110 T.C. No. 15
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
VULCAN OIL TECHNOLOGY PARTNERS, VANGUARD OIL TECHNOLOGY PARTNERS,
DRAKE OIL TECHNOLOGY PARTNERS, DILLON OIL TECHNOLOGY PARTNERS,
DERRINGER OIL TECHNOLOGY PARTNERS-1981, DERRINGER OIL TECHNOLOGY
PARTNERS-1982, CROWNE OIL TECHNOLOGY PARTNERS, CARLTON OIL
TECHNOLOGY PARTNERS, LTD., AMERICAN ENERGY RESOURCES, INC., TAX
MATTERS PARTNER, ET AL.,1 Petitioners v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket Nos. 21530-87, 16768-88, Filed March 5, 1998.
24725-89.
1
Cases of the following petitioners are consolidated
herewith: Vulcan Oil Technology Partners, Vanguard Oil
Technology Partners, Drake Oil Technology Partners, Dillon Oil
Technology Partners, Derringer Oil Technology Partners 1981,
Derringer Oil Technology Partners 1982, Crowne Oil Technology
Partners, Carlton Oil Technology Partners, Ltd., American Energy
Resources, Inc., Tax Matters Partner, docket No. 16768-88; and
Crowne Oil Technology Partners, American Energy Resources, Inc.,
Tax Matters Partner, docket No. 24725-89.
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Movants were investors in the so-called Elektra
Hemisphere tax shelters. Among other things, movants'
motions seek from the Court orders --
(1) under the TEFRA partnership provisions and
under Rule 245(b) that would grant movants
leave to file untimely notices of election to
participate in the instant consolidated TEFRA
partnership proceedings with attached notices
of election to participate;
(2) under Rule 50 that would set aside
settlement agreements that were entered into
by most of the movants herein during 1994 and
later years; and
(3) under the TEFRA partnership provisions
that would require respondent now to enter
into settlement agreements with movants
consistent with settlement terms that were
available to investors in the Elektra
Hemisphere tax shelters during 1986, 1987, and
1988.
Held: Movants' motions are denied.
Declan J. O'Donnell, for movants.
Marilyn S. Ames and Dennis M. Kelly, for respondent.
OPINION
SWIFT, Judge: This matter is before the Court in these
consolidated cases on movants' motions, under the Tax Equity and
Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982 (TEFRA), Pub. L. 97-248, 96
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Stat. 324, partnership provisions and under Rule 245(b),2 for
leave to file untimely notices of election to participate with
attached notices of election to participate, and motions, under
Rule 50, to set aside settlement agreements and/or to require
respondent now to enter into consistent settlement agreements. An
evidentiary hearing was held on May 21, 1997, in regard to these
motions.
The particular years before us in these consolidated cases
are 1983, 1984, and 1985 -- years subject to the TEFRA partnership
provisions. In Estate of Campion v. Commissioner, 110 T.C. __
(1998), with regard to years prior to the effective date of the
TEFRA partnership provisions, other investors in the Elektra
Hemisphere tax shelters have filed motions similar to the instant
motions. Our opinion in Campion is also filed this date.
The underlying tax shelter investments that are involved in
these consolidated cases constitute investments in seven Denver-
based limited partnerships and are related to the so-called
Elektra Hemisphere tax shelter investments that were the subject
of litigation in this Court in Krause v. Commissioner, 99 T.C. 132
(1992), affd. sub nom. Hildebrand v. Commissioner, 28 F.3d 1024
(10th Cir. 1994); Acierno v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1997-441;
2
Unless otherwise indicated, all Rule references are to the
Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure, and all section
references are to the Internal Revenue Code for the years in
issue.
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Karlsson v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1997-432; and Vanderschraaf
v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1997-306.
