T.C. Memo. 1996-14
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
THOMAS E. AND JOAN A. BENNETT, Petitioners v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
THEODORE H. AND MARILYN F. BLACK, Petitioners v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket Nos. 31758-85, 36202-86. Filed January 22, 1996.
Elliot I. Miller, for petitioners.
Maureen T. O'Brien and Paul T. Colleran, for respondent.
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
DAWSON, Judge: These consolidated cases were assigned to
Special Trial Judge Norman H. Wolfe pursuant to the provisions of
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section 7443A(b)(4) and Rules 180, 181, and 183.1 They were
tried and briefed separately but consolidated for purposes of
opinion. The Court agrees with and adopts the opinion of the
Special Trial Judge, which is set forth below.
OPINION OF THE SPECIAL TRIAL JUDGE
WOLFE, Special Trial Judge: These cases are part of the
Plastics Recycling group of cases. For a detailed discussion of
the transactions involved in the Plastics Recycling cases, see
Provizer v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1992-177, affd. without
published opinion 996 F.2d 1216 (6th Cir. 1993). The underlying
transaction in these cases is substantially identical to the
transaction considered in the Provizer case.
In a notice of deficiency, respondent determined
deficiencies in the 1978, 1979, and 1981 joint Federal income
taxes of petitioners Bennett in the respective amounts of
$19,120, $954, and $37,715.2 Respondent also determined that
interest on deficiencies accruing after December 31, 1984, would
be calculated at 120 percent of the statutory rate under section
1
All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code, in
effect for the years in issue, unless otherwise indicated. All
Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and
Procedure.
2
The deficiencies in the Bennett case, docket No. 31758-85,
for taxable years 1978 and 1979 result from disallowance of
investment tax credit carrybacks and business energy credit
carrybacks from taxable year 1981.
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6621(c).3 In an amendment to answer, respondent asserted the
following: For taxable years 1978 and 1979, additions to tax for
negligence under section 6653(a); for taxable years 1978, 1979,
and 1981, additions to tax for valuation overstatement under
section 6659; and for taxable year 1981, additions to tax under
section 6653(a)(1) for negligence and under section 6653(a)(2) in
an amount equal to 50 percent of the interest due on the
underpayment attributable to negligence.4
In a notice of deficiency, respondent determined a
deficiency with respect to the joint Federal income tax return
filed by petitioners Black for 1981 in the amount of $74,111.
Respondent also determined additions to tax in the amount of
$7,411 under section 6661, in the amount of $3,705 under section
6653(a)(1) for negligence, and under section 6653(a)(2) in an
amount equal to 50 percent of the interest due on the
underpayment attributable to negligence. In an answer to
3
The notice of deficiency refers to sec. 6621(d). This
section was redesignated as sec. 6621(c) by sec. 1511(c)(1)(A) of
the Tax Reform Act of 1986, Pub. L. 99-514, 100 Stat. 2085, 2744
and repealed by sec. 7721(b) of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation
Act of 1989 (OBRA 89), Pub. L. 101-239, 103 Stat. 2106, 2399,
effective for tax returns due after Dec. 31, 1989, OBRA 89 sec.
7721(d), 103 Stat. 2400. The repeal does not affect the instant
case. For simplicity, we will refer to this section as sec.
6621(c). The annual rate of interest under sec. 6621(c) for
interest accruing after Dec. 31, 1984, equals 120 percent of the
interest payable under sec. 6601 with respect to any substantial
underpayment attributable to tax-motivated transactions.
4
Corresponding dollar figures were not set out by respondent
for these asserted additions to tax.
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petition, respondent asserted that interest on deficiencies
accruing after December 31, 1984, would be calculated at 120
percent of the statutory rate under section 6621(c). See supra
note 3. In an amendment to answer, respondent asserted an
addition to tax under section 6659 for taxable year 1981. See
supra note 4.
Petitioners each filed a Stipulation of Settled Issues
relating to their participation in the "Plastics Recycling
Program" and the additions to tax relating thereto. The parties
stipulated that petitioners Bennett and Black are not entitled to
any deductions, losses, investment tax credits, business energy
credits, or any other tax benefits claimed on their tax returns
as a result of their participation in the "Plastics Recycling
Program". The parties further stipulated that the underpayments
in income tax attributable to petitioners' participation in the
"Plastics Recycling Program" are substantial underpayments
attributable to tax motivated transactions, subject to the
increased rate of interest established under section 6621(c).
Respondent and petitioners Bennett also filed a stipulation
of settled issues with respect to tax benefits claimed in 1981
flowing from their interests in three other limited partnerships
not at issue herein: Ludlow Oil & Gas Drilling Program 1980,
Monroe Oil & Gas Drilling Program 1980 Ltd., and Riefenberger No.
1 1981 Ltd.
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Respondent's determination of an addition to tax under
section 6661 with respect to petitioners Black was not
specifically addressed in the stipulation of settled issues nor
elsewhere in the record. However, the third stipulation in the
stipulation of settled issues provides:
This stipulation [of settled issues] resolves all
issues that relate to the items claimed on petitioners'
tax returns resulting from their participation in the
Plastics Recycling Program, with the exception of
petitioners' potential liability for additions to the
tax for valuation overstatements under I.R.C. §6659 and
for negligence under the applicable provisions of
I.R.C. §6653(a).
Because of this stipulation, we consider any issue with respect
to the addition to tax under section 6661 to be settled.
The issues for decision in these consolidated cases are:
(1) Whether petitioners are liable for additions to tax for
negligence or intentional disregard of rules or regulations under
section 6653(a); and (2) whether petitioners are liable for the
addition to tax under section 6659 for an underpayment of tax
attributable to valuation overstatement.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found.
The stipulated facts and attached exhibits are incorporated by
this reference. Petitioners Bennett resided in Avon,
Connecticut, when their petition was filed. Petitioners Black
resided in New Canaan, Connecticut, when their petition was
filed.
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During 1981, Thomas E. Bennett (Bennett) was a vice
president at Ingersoll-Rand Company (Ingersoll-Rand). His
spouse, Joan A. Bennett, was not employed outside the home.
Theodore H. Black (Black) was also a vice president of Ingersoll-
Rand during 1981. His wife, Marilyn F. Black, was not employed
outside the home.
