T.C. Memo. 2015-15
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
ESTATE OF MARTHA E. SANFILIPPO, DECEASED, WILLIAM J. SNYDER,
EXECUTOR, Petitioner v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket No. 18344-12L. Filed January 22, 2015.
David W. Mitchell, for petitioner.
Janice B. Geier, for respondent.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
THORNTON, Chief Judge: This case arises from a petition for review of
respondent’s determination to proceed with a proposed levy. See sec. 6330(d).1
1
All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect at all
relevant times, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and
Procedure.
-2-
[*2] Background
The parties submitted this case fully stipulated pursuant to Rule 122. The
stipulated facts are found accordingly. Martha E. Sanfilippo (decedent) resided in
California when she died testate on July 14, 2004. The probate proceeding for
decedent’s estate was held in California. When the petition was filed the estate’s
executor, William J. Snyder, resided in California.
I. Decedent’s Trusts and Garrett Rajkovich
Decedent held interests in and general powers of appointment over various
trusts, including the Martha E. Sanfilippo Survivor Trust (survivor trust), the
Philip S. Sanfilippo Qualified Terminable Interest Property Trust (QTIP trust), and
the Martha E. Sanfilippo California Residence Trust (residence trust).
II. Decedent’s Last Will and Testament
Decedent’s last will and testament provided, pursuant to her general power
of appointment, that the survivor trust was to distribute to her adopted son, Garrett
Rajkovich (Mr. Rajkovich), free of trust, her 10% undivided interest in property
on Meridian Avenue (Hacienda shopping center property) and on Monterey Road
(Monterey property), both of which were in San Jose, California. Decedent’s will
also provided that the residence trust was to distribute to Mr. Rajkovich, free of
-3-
[*3] trust, property bordering the Almaden Expressway in San Jose, California
(Almaden Expressway property).
On the date of decedent’s death Mr. Rajkovich owed the survivor trust or
decedent $21,268,186. Decedent’s will forgave any debts that Mr. Rajkovich
owed the survivor trust or her.
III. The Hacienda Shopping Center Property Transfer and Mortgage
On February 3, 2005, Mr. Snyder, as successor trustee of the survivor trust,
transferred by grant deed the estate’s 10% interest in the Hacienda shopping center
property to Mr. Rajkovich. This transfer increased Mr. Rajkovich’s interest in the
property from 65.7% to 75.7%. On the same day Mr. Rajkovich, David
Rajkovich, Randall Rajkovich, and Nikette Pujalet executed a deed of trust
assigning their rights in the Hacienda shopping center property as security for a
$9,750,000 loan from a lending company.2
IV. The Estate’s Return
On March 31, 2005, the estate filed Form 4768, Application for Extension
of Time To File a Return and/or Pay U.S. Estate (and Generation-Skipping
Transfer) Taxes, requesting both an extension of time to file a Form 706, United
2
The record does not show the relationship, if any, between the borrowers
and does not indicate the interests in the Hacienda shopping center property held
by any of these parties other than Mr. Rajkovich.
-4-
[*4] States Estate (and Generation-Skipping Transfer) Tax Return, and an
extension of time to pay the estate tax liability pursuant to section 6161.
Respondent granted the estate’s request to file a Form 706 by October 14, 2005,
and granted an extension of time to pay the tax until April 14, 2006.
On April 5 and June 12, 2005, the estate made estate tax payments of
$2,252,000 and $550,000, respectively.