In Acierno v. Commissioner, supra, we found that the Denver-
based partnerships that are involved in the instant cases were
similar to the Manhattan and Wichita partnerships that were
involved in the lead test cases in the Elektra Hemisphere tax
shelter project of Krause v. Commissioner, supra, and accordingly
that the limited partners of the Denver-based partnerships who had
not settled their cases with respondent were to be bound by the
opinion in Krause. The settlements that most of the movants
herein entered into, during 1994 and later years, are consistent
with our decisions in Krause and the above-cited related cases
(namely, no deductions are to be allowed to the taxpayers relating
to their investments in the Elektra Hemisphere tax shelters, and
the taxpayers are not to be held liable for additions to tax or
penalties other than increased interest under section 6621(c) or
its predecessor section 6621(d)) (hereinafter referred to as the
no-cash settlements).
On an untimely basis, the majority of the movants herein now
seek permission from the Court to file notices of election to
participate in the instant TEFRA partnership proceedings for the
purpose of seeking an order from the Court that would set aside
the no-cash settlement agreements that they entered into and that
would require respondent to enter into revised settlement
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agreements with movants consistent with the more favorable
settlement terms that were available generally to investors in the
Elektra Hemisphere tax shelters during 1986, 1987, and 1988
(namely, tax deductions were allowed for the amount of cash that
investors had invested in the Elektra Hemisphere tax shelters and
no additions to tax or penalties were imposed other than increased
interest under section 6621(c) or its predecessor section 6621(d)
(hereinafter referred to as the cash settlements).
The remaining movants herein have not yet entered into any
settlement agreements with respondent relating to tax benefits
movants claimed on their Federal income tax returns relating to
their Elektra Hemisphere tax shelter investments. Such movants
seek from the Court an order that would require respondent to now
enter into settlement agreements with them consistent with the
cash settlements that were available generally to investors in the
Elektra Hemisphere tax shelters during 1986, 1987, and 1988.
All of the movants herein seek permission from the Court to
file notices of election to participate in the instant TEFRA
partnership proceedings solely for purposes of obtaining from the
Court an order requiring respondent to enter into settlements with
them consistent with the terms of the cash settlements.
Beginning in 1986, respondent’s settlement position with
regard to investments in the Elektra Hemisphere tax shelters
reflected the cash settlement terms to which many investors,
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during 1986, 1987, and 1988, agreed, including many investors who
had invested in the seven Denver-based Elektra Hemisphere
partnerships. Over the years, however, respondent’s settlement
position relating to the Elektra Hemisphere tax shelters has
changed, and terms of the settlement offers that respondent has
made available to investors have changed accordingly. As time
progressed and as the Krause v. Commissioner, supra, lead test
cases approached trial, respondent’s settlement position generally
became less favorable to investors and more favorable to
respondent. Each of respondent’s various settlement positions
contained time deadlines or termination dates beyond which a
particular settlement position would no longer be available to
investors.
As indicated, after the opinion in Krause v. Commissioner,
supra, was rendered by this Court, many of the movants herein
agreed to settle on the basis of respondent’s then pending no-cash
settlement position.
In the instant motions, movants allege that a structural
defect or a fraud on the Court occurred in obtaining from movants
the above-referenced no-cash settlements and that respondent had,
and has, under the TEFRA partnership provisions, a continuing duty
of consistency to treat all investors in the Elektra Hemisphere
tax shelters consistently and to affirmatively now make available
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to all investors the most favorable settlement terms that ever
were offered to any of the investors.
More specifically, movants allege --
(1) that the no-cash settlements that were agreed to by
movants herein during 1994 and later years were premised
on the erroneous fact that no better settlements were
available to investors;
(2) that during 1994 and later years, when the no-cash
settlements that movants now seek to set aside were
entered into, movants and their counsel allegedly were
not aware of the prior more favorable cash settlements
that other taxpayers had entered into during 1986, 1987,
and 1988; and
(3) that under the TEFRA partnership provisions movants
herein, during 1994 and later years, should have been
and should now be allowed to settle their tax
adjustments relating to their investments in the Elektra
Hemisphere tax shelters consistently with the cash
settlements offered in prior years.