For their respective investments of $25,000, petitioners
Bennett and Black each acquired a 2.605-percent interest in the
limited partnership Empire Associates (Empire) during 1981. As a
result of the passthrough from Empire, on their respective 1981
Federal income tax returns petitioners each deducted an operating
loss in the amount of $20,510 and claimed investment tax credits
in the amount of $42,402. Petitioners Bennett used $22,328 of
the claimed credits on their 1981 return and carried back the
unused portion of the credits to 1978 and 1979 in the respective
amounts of $19,120 and $954. Respondent disallowed petitioners'
claimed deductions and credits related to Empire. In docket No.
31758-85, respondent disallowed petitioners Bennett's claimed
deductions related to three previously mentioned partnerships not
at issue herein.
The facts of the underlying transaction in these cases are
substantially identical to those in Provizer v. Commissioner,
T.C. Memo. 1992-177, and may be summarized as follows. In 1981,
Packaging Industries, Inc. (PI), manufactured and sold seven
Sentinel expanded polyethylene (EPE) recyclers to ECI Corp. for
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$6,867,000 ($981,000 each), of which $533,000 was paid in cash.
ECI Corp., in turn, resold the recyclers to F & G Corp. for
$8,138,667 ($1,162,666 each), of which $618,000 was paid in cash.
F & G Corp. then leased the recyclers to Empire, which licensed
the recyclers to FMEC Corp., which sublicensed them back to PI.
All of the monthly payments required among the entities in the
above transactions offset each other. These transactions were
accomplished simultaneously. We refer to these transactions
collectively as the Empire transaction.
In Provizer v. Commissioner, supra, we examined the
Clearwater transaction. In the Clearwater transaction, PI sold
six EPE recyclers to ECI Corp. for $981,000 each, and ECI, in
turn, resold the recyclers to F & G Corp. for $1,162,666 each. F
& G leased the recyclers to a limited partnership, Clearwater,
which licensed them to FMEC, which sublicensed them to PI. The
transaction involved herein differs in two respects: (1) Seven
Sentinel EPE recyclers were sold and leased rather than six; and
(2) Empire, rather than Clearwater, leased the recyclers from F &
G and then licensed them to FMEC. Empire is therefore like
Clearwater, occupying the same link in the transactional chain.
The Sentinel EPE recyclers considered in these cases are the same
type of machines considered in the Provizer case. The fair
market value of a Sentinel EPE recycler in 1981 was not in excess
of $50,000.
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PI allegedly sublicensed the recyclers to entities that
would use them to recycle plastic scrap. The sublicense
agreements provided that the end-users would transfer to PI 100
percent of the recycled scrap in exchange for a payment from FMEC
Corp. based on the quality and amount of recycled scrap.
Bennett and Black each learned of the Empire transaction
from Edward Gallagher (Gallagher). Gallagher was an officer in
the personal financial planning department at Bankers Trust.
Ingersoll-Rand had retained Bankers Trust in the early 1970's to
provide financial counseling to its officers. Gallagher became
responsible for the Ingersoll-Rand account starting in the late
1970's and counseled executives on investment planning, estate
planning, income tax planning, and retirement planning.
Gallagher had been with Bankers Trust since 1964. Before then he
had earned a B.A. degree from Holy Cross College in 1962, spent a
year in medical school, and served in the U.S. Army.
Gallagher learned of the Empire transaction from Robert
Miller (Miller), a lawyer at the firm of Windels, Marx, Davies &
Ives (WMDI). Ingersoll-Rand was a client of WMDI. Miller
referred Gallagher to John Taggart (Taggart), the head of the tax
department at WMDI. Gallagher discussed the transaction with
Taggart and the general partner of Empire, Richard Roberts
(Roberts). Gallagher read the offering memorandum and used that
information to analyze the economics of the investment. Gus
Kreischer (Kreischer), who was in charge of the tax section of
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the trust department at Bankers Trust, reviewed WMDI's tax
opinion letter contained in the offering memorandum and reported
favorably to Gallagher with respect to the opinion.
Gallagher discussed the Sentinel EPE recycler transactions
with about 11 executives at Ingersoll-Rand. At the behest of
Bennett, Gallagher toured PI's Hyannis plant. Upon his return
from Hyannis, Gallagher reported to the officers at Ingersoll-
Rand and told them that PI was a going concern, that he had seen
the recyclers, and that they were big machines. Gallagher also
submitted a brief handwritten summary to the same effect. He
prefaced his written summary by noting that he did "not have an
engineering background." The summary included a list of six
purported current end-users of recyclers and contained the
following postscript: "If you have any questions or would like
an opportunity to see the equipment in operation, please let me
know." Gallagher made no representations about the uniqueness of
the recyclers.
Neither Gallagher nor Bankers Trust received a commission
from Ingersoll-Rand for the investments in the Plastics Recycling
transactions. However, Gallagher did receive what he admitted
was a "special deal." The typical Plastics Recycling investment
entailed the acquisition of an interest in a partnership which
leased the recyclers. Such an interest sold for a minimum of
$50,000. In December of 1981, however, Gallagher was allowed to
purchase a 10-percent undivided interest directly in a recycler,
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for which he paid approximately $10,000 in cash and $90,000 in
notes. Gallagher told representatives of Bankers Trust and also
Bennett and probably Black that he was receiving this special
deal.
Bennett is a graduate of the New York State Maritime
Academy, from which he received a degree in marine engineering in
1950. After graduation he tested for a Coast Guard license and
was qualified to operate any ship as a third assistant engineer.
Bennett began working for Ingersoll-Rand in the fall of 1951.
Bennett started as an applications engineer in the centrifugal
pump marketing department where he was responsible for working on
worldwide customer inquiries, and was a specialist on power
plants and marine and navy equipment. From 1951 to 1968 he
served in a marketing capacity and continuously dealt with
product pricing. During 1972 he completed an advanced management
program at Harvard University. By 1978 he had been promoted to
vice president in charge of strategic planning, and became
involved in the planning for all of the businesses and also
mergers and acquisition analysis and studies. In mid-1981 he was
reassigned to the Torrington Company, an Ingersoll-Rand
subsidiary located in Torrington, Connecticut, which manufactured
roller bearings.
As an officer of Ingersoll-Rand, Bennett received financial
counseling from Bankers Trust. The Bankers Trust representative
during 1981, Gallagher, told him about Empire. Bennett reviewed
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the Empire offering memorandum and discussed the investment with
Gallagher and with other Ingersoll-Rand executives. Bennett
insisted that Gallagher visit the PI plant and see the recyclers.
