objective, factual record in this case ——
which is all that remained for the Tax Court to rely on after it
disregarded most expert testimony —— we are left with the definite
impression that an error was committed at the weighting step of the
method employed here. This review also mandates that something
between zero and a small percentage of weight be assigned to the
Corporation’s asset-based value, and that the remainder of the
weight be assigned to its earnings-based value. Under different
circumstances, we might be inclined to remand for the Tax Court to
make another try at assigning relative weights and constructing a
34
See e.g., B. F. Sturtevant Co. v. Comm’r, 75 F.2d 316, 324
(1st Cir. 1935)(holding that good business judgment must prevail,
“and a failure or refusal to exercise that judgment constitutes an
error of law”).
36
reasonable ratio. Given the state of the record and the seven-plus
years that this case has languished in the courts (over a year now
in ours), such a remand, coupled with its potential for yet another
appeal, militates against sending this particular issue back to the
Tax Court. After all, the record of this case, free as it is of
credibility calls and genuine disputes of material fact between the
parties (other than as to their experts) places us in exactly the
same methodological vantage point as the Tax Court when it comes to
assigning relative weights to the results of the valuation
approaches employed. This is true regardless of whether that
assignment be labeled a question of law or a mixed question of fact
and law.
Tempting as it is to follow the implication of the Tax Court’s
rhetorical question and disregard the asset-based value altogether,
we remain cognizant of the venerable Cohan35 rule, which counsels
against assigning a zero value or probability to anything under any
circumstances, and therefore resist that temptation. Recognizing
the impossibility of ever making an absolutely precise and
universally accepted determination of weighting percentages,36 we
35
Cohan v. Comm’r, 39 F.2d 540, 544 (2d Cir. 1930) (L. Hand,
J.) (“But to allow nothing at all appears to us inconsistent....The
amount may be trivial and unsatisfactory, but there was a basis
for some allowance, and it was wrong to refuse any....”).
36
Fomented in significant part by myriad valuation challenges
instituted by the IRS over the past decades, a full-fledged
profession of business appraisers, such as the American Society of
Appraisers, has emerged, generating its own methodology and lexicon
in the process; which in turn have contributed to the profession’s
37
nevertheless hold that the proper method of valuing the stock of
Dunn Equipment, under all the relevant circumstances and discrete
facts of this case (not the least of which is the “unlikelihood” of
liquidation of its assets), requires assigning a weight to its
earnings-based value somewhere between 75% and 90%, and to its
asset-based value somewhere between 10% and 25%. Within these
ranges we select 85% for the earnings-based weight and 15% for the
asset-based weight, producing a 85:15 weighting ratio.
III. Conclusion
The Tax Court calculated Dunn Equipment’s earnings-based value
before discount at $1,321,740, and the Estate does not appeal that
determination. Therefore, on remand the Tax Court shall give the
respect and mystique. Because —— absent an actual purchase and
sale —— valuing businesses, particularly closely held corporations,
is not a pure science replete with precise formulae and susceptible
of mechanical calculation but depends instead largely on subjective
opinions, the writings and public pronouncements (including expert
testimony) of these learned practitioners necessarily contain some
vagaries, ambiguities, inexactitudes, caveats, and qualifications.
It is not surprising therefore that from time to time disagreements
of diametric proportion arise among these practitioners. As the
methodology we employ today may well be viewed by some of these
professionals as unsophisticated, dogmatic, overly simplistic, or
just plain wrong, we consciously assume the risk of incurring such
criticism from the business appraisal community. In particular, we
anticipate that some may find fault with (1) our insistence (like
that of the Estate’s expert) that, in the asset-based approach, the
valuing of the Corporation’s assets proceed on the assumption that
the assets are sold; and (2) our determination that, in this case,
the likelihood of liquidation or sale of essentially all assets be
factored into the weighting of the results of the two valuation
approaches and not be considered as an integral factor in valuing
the Corporation under either of those approaches. In this regard,
we observe that on the end of the methodology spectrum opposite
oversimplification lies over-engineering.
38
results of that approach a weight of 85% in computing the
Corporation’s value. In contrast, the asset-based value, to which
a weight of 15% shall be given, must be recalculated by the Tax
Court by applying to the previously determined market value of the
Corporation’s assets, a reduction equal to 34% of those assets’
built-in taxable gains. After thus recalculating the Corporation’s
asset-based value and computing the pre-discount value of the
Corporation by application of this 85:15 ratio, the Tax Court shall
then reduce the Estate’s 62.96% ratable portion of that value by
22.5% for lack of marketability and lack of super-majority control,
pursuant to the unappealed discount methodology originally selected
by the Tax Court.
With the correct value of the Estate’s block of stock in Dunn
Equipment thus determined, the court shall recalculate (or the
parties shall stipulate) the correct estate tax liability for
Decedent’s Estate. This will enable the court to enter an
appropriate final judgment to account for the Estate’s overpayment
of taxes as well as interest and any other relevant factors.
Finally, given the Commissioner’s delays in issuing his notice
of deficiency and his extreme and unjustifiable trial position in
advocating a valuation based entirely on asset value (with no
reduction for built-in tax liability and no weight given to income-
based value), exacerbated by his failure to adduce expert appraisal
testimony in support of his own exorbitant proposed value, the Tax
Court shall entertain any claim that the Estate might elect to
39
assert under I.R.C. § 7430, if perchance the re-valuation of the
Decedent’s block of Dunn Equipment’s stock should reduce the net
worth of the Estate to a sum below the $2 million cap on
entitlement to relief under that section.37
REVERSED and REMANDED, with instructions.
37
See 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(1)(B); I.R.C. § 7430(c)(4)(ii).
40