Movants further allege the existence of "a pervasive and
manufactured conspiracy" among respondent’s counsel to deprive
movants herein and other taxpayers of proper TEFRA partnership
settlement procedures. Movants contend that the allegedly
defective settlement procedures respondent utilized in obtaining
settlements with movants herein affected thousands of investors in
the Elektra Hemisphere tax shelters.
In response, respondent emphasizes that the no-cash
settlements that movants agreed to and that they now seek to
disavow are based on and are consistent with the results of the
above-cited test cases. Respondent argues that movants herein
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(having refused to settle on a cash basis in 1986, 1987, and 1988,
having "waited out" the litigation of the lead test cases until
our opinion in Krause v. Commissioner, supra, was rendered in
1992, and now not liking the results) are simply the victims of
their own procrastination or litigation strategy, not of any
structural defect or fraud on the Court.
Respondent also emphasizes that, under the TEFRA provisions,
respondent had no affirmative obligation to notify movants that,
in earlier years, some of the Elektra Hemisphere investors settled
their disputes with respondent relating thereto on any particular
terms.
Respondent responds further that --
(1) movants did not make timely requests for consistent
settlements during the time period when respondent’s
cash settlement position was open to all Elektra
Hemisphere investors;
(2) that there is no requirement that respondent
specifically notify each investor of each settlement
agreement; and
(3) with regard to the specific settlement agreements
that movants entered into, movants have not shown any
fraud, malfeasance, or misrepresentation as a basis for
setting aside the settlement agreements.
We agree with each of respondent’s arguments.
The evidence indicates that the cash settlements that, during
1986, 1987, and 1988, many investors entered into with respondent
reflected a date of September 30, 1986, by which date, under the
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terms of respondent's offer to settle, investors needed to notify
respondent of their willingness to settle on that basis. Those
investors who so notified respondent were allowed in 1986, 1987,
and 1988 to finalize the related computations under the cash
settlements.
The schedule below sets forth the specific dates on which
respondent mailed notices of Final Partnership Administrative
Adjustments (FPAA's) to the Denver-based partnerships with respect
to 1983, 1984, and 1985 and also the latest dates on which cash
settlement agreements were finalized with partners in each of the
partnerships:3
Date Date of
Year Partnership FPAA Mailed Latest Settlement
1983 Crowne 4/15/87 12/29/87
Derringer-1981 3/30/87 11/17/87
Derringer-1982 3/30/87 12/08/87
Dillon 4/15/87 11/15/88
Drake 4/06/87 12/22/87
Vanguard 3/30/87 9/10/87
Vulcan 3/30/87 9/23/87
3
The schedule reflects information with regard to each of the
Denver-based Elektra Hemisphere tax shelter partnerships except
for those partnerships with respect to whose partners either no
prior cash settlements were entered into or with respect to which
no consistent settlements have been requested by any of the
movants herein (namely, Carlton Oil Technology Partners, Ltd.,
for 1984 and 1985, Crowne Oil Technology Partners for 1984 and
1985, Derringer Oil Technology Partners-1981 for 1984 and 1985,
Dillon Oil Technology Partners for 1985, Vanguard Oil Technology
Partners for 1984 and 1985, and Vulcan Oil Technology Partners
for 1984 and 1985).
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1984 Derringer-1981 4/11/88 11/17/87
Derringer-1982 3/28/88 12/08/87
Dillon 4/11/88 11/15/88
1985 Derringer-1981 4/11/88 9/17/87
Derringer-1982 3/28/88 12/08/87
As settlement agreements were finalized, personnel in
respondent's Ogden Service Center, which was the key-case Service
Center for the Denver-based Elektra Hemisphere tax shelter
partnerships, generally mailed copies of the final agreements to
the tax matters partner of each partnership.
In late 1993 and early 1994, respondent mailed settlement
offers to investors in the Denver-based partnerships who had not
previously settled, reflecting respondent's then-current no-cash
settlement position. The mailing from respondent contained a
standard transmittal letter, a schedule of partnership adjustments
consistent with this Court's opinion in Krause v. Commissioner, 99
T.C. 132 (1992), and a proposed settlement agreement form.