Gallagher did so and reported back to the executives. Bennett
knew Gallagher was not an engineer and "could not assess the
machine in terms of its technical capability." Gallagher
arranged for the general partner of Empire, Roberts, to meet with
the officers at the Ingersoll-Rand corporate headquarters.
Bennett did not attend that meeting.
Ingersoll-Rand manufactures machinery, including
construction equipment, pumps, air compressors, rock drills,
pneumatic tools, and bearings. Its 1993 revenues were slightly
more than $4 billion. One of Ingersoll-Rand's subsidiaries
during 1981, Improved Machinery Company (IMCO), manufactured
plastic injection molding equipment. Bennett was aware of IMCO
and the nature of its business in 1981. He had been to the IMCO
plant several times and knew that IMCO's injection molding
machine used pellets, probably the same type produced by the
Sentinel EPE recycler. Bennett did not, however, talk to anyone
at IMCO about the Empire transaction or the Sentinel EPE recycler
prior to making his investment in Empire. Bennett knew that
several recyclers purportedly had been placed with end-users
before he invested in Empire. However, Bennett did not see a
Sentinel EPE recycler prior to investing in Empire, nor did he
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investigate whether there were any existing or potential
competitors for the Sentinel EPE recycler.
Black joined the U.S. Marine Corps. at the end of 1945. In
1949 he entered the U.S. Naval Academy, and in 1953 he graduated
with a bachelor of science degree in electrical engineering.
Black began his career at Ingersoll-Rand in 1957. Over the
course of his career, Black held the positions of salesman,
technical personnel director, account manager, general manager,
district manager, president, and chairman and chief executive
officer. As general manager of the turbo products division in
1967, he first became responsible for pricing specially
engineered equipment with unique proprietary technology. In the
fall of 1974, Black attended an advanced management program at
Harvard University.
Black first heard of the Sentinel EPE recyclers from
Gallagher in 1981. He had no formal education, training, or
background in chemical engineering, plastics engineering, or
plastics processing, although he had substantial knowledge of
some plastics processing from the standpoint of the seller of
machinery. His investigation of the Empire transaction did not
extend beyond discussions with Gallagher and a review of the
offering memorandum. Black did not see a Sentinel EPE recycler
prior to investing in Empire, did not speak to anyone at IMCO,
and never did a personal investigation of the competition.
OPINION
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In Provizer v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1992-177, a test
case involving the Clearwater transaction, this Court (1) found
that each Sentinel EPE recycler had a fair market value not in
excess of $50,000, (2) held that the Clearwater transaction was a
sham because it lacked economic substance and a business purpose,
(3) upheld the section 6659 addition to tax for valuation
overstatement since the underpayment of taxes was directly
related to the overstatement of the value of the Sentinel EPE
recyclers, and (4) held that losses and credits claimed with
respect to Clearwater were attributable to tax-motivated
transactions within the meaning of section 6621(c). In reaching
the conclusion that the Clearwater transaction lacked economic
substance and a business purpose, this Court relied heavily upon
the overvaluation of the Sentinel EPE recyclers.
Although petitioners have not agreed to be bound by the
Provizer opinion, they have stipulated that their investment in
the Sentinel EPE recyclers was similar to the investment
described in Provizer v. Commissioner, supra. The underlying
transaction in these cases (the Empire transaction) is in all
material respects identical to the transaction considered in the
Provizer case. The Sentinel EPE recyclers considered in these
cases are the same type of machines considered in the Provizer
case.
Based on the entire records in these cases, including the
extensive stipulations, testimony of respondent's experts, and
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petitioners' testimony, we hold that the Empire transaction was a
sham and lacked economic substance. In reaching this conclusion,
we rely heavily upon the overvaluation of the Sentinel EPE
recyclers. Respondent is sustained on the question of the
underlying deficiency. We note that petitioners have explicitly
conceded this issue in stipulations of settled issues filed
shortly before trial. The record plainly supports respondent's
determination regardless of such concessions. For a detailed
discussion of the facts and the applicable law in a substantially
identical case, see Provizer v. Commissioner, supra.
Issue 1. Sec. 6653(a) Negligence
In the notice of deficiency in docket No. 36202-86,
respondent determined that petitioners Black were liable for the
negligence additions to tax under section 6653(a)(1) and (2) for
1981. Petitioners Black have the burden of proving that
respondent's determination is erroneous. Rule 142(a); Luman v.
Commissioner, 79 T.C. 846, 860-861 (1982). In an amendment to
answer, respondent asserted that petitioners Bennett were liable
for the negligence additions to tax under section 6653(a)(1) and
(2) for 1981, and under section 6653(a) for 1978 and 1979.
Because these additions to tax were raised for the first time in
respondent's amendment to answer, respondent bears the burden of
proof on this issue. Rule 142(a); Vecchio v. Commissioner, 103
T.C. 170, 196 (1994).
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Section 6653(a) for 1978 and 1979 and section 6653(a)(1) for
taxable year 1981 provide for an addition to tax equal to 5
percent of the underpayment if any part of an underpayment of tax
is due to negligence or intentional disregard of rules or
regulations. Section 6653(a)(2) for taxable year 1981 provides
for an addition to tax equal to 50 percent of the interest
payable with respect to the portion of the underpayment
attributable to negligence. Negligence is defined as the failure
to exercise the due care that a reasonable and ordinarily prudent
person would employ under the circumstances. Neely v.
Commissioner, 85 T.C. 934, 947 (1985). The question is whether a
particular taxpayer's actions in connection with the transactions
were reasonable in light of his experience and the nature of the
investment or business. See Henry Schwartz Corp. v.
Commissioner, 60 T.C. 728, 740 (1973).
Petitioners each contend that they were reasonable in
claiming deductions and investment credits with respect to their
investment in Empire. To support this contention, petitioners
each allege, in general terms, the following: (1) That claiming
the deductions and credits with respect to Empire was reasonable
in light of a so-called oil crisis in the United Sates in 1981,
and (2) that in claiming the deductions and credits, petitioners
reasonably relied upon Gallagher and the offering materials.
Petitioners argue, in general terms, that they were
reasonable in claiming the deductions and credits related to
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Empire because of rising oil prices in the United States in 1981.