On October 18, 2005, respondent received the estate’s Form 706, reporting
a gross estate of $62,210,409, deductions of $29,225,132, a taxable estate of
$32,985,277, and estate tax liability of $14,719,020. The $62,210,409 gross estate
included Mr. Rajkovich’s $21,268,186 debt and $27,020,483 of assets from the
QTIP trust. On Schedule G of the Form 706 the estate also reported the following
assets:
Asset Value
Undivided 50% interest in Monterey property $882,500
Undivided 10% interest in Hacienda
shopping center property (after discount for lack of
control and lack of marketability) 1,778,000
Almaden Expressway property 1,700,000
-5-
[*5] The balance due as shown on the Form 706 after credit for prior payments of
$3,084,285 was $11,634,735.3
On or about November 23, 2005, respondent began examining the estate’s
return. On December 5, 2005, respondent assessed the $14,719,020 tax liability
reported on the estate’s return.
From March 29, 2006, to April 14, 2010, the estate submitted six additional
Forms 4768, requesting extensions of time to pay the estate tax. These requests
for extensions were based generally on the estate’s ongoing attempts to liquidate
certain assets and on representations that the remaining outstanding balance of
estate tax was payable from the share of a single beneficiary, Mr. Rajkovich, who
had liquidity problems of his own. Respondent granted the first six of these
requests but on August 3, 2010, denied the last request for an extension of time.
In the meantime, on June 12, 2006, the estate had made an additional estate
tax payment of $750,000. On October 1, 2007, respondent abated $660,309 of the
estate’s tax liability.
3
The $3,084,285 credit included the $2,802,000 of total payments made on
April 5 and June 12, 2005, and also included a $282,285 credit for gift tax paid on
October 14, 2002.
-6-
[*6] V. Three-Way Security Agreement
On June 12, 2008, the estate, Mr. Rajkovich, and respondent entered into a
collateral three-way security agreement (security agreement).4 It provided that as
security for the estate’s prompt and complete payment of its estate tax, Mr.
Rajkovich would provide the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) a continuing first
priority security in and lien on his 12.5% interest in GMK Oakley Development,
LLC, for as long as the estate had unpaid estate tax liabilities.5 The security
agreement further provided that if at any time the value of the collateral decreased
from its value on the effective date of the agreement, the IRS could request and
Mr. Rajkovich would provide additional collateral.
VI. The Appeals Office Hearing
On June 21, 2011, respondent sent the estate Letter 1058, Final Notice -
Notice of Intent to Levy and Notice of Your Right to a Hearing, with respect to the
estate’s then-unpaid estate tax liability of $15,071,058.
4
The copy of the security agreement in the administrative record bears the
signatures of Mr. Snyder and Mr. Rajkovich but none on behalf of the IRS. The
case activity records indicate that because the original three-way security
agreement was held in a safe at a different location and was not available to the
Appeals officer, he relied upon a copy provided by Mr. Snyder. Presumably, this
is the copy found in the administrative record.
5
GMK Oakley Development, LLC, held various real properties. For
convenience, we refer to these properties as the GMK Oakley properties.
-7-
[*7] On July 14, 2011, the estate timely submitted to respondent Form 12153,
Request for a Collection Due Process or Equivalent Hearing. On the Form 12153
the estate indicated that it wished to submit an offer-in-compromise as a collection
alternative to the levy. The estate also indicated on the Form 12153 that it wanted
“to arrive at a compromise of the tax due because the Martha Sanfilippo
Estate/Sanfilippo Survivor’s Trust does not have the cash or ability to pay the
entire amount due.”
On or about August 17, 2011, the estate’s case was assigned to Settlement
Officer Alan Pobre (SO Pobre). On August 31, 2011, SO Pobre sent Mr. Snyder a
letter scheduling a face-to-face conference for October 25, 2011, and indicating
that the estate would need to submit certain documents and financial information
within 14 days to allow SO Pobre to consider any proposed collection alternatives.
The letter also requested the estate to provide a “specific proposal by which to
resolve the estate tax” but did not request a Form 656, Offer In Compromise.
Mr. Snyder promptly sent SO Pobre a three-ring notebook of requested
documents and financial information. In his cover letter Mr. Snyder indicated that
although the estate had an undivided 50% interest in the Monterey property there
was a mortgage on the property of about $1,350,226 that was subject to default
and that the estate had been unaware of this mortgage when it filed its Form 706.