Respondent's transmittal letters contained a statement that
"we have completed settlement negotiations for the partnership
shown above," and indicated a 30-day deadline for acceptance of
the terms of the settlement.
All of the movants in these cases with respect to the instant
motions (except Frank Acierno, Jack and Katherine Schoellerman,
Mary F. Hill, and David and Barbara Jonson) executed settlement
agreements reflecting the no-cash settlement terms consistent with
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the Krause opinion and such settlements were finalized. The
earliest settlement agreement executed by a movant herein was
signed on January 3, 1994, and the latest one was signed on
December 1, 1994.
Between February 16 and March 27, 1995, written requests to
respondent were made by the movants herein (with exception of
William and Arlene Ginn and Lomand and Janice Beals)4 for the
opportunity to set aside their prior no-cash settlement agreements
with respondent and to enter into new settlement agreements with
respondent consistent with the cash settlement terms that had been
entered into by other investors during 1986, 1987, and 1988.
Respondent denied each such request on the grounds that each
request was untimely, that each investor making such request had
previously entered into a settlement agreement with respondent,
and that each such settlement agreement had converted the
investors' partnership items to nonpartnership items.
The TEFRA provisions expressly provide that where a
settlement agreement is entered into between respondent and a
partner in a partnership before issuance of the relevant FPAA to
the tax matters partner (TMP), other partners who wish to enter
into consistent settlement agreements must make requests therefor
within 150 days after the FPAA is mailed to the TMP. Section
4
The Ginns and the Beals appear not to have made a written
request to respondent for a consistent settlement.
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6224(c)(2) reads in pertinent part and with exceptions not
applicable herein, as follows:
SEC. 6224(c)(2). Other partners have right to enter
into consistent agreements.--If the Secretary enters into a
settlement agreement with any partner with respect to
partnership items for any partnership taxable year, the
Secretary shall offer to any other partner who so requests
settlement terms for the partnership taxable year which are
consistent with those contained in such settlement agreement.
* * * this paragraph shall apply with respect to a settlement
agreement entered into with a partner before notice of a
final partnership administrative adjustment is mailed to the
tax matters partner only if such other partner makes the
request before the expiration of 150 days after the day on
which such notice is mailed to the tax matters partner.
Where, after issuance of the related FPAA to the TMP, a
settlement agreement is entered into with a partner, section
301.6224(c)-3T(c)(3), Temporary Proced. & Admin. Regs., 52 Fed.
Reg. 6787 (Mar. 5, 1987), provides that other partners who wish to
enter into consistent settlement agreements must submit a request
therefor to respondent within either 150 days after the FPAA was
issued or 60 days after the day on which the prior settlement was
entered into, whichever is later. Section 301.6224(c)-3T,
Temporary Proced. & Admin. Regs., 52 Fed. Reg. 6787 (Mar. 5,
1987), reads in part as follows:
(a) In general. If the Service enters into a settlement
agreement with any partner with respect to partnership items,
the Service shall offer to any other partner who so requests
in accordance with paragraph (c) of this section settlement
terms which are consistent with those contained in the
settlement agreement entered into.
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* * * * * * *
(c) Time and manner of requesting consistent
settlements--(1) In general. A partner desiring settlement
terms consistent with the terms of any settlement agreement
entered into between any other partner and the Service shall
submit a written statement to the Internal Revenue Service
office that entered into the settlement.
* * * * * * *
(3) Time for filing request. The statement shall be
filed not later than the later of --
(i) The 150th day after the day on which the notice of
final partnership administrative adjustment is mailed to the
tax matters partner, or
(ii) The 60th day after the day on which the settlement
was entered into.