Petitioners placed into the record several documents from the
period 1979 to 1981, including speeches by William L. Wearly
(Wearly), chairman of the board of Ingersoll-Rand; articles from
Modern Plastics magazine; and an energy projections report from
the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE). Wearly's speeches, given at
colleges and universities, discussed business and national policy
challenges. One of his concerns was U.S. dependency on foreign
oil. The Modern Plastics articles and DOE report speculated on
the price of oil, among other things. Petitioners failed to
explain, however, the connection between these speculative
materials and the Empire investment. We find petitioners' vague,
general claims concerning the so-called oil crisis to be without
merit.
Petitioners' reliance on Krause v. Commissioner, 99 T.C. 132
(1992) (citing Todd v. Commissioner, 89 T.C. 912 (1987), affd.
862 F.2d 540 (5th Cir., 1988), affd. sub nom. Hildebrand v.
Commissioner, 28 F.3d 1024 (10th Cir. 1994), is misplaced. The
facts in the Krause case are distinctly different from the facts
of these cases. In the Krause case, the taxpayers invested in
limited partnerships whose investment objectives concerned
enhanced oil recovery (EOR) technology. The Krause opinion notes
that during the late 1970's and early 1980's, the Federal
Government adopted specific programs to aid research and
development of EOR technology. Id. at 135-136. In holding that
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the taxpayers in the Krause case were not liable for the
negligence additions to tax, this Court noted that one of the
Government's expert witnesses acknowledged that "investors may
have been significantly and reasonably influenced by the energy
price hysteria that existed in the late 1970's and early 1980's
to invest in EOR technology." Id. at 177. In the present cases,
however, one of respondent's experts, Steven Grossman, noted that
the price of plastics materials is not directly proportional to
the price of oil, that less than 10 percent of crude oil is
utilized for making plastics materials, and that studies have
shown that "a 300% increase in crude oil prices results in only a
30 to 40% increase in the cost of plastics products." While EOR
was, according to our Krause opinion, in the forefront of
national policy and the media during the late 1970's and 1980's,
there is no showing in these records that the so-called energy
crisis would provide a reasonable basis for petitioners'
investing in recycling of polyethylene, particularly in the
machinery here in question.
Moreover, the taxpayers in the Krause opinion were
experienced in or investigated the oil industry and EOR
technology specifically. One of the taxpayers in the Krause case
undertook significant investigation of the proposed investment
including researching EOR technology. The other taxpayer was a
geological and mining engineer whose work included research of
oil recovery methods and who hired an independent geologic
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engineer to review the offering materials. Id. at 166. In the
present cases, Black testified that he has no formal background
or education in plastics engineering or plastics processing,
although he is knowledgeable about polyethylene "for the purposes
of selling machinery", and nothing in the records indicates that
Bennett had any experience or knowledge in plastics or plastics
recycling. Moreover, although they had the personal ability to
do so and the resources to have it done, petitioners did not
independently investigate the Sentinel EPE recyclers. They did
not hire an expert in plastics to evaluate the Empire transaction
either. We consider petitioners' arguments with respect to the
Krause case inapplicable.
Petitioners' reliance on Rousseau v. United States, 91-1
USTC par. 50252 (E.D. La. 1991), is similarly misplaced. In
Rousseau, the property underlying the investment, ethanol
producing equipment, was widely considered at that time to be a
viable fuel alternative to oil and its potential for profit was
apparent. In addition, the taxpayer therein conducted an
independent investigation of the investment and researched the
market for the sale of ethanol in the United States. In
contrast, as we noted in distinguishing the Krause case, there is
no showing in these records that the so-called energy crisis
would provide a reasonable basis for petitioners' investing in
the polyethylene recyclers here in question. See supra pp. 16-
17. Petitioners did not independently investigate the Sentinel
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EPE recyclers or hire an expert in plastics to evaluate the
Empire transaction. This inattention to the machinery involved
in the transaction is particularly telling since petitioners each
had experience in pricing and selling machinery and ready access
to IMCO, an Ingersoll-Rand subsidiary involved in plastics and
which Bennett believed used pellets like those produced by the
Sentinel EPE recycler. The facts of petitioners' cases are
distinctly different from the Rousseau case. Accordingly, we do
not find petitioners' arguments with respect to the Rousseau case
applicable.
In each of the cases before us, petitioners' investigation
of the Empire transaction and the Sentinel EPE recyclers was
limited to conversations with Gallagher and other Ingersoll-Rand
executives and examination of the Empire offering materials.
Nonetheless, petitioners argue that their reliance on Gallagher
and the representations in the offering materials insulate them
from the negligence additions to tax.
Under some circumstances a taxpayer may avoid liability for
the additions to tax under section 6653(a)(1) and (2) if
reasonable reliance on a competent professional adviser is shown.
Freytag v. Commissioner, 89 T.C. 849, 888 (1987), affd. 904 F.2d
1011 (5th Cir. 1990), affd. 501 U.S. 868 (1991). Reliance on
professional advice, standing alone, is not an absolute defense
to negligence, but rather a factor to be considered. Id. In
order for reliance on professional advice to excuse a taxpayer
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from the negligence additions to tax, the reliance must be
reasonable, in good faith, and based upon full disclosure. Id.;
see Weis v. Commissioner, 94 T.C. 473, 487 (1990); Ewing v.
Commissioner, 91 T.C. 396, 423-424 (1988), affd. without
published opinion 940 F.2d 1534 (9th Cir. 1991); Pritchett v.
Commissioner, 63 T.C. 149, 174-175 (1974).
Reliance on representations by insiders, promoters, or
offering materials has been held an inadequate defense to
negligence. LaVerne v. Commissioner, 94 T.C. 637, 652-653
(1990), affd. without published opinion 956 F.2d 274 (9th Cir.
1992), affd. without published opinion sub nom. Cowles v.
Commissioner, 949 F.2d 401 (10th Cir. 1991); Marine v.
Commissioner, 92 T.C. 958, 992-993 (1989), affd. without
published opinion 921 F.2d 280 (9th Cir. 1991); McCrary v.
Commissioner, 92 T.C. 827, 850 (1989); Rybak v. Commissioner, 91
T.C. 524, 565 (1988). We have rejected pleas of reliance when
neither the taxpayer nor the advisers purportedly relied upon by
the taxpayer knew anything about the nontax business aspects of
the contemplated venture. Beck v. Commissioner, 85 T.C. 557
(1985); Flowers v. Commissioner, 80 T.C. 914 (1983); Steerman v.
Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1993-447.
The record here shows that petitioners' "adviser" in this
matter, Gallagher, possessed no special qualifications or
professional skills in the recycling or plastics industries.
Gallagher testified that Bankers Trust's due diligence involved
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only a review of the tax opinion letter. He explained that he
relied upon the people at Ingersoll-Rand to make their own
judgments of the value of the machines involved in the Empire
transaction since many of them were engineers and many had their
own resources to ascertain the value of machinery. Gallagher
testified that the taxpayers he advised at Ingersoll-Rand
concerning the Empire transaction "absolutely" understood that
they were not to rely upon him as to the value of the machinery.
While he purportedly read the offering memorandum, Gallagher
could not recall at trial how the Empire transaction was
structured, how Empire was to receive income, or how much its
monthly lease payments were. Gallagher could not even recall the
name of the purported end-user of the recycler in which he
personally had invested.
Gallagher spoke with Taggart and Roberts, but the record
does not indicate what representations they may have made to him
or if he learned anything beyond the representations in the
offering memorandum. Gallagher visited PI at the behest of
Bennett. His observations were those of a layman, and he was
careful to caution that he was not an engineer. As Bennett put
it, Gallagher "could not assess the [Sentinel EPE recycler]
machine in terms of its technical capability," but he could
verify the existence of the machines.
In our view, petitioners' reliance on Gallagher was not
reasonable. It was petitioners' reliance upon the purported
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values of the Sentinel EPE recyclers that generated the
deductions and credits in these cases. Yet the purported value
of the Sentinel EPE recyclers is the very thing that petitioners
and Gallagher did not verify. A taxpayer may rely upon his
adviser's expertise (in these cases financial planning and tax
advice), but it is not reasonable or prudent to rely upon an
adviser regarding matters outside of his field of expertise or
with respect to facts which he does not verify. See Skeen v.
Commissioner, 864 F.2d 93 (9th Cir. 1989), affg. Patin v.
Commissioner, 88 T.C. 1086 (1987); Lax v. Commissioner, T.C.
Memo. 1994-329.
In fact, both Black and Bennett plainly were more capable of
assessing the economic value of the recyclers than Gallagher
because of their experience pricing machinery at Ingersoll-Rand.
Petitioners also had ready access to the IMCO subsidiary of
Ingersoll-Rand, which was involved in plastics and possibly used
the same type of pellets produced by the Sentinel EPE recycler.
Petitioners had a list of supposed end-users of the recycler and
an open invitation from Gallagher to arrange for a tour to see
the equipment in operation. Even though petitioners could have
independently investigated the recyclers, they did nothing more
than have Gallagher verify the existence of the recyclers.
Petitioners expected no more from Gallagher, for as Bennett
testified, he could not assess the machines from a technical
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standpoint. Petitioners are not insulated from the negligence
additions to tax by claiming reliance on Gallagher.
Petitioners also contend that they read and reasonably
relied upon the Empire offering memorandum and the reports of the
evaluators annexed thereto. However, a careful consideration of
the materials in the Empire offering memorandum, especially the
discussions in the prospectus of high writeoffs and risk of
audit, would have alerted a prudent and reasonable investor to
the questionable nature of the promised deductions and credits.
See Collins v. Commissioner, 857 F.2d 1383, 1386 (9th Cir. 1988),
affg. Dister v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1987-217. The preface
to the memorandum contained the following: NO OFFEREE SHOULD
CONSIDER THE CONTENTS OF THIS MEMORANDUM *** AS *** EXPERT
ADVICE. *** EACH OFFEREE SHOULD CONSULT HIS OWN PROFESSIONAL
ADVISERS AS TO LEGAL, TAX, ACCOUNTING AND OTHER MATTERS RELATING
TO ANY PURCHASE BY HIM OF UNITS. It also clearly stated that the
Empire transaction involved significant tax risks and that in all
likelihood the Internal Revenue Service would challenge the
transaction. In a "business risks" section, it warned that there
was no history for the partnership and no established market for
the recyclers or the pellets.
At trial, Bennett could not recall having read those
business risk warnings or the statements that there was no market
for the recyclers or for the pellets of recycled plastic. Black
could not recall having read that there was no market for the
- 24 -
pellets or the recycler. Bennett testified that he was motivated
by the report of Stanley M. Ulanoff (Ulanoff), a marketer, which
was attached to the offering circular, even though Ulanoff had
not done a marketing analysis or put a value on the machine. He
also testified that in his experience, the price of machinery is
generally predicated upon the performance aspects rather than the
production cost. However, such an analysis was not done by
Ulanoff. Black testified that he "relied on others" regarding
the evaluation of the recycler, but that it was "in hindsight,
not very brilliant on [his] part" to have done so. It is
questionable from the records in these cases how closely
petitioners read the offering memorandum and to what extent they
relied on the representations therein. However, even if
petitioners did thoroughly review the offering memorandum, such
reading does not relieve them of negligence.
On its face, the Empire transaction should have raised
serious questions in the minds of ordinarily prudent investors.
According to the offering memorandum, the projected benefits for
each $50,000 investor were investment tax credits in 1981 of
$86,328 plus deductions in 1981 of $39,399. In the first year of
the investment alone, petitioners each claimed an operating loss
in the amount of $20,510 and investment tax and business energy
credits related to Empire totaling $42,402, while petitioners
- 25 -
each invested only $25,000 in Empire.5 The direct reductions in
petitioners' respective Federal income taxes, from just the tax
credits, equaled 170 percent of their cash investment.
Therefore, like the taxpayers in Provizer v. Commissioner, T.C.
Memo. 1992-177, "except for a few weeks at the beginning,
petitioners never had any money in the [Empire] deal." Indeed,
Gallagher testified that he probably told petitioners that they
would never be out of pocket on their Empire investment. A
reasonably prudent person would not conclude without substantial
investigation that the Government was providing significant tax
benefits to taxpayers in these circumstances. McCrary v.
Commissioner, 92 T.C. 827, 850 (1989).