-8-
[*8] Mr. Snyder’s letter also indicated that the estate had received a $1,150,000
offer for the property in October 2010, from which circumstance he concluded that
the market value of the property was less than the outstanding mortgage.
On September 20, 2011, SO Pobre received a telephone message from Mr.
Snyder inquiring about the priority of the IRS’ lien on the Monterey property and
indicating that a foreclosure sale of the property would take place that morning.
According to his case activity notes, SO Pobre was of the opinion that the
mortgage had priority over the IRS lien, which would have to be reduced to
judgment to be effective against the estate.
On October 19, 2011, SO Pobre made the following entries in his “Case
Activity Records”:
Returned Executor W.Snider’s [sic] call. In determining viability of
collection alternatives, value of estate needs to be established. There
are two realties--the Monterey property, which sold on foreclosure
last week for less than balance owed on note, and * * * [the Almaden
Expressway property], presently valued at $1 [million.] Cash - subject
to administrative expenses of estate. Loan as previously disclosed,
now in escrow, expected to close in Jan.
The remaining asset is largest debt owed to estate by decedent’s son
Garret Rajkovic [sic]. Executor is not sure if he can get a full
financial package from Garret Rajkovic [sic], who has the biggest
debt to the estate, but he knows enough to fill in the blanks for our
conference. * * * [Mr. Snyder] said he would try to bring G. Rajvovic
[sic] to the conference, and I said he needs to be told that his
-9-
[*9] attendance is voluntary as to the service. (G. Rajkovic [sic]
owes the Estate, not the Service).
On October 25, 2011, SO Pobre held a face-to-face conference with Mr.
Snyder and Mr. Rajkovich. During this conference SO Pobre requested that Mr.
Snyder provide to him by November 9, 2011: a list of the estate’s assets from the
time of its first request for an extension of time to file and to pay to the date of the
conference; a list of any asset dispositions for that same period; an explanation as
to why no tax payments were made from these assets; and a report of the fair
market values of the estate’s current assets. Also during the conference, Mr.
Rajkovich informed SO Pobre that the California Department of Water Resources
was interested in purchasing the GMK Oakley properties and that he would remit
the funds from this sale for payment on the estate’s tax liability. SO Pobre agreed
to “hold * * * [the estate’s] case in suspense until June 2012” to permit Mr.
Rajkovich time to sell these properties and to submit the proceeds to the IRS. SO
Pobre also requested that by November 9, 2011, the estate submit a plan to collect
and dispose of its remaining properties as well as an update on the sale of the
GMK Oakley properties.
In a letter to Mr. Snyder dated October 27, 2011, SO Pobre stated: “My
plan to hold this case in suspense until June 2012 is based on the projected time
- 10 -
[*10] frame for the Oakley sale to come to fruition.” Also on October 27, 2011,
SO Pobre recorded in his case activity records that if the estate were to liquidate
all its assets presently and force Mr. Rajkovich to liquidate, possible proceeds
would be only about $5 million, but “if the Oakley/Water District purchases the
Oakley property [from Mr. Rajkovich], potential proceeds may exceed three times
more. In view of this, an offer now (remedy sought) would not represent RCP
[reasonable collection potential].”
On November 3, 2011, after receiving documentation from the estate, SO
Pobre determined that the estate had received no funds on the foreclosure sale of
the Monterey property.
On November 8, 2011, Mr. Snyder sent SO Pobre a letter stating:
I expect to be able to settle the estate tax balance by June 30, 2012
with approximately $5,000,000 from the following sources: cash
$1,500,000, collection of notes $500,000, proceeds from the * * *
[Almaden Expressway property] $1,000,000 and collection from
Garret after the [GMK] Oakley property is sold $2,000,000.
Mr. Snyder also enclosed a November 7, 2011, letter he had received from Mr.