At the time the cash settlements involved in these cases were
entered into, there was no statutory or regulatory provision that
placed on respondent the duty to notify each partner in a TEFRA
partnership that a settlement was entered into. Rather, section
6223(g) and section 301.6223(g)-1T(b)(1)(iv), Temporary Proced. &
Admin. Regs., 52 Fed. Reg. 6786 (Mar. 5, 1987), placed the duty on
the TMP to keep each partner informed about settlement offers that
had been entered into by partners. It was the TMP, not
respondent, who had the duty of notification to other investor-
partners of the fact and date that settlements were entered into.
Movants erroneously rely on Rule 248 as a ground for
establishing that, during 1986 through 1988, notice to them of the
cash settlements was defective. Rule 248(c)(1), which requires
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notification to the Court, only applies to settlements with
participating partners, and the evidence does not establish that
any of the participating partners in the instant cases ever
entered into prior cash settlements with respondent. Also, Rule
248(c)(2), which requires respondent to give notice to the TMP's
when a partner enters into a settlement, was not effective until
September 1, 1988, see Note to Rule 248(c)(2), 90 T.C. 1376
(1988), and there is no credible evidence that respondent failed
to comply with Rule 248(c)(2) after that date.
For the period January 19, 1984, through September 1, 1989, a
provision of respondent’s manual provided that upon receipt of a
settlement in a TEFRA partnership audit or proceeding,
respondent’s Service Center was to notify the appropriate TMP’s of
the settlement, and the responsibility then fell on the TMP’s to
notify other partners of the settlement. Movants argue that
respondent did not follow this manual procedure with regard to the
Elektra Hemisphere tax shelter partnerships, and therefore that
all movants herein (those who already entered into no-cash
settlements and those who have not yet entered into any
settlements) should now be entitled to enter into cash
settlements. With regard to this argument, we note that movants
have failed to present any credible testimony from the TMP's of
the partnerships, from other partners, from their representatives,
or others to support their claim that respondent failed to give
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proper notice of settlements to the TMP's under this manual
provision and that the TMP's and other partners did not timely
know of cash settlements that were available during 1986, 1987,
and 1988.
Also, failure of respondent to comply with the above manual
provision would provide little support for granting movants’
motions herein. See United States v. Caceres, 440 U.S. 741
(1979); Keado v. United States, 853 F.2d 1209 (5th Cir. 1988);
Lojeski v. Boandl, 788 F.2d 196 (3d Cir. 1986); and United States
v. Horne, 714 F.2d 206 (1st Cir. 1983), which provide that
irregularities in following manual provisions not involving
constitutional rights generally will not give rise to legal
remedies.
Further, section 6230(f) expressly provides that the failure
of the TMP to provide notice or to perform any act on behalf of
any partner, as required by either the statute or the regulations,
would not affect the applicability of any partnership proceeding
or adjustment to such partner. Thus, despite the TMP's alleged
failure to provide notice to movants of cash settlements that were
entered into in 1986 through 1988, movants herein have no right
now to require respondent to enter into cash settlements.
Under no statutory or regulatory provision, Court rule, or
other basis, was respondent required to give movants herein notice
of cash settlements that, during 1986 through 1988, were entered
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into between respondent and investors in the Elektra Hemisphere
tax shelters. Responsibility for providing notice to movants was
with the TMP's of the various Elektra Hemisphere tax shelter
partnerships.
The latest cash settlement agreements that were entered into
between respondent and investors with respect to each of the 1983
Elektra Hemisphere partnership tax years in question and with
respect to the 1984 tax year of the Dillon partnership were
entered into in late 1987 and late 1988 after the respective
FPAA's were mailed to the respective TMP's in early 1987 and early
1988. Any requests by movants herein for consistent settlements
with regard to those specific partnerships and those specific
years should have been made within 60 days after the latest cash
settlement was entered into. Since movants' requests for
consistent settlements pertaining to 1983 and 1984 were made by
movants in 1995, they are untimely by approximately 6 years.
With respect to the 1984 and 1985 tax years of Derringer-1981
and 1982, the latest cash settlement agreements were entered into
in November and December of 1987, before respondent's FPAA's were
mailed to the TMP's in March and April of 1988. Since the
settlements were entered into before the FPAA's were mailed, the
timeliness of movants' requests for consistent settlements is
controlled by section 6224(c)(2), and the requests are untimely
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because they were not made within the 150-day deadline. Rather,
they were made more than 6 years thereafter.