The parties in these consolidated cases stipulated that the
fair market value of a Sentinel EPE recycler in 1981 and 1982 was
not in excess of $50,000. Notwithstanding this concession,
petitioners contend that they were reasonable in claiming credits
on their Federal income tax returns based upon each recycler
having a value of $1,162,666. In support of this position,
petitioners submitted into evidence preliminary reports prepared
for respondent by Ernest D. Carmagnola (Carmagnola), the
president of Professional Plastic Associates. Carmagnola had
been retained by the Internal Revenue Service in 1984 to evaluate
5
Petitioners Bennett used $22,328 of the claimed credits on
their 1981 return and carried back the unused portion of the
credits to 1978 and 1979 in the respective amounts of $19,120 and
$954.
- 26 -
the Sentinel EPE and EPS recyclers in light of what he described
as "the fantastic values placed on the [recyclers] by the
owners." Based on limited information available to him at that
time, Carmagnola preliminarily estimated the value of the
Sentinel EPE recycler to be $250,000. However, after additional
information became available to him, Carmagnola concluded in a
signed affidavit, dated March 16, 1993, that the machines
actually had a fair market value of not more than $50,000 each in
the fall of 1981 and 1982.
We accord no weight to the Carmagnola reports submitted by
petitioners. The projected valuations therein were based on
inadequate information,6 research, and investigation, and were
subsequently rejected and discredited by their author.
Respondent likewise rejected the reports and considered them
unsatisfactory for any purpose; and there is no indication in the
records that respondent used them as a basis for any
determinations in the notices of deficiency. Even so,
petitioners' counsel obtained copies of these reports and urge
that they support the reasonableness of the values reported on
their returns. Not surprisingly, petitioners did not call
6
In one preliminary report, Carmagnola states that he has "a
serious concern of actual profit-level" of a Sentinel EPE
recycler and that to determine whether the machines actually
could be profitable, he required additional information from PI.
Carmagnola also indicates that in preparing the report, he did
not have information available concerning research and
development costs of the machines and that he estimated those
costs in his valuations of the machines.
- 27 -
Carmagnola to testify in these cases,7 but preferred instead to
rely solely upon his preliminary, ill-founded valuation
estimates. The Carmagnola reports were a part of the record
considered by this Court and reviewed by the Sixth Circuit Court
of Appeals in the Provizer case, where we held the taxpayers
negligent. Consistent therewith, we find in these cases, as we
have found previously, that the reports prepared by Carmagnola
are unreliable and of no consequence. Petitioners are not
relieved of the negligence additions to tax based on the
preliminary reports prepared by Carmagnola.
Petitioners' reliance on Mollen v. United States, 72 AFTR2d
93-6443, 93-2 USTC par. 50585 (D. Ariz. 1993) is misplaced. The
taxpayer in Mollen was a medical doctor who specialized in
diabetes and who, on behalf of the Arizona Medical Association,
led a continuing medical education ("CME") accreditation program
for local hospitals. The underlying tax matter involved the
taxpayer's investment in Diabetics CME Group, Ltd., a limited
partnership which invested in the production, marketing, and
distribution of medical educational video tapes. The taxpayer's
personal expertise and insight in the underlying investment gave
him reason to believe it would be economically profitable.
Although the taxpayer was not experienced in business or tax
matters, he did consult with an accountant and a tax lawyer
7
Carmagnola has not been called to testify in any of the
Plastics Recycling cases before us.
- 28 -
regarding those matters. Moreover, as the District Court noted,
the propriety of the taxpayer's disallowed deduction therein was
"reasonably debatable."
The records in these cases, on the other hand, show no
comparable evidence that either of petitioners or their
"adviser," Gallagher, had formal education, expertise, or
experience in plastics or plastics recycling, although Black
explained that he had substantial knowledge of polyethylene for
purposes of selling machinery. As a representative of Bankers
Trust, Gallagher's due diligence responsibilities extended only
to a review of the tax opinion letter. He took no responsibility
for the valuation of the machinery in the Empire transaction.
Petitioners had knowledge and experience in business and the
pricing of machinery, and ready access to IMCO, a subsidiary of
Ingersoll-Rand which manufactured plastic injection molding
equipment, and which Bennett believed used the same type of
pellets produced by the Sentinel EPE recycler. However, they did
not utilize that knowledge and experience or consult anyone at
IMCO with respect to the purported value of the Sentinel EPE
recycler or its economic viability. The facts of these cases are
distinctly different from those in the Mollen case. We find
petitioners' arguments with respect to the Mollen case
inapplicable.
Petitioners' arguments are not supported by Anderson v.
Commissioner, 62 F.3d 1266 (10th Cir. 1995), affg. T.C. Memo.
- 29 -
1993-607, where the taxpayers were found liable for negligence
additions to tax. In Anderson, the taxpayers claimed tax
benefits based upon their acquisition of property listed at
$124,500, but for which they actually paid $6,225 in a cash
downpayment (5 percent of the purchase price) plus a 5-year
financing arrangement. Had the acquisition been nothing more
than a $6,225 passive investment, noted the Court of Appeals, it
would have been reasonable for the taxpayers to rely on the
advice of a good friend who had thoroughly investigated the
investment.8 However, because the transaction was structured and
represented as a purchase in the amount of $124,500, the Court of
Appeals held that something more was required.
In the cases before us, petitioners claimed tax benefits
based on the assumption that they leased, through Empire, an
interest in $8,138,662 worth of recycling machines. Based on
their investments of $25,000 each, Black and Bennett each claimed
a qualified investment in new investment credit property with a
basis of $212,012, with resulting first-year tax credits of
$42,402 and deductible losses of $20,510, a substantial
transaction clearly requiring careful investigation under the
Anderson case. Petitioners' adviser, Gallagher, reviewed the
8
The adviser had his accountant and attorney review and check
out the structure of the investment; he spoke with the investment
principal; he looked into the principal's background and checked
out his references, banks, other business connections, and the
Better Business Bureau; and he spoke with competitors to make
sure the venture was viable.
- 30 -
offering memorandum, had conversations with Taggart and Roberts,
and visited the PI plant. Unlike the adviser in Anderson, he did
not thoroughly investigate or educate himself in the industry
being invested in. In fact, Gallagher made it clear at the trial
that Bankers Trust's due diligence responsibilities regarding
Empire were limited to a review of the tax opinion letter. In
view of the $212,012 claimed basis for the interest of each
petitioner in the machinery, from which the investment credits
stemmed, a substantial amount and more than eight times greater
than the cash invested, plainly something more was required.
Accordingly, we find petitioners' reliance on the Anderson case
inapplicable.