Rajkovich stating:
As you know I have been unable to repay the tax levied on the
forgiven Sanfilippo notes. I have attached for your review my
original March 1, 2006 Financial Statement as well as my most
current Financial Statement dated October 24, 2011. I have tried to
explain what happened to the assets in the right hand column. Also
- 11 -
[*11] please find a time line explaining what happened to the primary
assets originally planned to be used as payments. As you can see no
assets were liquidated to remove cash from my estate. Any and all
proceeds from activities were either re-invested or used to pay on
going expenses to keep the business solvent.
On the accompanying balance sheet dated March 1, 2006, Mr. Rajkovich showed
total assets of $102,724,893, total liabilities of $50,573,852, and total equity of
$52,151,041. The balance sheet also showed a value of $27,405,000 for Mr.
Rajkovich’s 75.7% interest in the Hacienda shopping center property. On another
accompanying balance sheet dated October 24, 2011, Mr. Rajkovich showed total
assets of $19,922,379, total liabilities of $19,976,796, and total equity of negative
$54,417.
On November 14, 2011, Mr. Snyder contacted SO Pobre, requesting
confirmation that SO Pobre had received the November 8, 2011, letter as well as
enclosures “plus guidance on [the] best alternative action/resolution.”
On January 26, 2012, Mr. Snyder called SO Pobre and told him that an
appraisal was being conducted on the GMK Oakley properties and that it was his
belief the property would have a fair market value of $2 to $3 million. Also on
January 26, 2012, SO Pobre indicated in his case activity records that the GMK
Oakley properties’ sale was expected to occur in May 2012.
- 12 -
[*12] On February 2, 2012, SO Pobre made the following entries in his “Case
Activity Records”:
Follow up on unresolved matters from * * * [Mr. Snyder’s] letter
11/08/2011, focus on notes receivable - $500 k expected to be
collected by March.
In view of agreed determination date in June 2012 and likelihood I
would not be the one to bring this case to an end, reviewed in detail
sequence of actions in marshalling all remaining assets of estate, with
end in view of resolving before expected late-May early-June sale of
Garret Rajkovich’s property to space preserve [California Department
of Water Resources].
POA wants to firm up final disposition - a discharge of Almaden
[Expressway] property and CNC of account - but expressed wish to
stay clear of OIC (indicated as alternative remedy on F12153)
because obligor (to estate) Garret Rajkovich has already expressed a
wish against inviting decision on his personal liability arising from
* * * [security agreement] for prior 6161 extensions worked out with
Advisory. Confirmed agreement with CNC direction.
On February 6, 2012, SO Pobre recorded in his case activity records that,
taking into account Mr. Rajkovich’s obligations, independent of the estate’s, under
the security agreement, he had determined that placing the estate’s collection
account in currently not collectible (CNC) status would be appropriate.
On March 13, 2012, Mr. Snyder contacted SO Pobre and informed him that
the California Department of Water Resources was not interested in purchasing
the GMK Oakley properties and that Mr. Rajkovich was going to list the
- 13 -
[*13] properties for sale. Mr. Snyder also requested that he, Mr. Rajkovich, and
SO Pobre meet to formulate a “common plan” and to “answer more definitely”
what would occur if the GMK Oakley, LLC, properties were not sold by June
2012. SO Pobre requested a copy of the GMK Oakley properties listing agreement
as well as a preliminary appraisal for the Almaden Expressway property before
deciding whether to schedule the meeting. Also on March 13, 2012, SO Pobre
recorded in his case activity records that he did “not expect to be the SO to see
disposition” of the estate’s CDP case. He listed various “agreements to date” and
noted the following as the “Direction agreed to”:
Upon receipt of value of remaining assets of estate (see inventory)
and proceeds from sale of [GMK] Oakley property * * *, discharge of
18200 Almaden Expwy from 6324 special lien and place account
CNC (as alternative to original unarticulated offer).