With regard to Carlton, no cash settlements were entered into
during the 1986 through 1988 years or thereafter, and therefore
there exists no cash settlement in respect to which any of the
movants herein can even seek a consistent settlement.
In spite of the fact that no prior cash settlements exist for
some of the Elektra Hemisphere tax shelter partnerships for the
years involved herein, some of the movants herein -- who were
partners in such partnerships -- argue that they nevertheless
should now be entitled to cash settlements for such years. Such
requests for "consistent" settlements are based on cash
settlements that were entered into with partners in partnerships
other than partnerships in which movants invested and/or with
respect to years other than years in which movants invested. For
example, there were no cash settlements entered into by any
partners in Crowne for 1984, but five of the movants herein are
partners in Crowne and are now requesting cash settlements for
that year.
Under a plain reading of section 6224(c)(2), "any other
partner" is to be interpreted only as a partner in the same
partnership, and "partnership items" relate only to the same
partnership tax year. Partners in different partnerships and
partners in the same partnerships for different years do not have
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the same partnership items. Absent a specific agreement or
stipulation to the contrary, the consistent settlement rules of
section 6224(c)(2) do not apply to an entire tax shelter project,
nor to partnerships within a group of related partnerships (such
as the Denver-based Elektra Hemisphere tax shelter partnerships).
What we said in Boyd v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1992-626, in
this regard is pertinent --
Even if TEFRA were to apply, the settlement
agreement for * * * [partnership A] would not be imposed
on petitioner or any other partner in * * *
[partnership B] because * * * [partnership B] is a
separate partnership from * * * [partnership A].
Petitioner was not a partner in * * * [partnership A] or
any of the six other partnerships for which settlement
agreements were reached. There is no provision in the
Code requiring * * * [respondent] to settle the * * * [B
partnership] under the same settlement terms that were
negotiated for the * * * [A partnership], a separate and
distinct partnership. [Citation omitted.]
Lastly, we address briefly movants' allegations that fraud,
malfeasance, and misrepresentations of fact occurred that provide
a basis for setting aside the no-cash settlements that the
majority of the movants herein entered into with respondent with
respect to their investments in the Elektra Hemisphere tax
shelters.
Movants cite DuFresne v. Commissioner, 26 F.3d 105 (9th Cir.
1994), vacating and remanding T.C. Memo. 1991-614, in which the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit vacated a decision in
a test case and remanded the case for further proceedings based on
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information that a corruption of the processes of this Court and
of the rights of the taxpayers may have occurred, allegedly as a
result of secret, out-of-the-ordinary settlement agreements
entered into between respondent and certain trial witnesses.
Nothing comparable is presented to us in the instant consolidated
cases.
The credible evidence herein indicates that the settlement
agreements available to investors in the Elektra Hemisphere tax
shelters during 1986 and 1987 were available to all investors. No
credible evidence corroborates movants’ contentions that in 1986
and 1987 they, or their counsel, were not aware of respondent’s
willingness to settle their tax disputes relating to investments
in the Elektra Hemisphere tax shelters on the same cash basis on
which other taxpayers during those years settled with respondent.
Movants' reliance on some ambiguities in certain forms and
letters mailed by respondent to movants regarding terms of
settlements that were available is futile. There is no credible
evidence that such ambiguities were intentional, that they gave
rise to material misrepresentations, or that they in any way
constituted fraud or malfeasance.
There is no evidence herein that would support a finding of
fraud, malfeasance, or misrepresentations of fact on respondent's
behalf with regard to any aspect of the cash settlements that were
entered into during 1986 through 1988 between respondent and other
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Elektra Hemisphere investors and with regard to any aspect of the
no-cash settlements that were entered into in later years between
respondent and movants herein.
For the reasons stated, each of movants’ motions will be
denied.
Appropriate orders will
be issued.