Under the circumstances of these cases, petitioners Bennett
and Black failed to exercise due care in claiming the large
deductions and tax credits with respect to Empire on their
respective Federal income tax returns. We hold that petitioners
did not reasonably rely upon Gallagher and the offering
memorandum, or in good faith investigate the underlying
viability, financial structure, and economics of the Empire
transaction. In fact, the records indicate that petitioners were
more influenced by the fact that their fellow executives at
Ingersoll-Rand were investing in Sentinel EPE recycler
partnerships than by anything they learned from Gallagher or the
offering memorandum. Black testified that he "was very impressed
by the fact that some of our supposed financial geniuses at
- 31 -
Ingersoll-Rand *** all invested in this," while Bennett testified
that he was "very much influenced" by the actions of his fellow
executives and that the investment by people he respected "made a
considerable impact" on him. However, in our view the record in
these cases, including the testimony of Black and Bennett and
their manner in presenting that testimony, establishes that they
are men of education, experience, and talent in the business of
manufacturing and selling machinery, that during the time in
issue they were senior executives of a large machinery
manufacturing company, that they were highly knowledgeable about
appropriate pricing for a great variety of machinery, that they
had the ability and resources to learn the value of the machinery
involved in the Empire plastics recycling venture, in which they
invested, and that they could have obtained such information
without undue expense or effort.
Upon consideration of the entire records, we hold that
petitioners are liable for the negligence additions to tax under
the provisions of section 6653(a)(1) and (2) for 1981.
Respondent is sustained on this issue.
Issue 2. Sec. 6659 Valuation Overstatement
In amendments to the answers, respondent asserted additions
to tax with respect to petitioners in these cases under section
6659 for valuation overstatement. Because these additions were
raised for the first time in amendments to the answers,
- 32 -
respondent bears the burden of proof on these issues. Rule
142(a); Vecchio v. Commissioner, 103 T.C. 170, 196 (1994).
A graduated addition to tax is imposed when an individual
has an underpayment of tax that equals or exceeds $1,000 and "is
attributable to" a valuation overstatement. Sec. 6659(a), (d).
A valuation overstatement exists if the fair market value (or
adjusted basis) of property claimed on a return equals or exceeds
150 percent of the amount determined to be the correct amount.
Sec. 6659(c). If the claimed valuation exceeds 250 percent of
the correct value, the addition is equal to 30 percent of the
underpayment. Sec. 6659(b).
Petitioners claimed tax benefits, including investment tax
credits, based on purported values of $1,162,666 for each
Sentinel EPE recycler. Petitioners each concede that during 1981
the fair market value of a Sentinel EPE recycler was not in
excess of $50,000. Therefore, if disallowance of petitioners'
claimed tax benefits is attributable to the valuation
overstatement, petitioners are liable for the section 6659
additions to tax at the rate of 30 percent of the underpayments
of tax attributable to the tax benefits claimed with respect to
Empire.
Section 6659 does not apply to underpayments of tax that are
not "attributable to" valuation overstatements. See McCrary v.
Commissioner, 92 T.C. 827 (1989); Todd v. Commissioner, 89 T.C.
912 (1987), affd. 862 F.2d 540 (5th Cir. 1988). To the extent
- 33 -
taxpayers claim tax benefits that are disallowed on grounds
separate and independent from alleged valuation overstatements,
the resulting underpayments of tax are not regarded as
attributable to valuation overstatements. Krause v.
Commissioner, 99 T.C. 132, 179 (1992) (citing Todd v.
Commissioner, supra), affd. sub nom. Hildebrand v. Commissioner,
28 F.3d 1024 (10th Cir. 1994). However, when valuation is an
integral factor in disallowing deductions and credits, section
6659 is applicable. See Illes v. Commissioner, 982 F.2d 163, 167
(6th Cir. 1992), affg. T.C. Memo. 1991-449; Gilman v.
Commissioner, 933 F.2d 143, 151 (2d Cir. 1991), affg. T.C. Memo.
1989-684 (section 6659 addition to tax applies if a finding of
lack of economic substance is "due in part" to a valuation
overstatement); Masters v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1994-197;
Harness v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1991-321.
In the respective stipulations of settled issues,
petitioners conceded that they "are not entitled to any
deductions, losses, investment credits, business energy
investment credits, or any other tax benefits claimed on their
tax returns as a result of their participation in the Plastics
Recycling Program." In Todd v. Commissioner, supra, and McCrary
v. Commissioner, supra, we denied application of section 6659,
even though the subject property was overvalued, because the
related deductions and credits had been conceded or denied in
their entirety on other grounds. In Todd, we found that an
- 34 -
underpayment was not attributable to a valuation overstatement
because property was not placed in service during the years in
issue. In McCrary, we found the taxpayers were not liable for
the section 6659 addition to tax when, prior to the trial of the
case, the taxpayers conceded that they were not entitled to the
investment tax credit because the agreement in question was a
license and not a lease. In both cases the underpayment was
attributable to something other than a valuation overstatement.
This Court has held that concession of the investment tax
credit in and of itself does not relieve taxpayers of liability
for the section 6659 addition to tax. Dybsand v. Commissioner,
T.C. Memo. 1994-56; Chiechi v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1993-630.
Instead, what is significant is the ground upon which the
investment tax credit is disallowed or conceded. Chiechi v.
Commissioner, supra. Even in situations in which there are
arguably two grounds to support a deficiency and one supports a
section 6659 addition to tax and the other does not, the taxpayer
may still be liable for the addition to tax. Gainer v.
Commissioner, 893 F.2d 225, 228 (9th Cir. 1990), affg. T.C. Memo.
1988-416; Irom v. Commissioner, 866 F.2d 545, 547 (2d Cir. 1989),
vacating in part and remanding T.C. Memo. 1988-211; Harness v.
Commissioner, supra.
No argument was made and no evidence was presented to the
Court in the present cases to prove that disallowance and
concession of the tax benefits related to anything other than a
- 35 -
valuation overstatement. To the contrary, petitioners each
stipulated substantially the same facts concerning the underlying
transactions as we found in Provizer v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo.
1992-177. In the Provizer case, we held that the taxpayers were
liable for the section 6659 addition to tax because the
underpayment of taxes was directly related to the overvaluation
of the Sentinel EPE recyclers. The overvaluation of the
recyclers, exceeding 2325 percent, was an integral part of our
findings in Provizer that the transaction was a sham and lacked
economic substance. Similarly, the records in these cases
plainly show that the overvaluation of the recyclers is integral
to and is the core of our holding that the underlying transaction
in these cases was a sham and lacked economic substance.
Consistent with our findings in Provizer, petitioners each
stipulated that the Empire partnership had no net equity value,
that Empire's sole activity lacked any potential for profit, and
that the Empire transaction therefore lacked economic substance.
When a transaction lacks economic substance, section 6659 will
apply because the correct basis is zero and any basis claimed in
excess of that is a valuation overstatement. Gilman v.
Commissioner, supra; Rybak v. Commissioner, 91 T.C. 524, 566-567
(1988); Zirker v. Commissioner, 87 T.C. 970, 978-979 (1986);
Donahue v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1991-181, affd. without
published opinion 959 F.2d 234 (6th Cir. 1992), affd. sub nom.
Pasternak v. Commissioner, 990 F.2d 893 (6th Cir. 1993).
- 36 -
We held in Provizer v. Commissioner, supra, that each
Sentinel EPE recycler had a fair market value not in excess of
$50,000. Our finding in the Provizer case that the Sentinel EPE
recyclers had been overvalued was integral to and inseparable
from our finding of a lack of economic substance. Petitioners
conceded that the Empire transaction was similar to the
Clearwater transaction described in Provizer v. Commissioner,
supra, and that the Empire transaction lacked economic substance.
Given those concessions, and the fact that the records here
plainly show that the overvaluation of the recyclers was the
reason for the disallowance of the tax benefits, and the fact
that no argument was made and no evidence was presented to the
Court to prove that disallowance and concession of the tax
benefits related to anything other than a valuation
overstatement, we conclude that the deficiencies caused by the
disallowance of the claimed tax benefits were attributable to the
overvaluation of the Sentinel EPE recyclers.
Finally, we consider petitioners' express argument as to
waiver of the penalty. On brief, petitioners each contested
imposition of the section 6659 addition to tax on the grounds
that respondent erroneously failed to waive the addition to tax.
Section 6659(e) authorizes respondent to waive all or part of the
addition to tax for valuation overstatements if taxpayers
establish that there was a reasonable basis for the adjusted
bases or valuations claimed on the returns and that such claims
- 37 -
were made in good faith. Respondent's refusal to waive a section
6659 addition to tax is reviewable by this Court for abuse of
discretion. Krause v. Commissioner, 99 T.C. at 179.
Petitioners urge that they relied on Gallagher and the
offering materials in deciding on the valuation claimed on their
tax return. Petitioners each contend that such reliance was
reasonable, and, therefore, respondent should have waived the
section 6659 addition to tax. Petitioners rely upon Krause v.
Commissioner, supra; Rousseau v. United States, 91-1 USTC par.
50252 (E.D. La. 1991); and Mauerman v. Commissioner, 22 F.3d 1001
(10th Cir. 1994), revg. T.C. Memo. 1993-23, in support of their
argument.
We have found that petitioners' purported reliance on
Gallagher, and the offering materials was not reasonable.
Gallagher was a representative of Bankers Trust. He was not an
engineer and he never represented himself as being an expert in
plastics or plastics recycling. In Gallagher's view, Bankers
Trust's due diligence responsibility, and therefore Gallagher's
own responsibility, was limited to reviewing the tax opinion
letter included in the offering memorandum. The evaluators whose
reports were attached to the offering memorandum each owned
interests in partnerships that leased Sentinel EPE recyclers.
The offering memorandum contained numerous caveats, including the
following: NO OFFEREE SHOULD CONSIDER THE CONTENTS OF THIS
MEMORANDUM *** AS *** EXPERT ADVICE. *** EACH OFFEREE SHOULD
- 38 -
CONSULT HIS OWN PROFESSIONAL ADVISERS. Petitioners were
experienced in pricing machinery, yet they did not make the
effort personally to see a Sentinel EPE recycler or independently
investigate the machinery prior to investing in Empire.
Petitioners' reliance on Krause v. Commissioner, supra,
Rousseau v. United States, supra, and Mauerman v. Commissioner,
supra, in support of their contention that they acted reasonably,
is misplaced. In the Krause and Rousseau cases, the section 6659
addition to tax was disallowed in light of the respective
holdings that the taxpayers in each case had a reasonable basis
for the valuations claimed on the tax returns or had reasonable
cause for the understatement on the return and were not subject
to negligence additions to tax. In contrast, we have held that
petitioners herein did not act reasonably in claiming deductions
and investment tax credits related to Empire, that the errors on
petitioners' tax returns were caused by the excessive valuations
of the underlying machinery in the Empire transaction, that
petitioners lacked reasonable cause for such overvaluation, and
that each petitioner is therefore liable for the negligence
additions to tax under section 6653(a). See supra pp. 14-28.
Accordingly, petitioners' reliance on the Krause and Rousseau
cases is misplaced.
In Mauerman v. Commissioner, supra, the Tenth Circuit Court
of Appeals held that the Commissioner had abused her discretion
by failing to waive a section 6661 addition to tax. Like section
- 39 -
6659, a section 6661 addition to tax may be waived by the
Commissioner if the taxpayer demonstrates that there was
reasonable cause for his underpayment and that he acted in good
faith. Sec. 6661(c). The taxpayer in Mauerman relied upon
independent attorneys and accountants for advice as to whether
payments were properly deductible or capitalized. The advice
relied upon by the taxpayer in Mauerman was within the scope of
his advisers' expertise, the interpretation of the tax laws as
applied to undisputed facts. Particularly with respect to
valuation, petitioners in these cases relied upon advice that was
outside the scope of expertise and experience of their advisers.
Consequently, we consider petitioners' reliance on the Mauerman
case inapplicable.
We hold that petitioners did not have a reasonable basis for
the adjusted bases or valuations claimed on their tax returns
with respect to their investments in Empire. In these cases,
respondent properly could find that petitioners' respective
reliance on Gallagher and the offering materials was
unreasonable. The records in these cases do not establish an
abuse of discretion on the part of respondent but support
respondent's position. We hold that respondent's refusal to
waive the section 6659 addition to tax is not an abuse of
discretion. Petitioners are liable for the respective section
6659 additions to tax at the rate of 30 percent of the
- 40 -
underpayments of tax attributable to the disallowed tax benefits.
Respondent is sustained on this issue.
To reflect the foregoing,
Decisions will be entered
under Rule 155.