On March 21, 2012, SO Pobre informed Mr. Snyder that the estate would
need to submit additional information including: appraisals for the GMK Oakley
and Almaden Expressway properties, the listing agreement for the GMK Oakley
properties, and certain accounting of costs incurred by Mr. Rajkovich and by Mr.
Snyder in administering the estate. The parties agreed to reduce to writing many
- 14 -
[*14] of the things they discussed “in order for the winding down to continue as
planned even after * * * [SO Pobre’s] departure.”6
Shortly thereafter, SO Pobre transferred out of the IRS Appeals Office. On
or about April 12, 2012, the estate’s case was transferred to Settlement Officer
Alan Owyang (SO Owyang). Also on April 12, 2012, Mr. Snyder and SO Owyang
spoke by telephone. In response to Mr. Snyder’s statement that SO Pobre had
offered to draft a settlement agreement before his departure, SO Owyang indicated
that he was unaware of any settlement agreement and that “this was not going to
happen.”
On April 13, 2012, SO Owyang sent an email to his Appeals team manager,
complaining that the subject matter of the case was complex because it related to
matters of estate and gift taxation that he was “not versed in” and that his reading
of SO Pobre’s case activity records was not helpful to him. On the same day SO
Owyang emailed former SO Pobre, recounting his conversation with Mr. Snyder
and stating: “I can’t figure out what settlement document he is referring to”. The
record does not show any immediate response to this inquiry from former SO
Pobre.
6
As far as the record reveals, this understanding was never reduced to
writing.
- 15 -
[*15] On May 2, 2012, SO Owyang spoke with Mr. Snyder by telephone. SO
Owyang said his primary concern was how the estate “once valued at $63 million,
is now reduced to $5 million * * *. Where did the $58 million go?”.7 He
requested an “outline” to help explain this matter.
On May 9, 2012, Mr. Snyder sent SO Owyang a letter, explaining that “[t]he
issue has been and remains the illiquidity of Mr. Rajkovich”. The letter explained
to SO Owyang, consistent with Mr. Snyder’s March 13, 2012, letter to SO Pobre,
that Mr. Rajkovich’s hoped-for sale of the GMK Oakley properties had not yet
materialized and it was unclear what proceeds the ultimate disposition of the
properties might yield. The letter stated that the GMK Oakley properties were
listed for sale for $3 million but there had been no offers to date. Mr. Snyder
reiterated, consistent with the proposal formerly submitted to SO Pobre, that the
estate “would like the Service to consider accepting a settlement payment
consisting of the cash in the [Survivor] trust plus the proceeds from * * * [Mr.
Rajkovich’s] interest in GMK Oakley, LLC, with the Service discharging the
7
SO Owyang’s question reveals an imperfect understanding of the estate tax
return, which reported a gross estate of $62,210,409 and allowable deductions of
over $29 million, which included, among other things, charitable contribution
deductions for distributions the estate made to charities and educational
institutions. Of the reported $33 million taxable estate, about $20 million was
attributable to debts that Mr. Rajkovich owed the estate.
- 16 -
[*16] remaining balance due.” Accompanying the letter was the outline that SO
Owyang had requested, which showed the following information:
Fair market Fair market
value of value of
asset on asset on
Asset July 14, 2004 March 31, 2012 Explanation
Cash, securities, Paid liabilities, estate
misc. receivables $3,232,836 $1,547,000 tax, admin. expenses
10% interest Hacienda Distributed; estate
Gardens 2,007,130 --- tax paid 6/12/06
Vacant land Discovered previously
[Monterey unknown secured
property] 2,064,000 --- loan, could not sell;
lost in foreclosure
Residence, plus Deteriorated in value
furnishings
[Almaden
Expressway
property] 1,721,325 650,000
Vehicles 36,770 --- Distributed
Notes (forgiven) 21,268,186 --- Forgiven
Notes (other) 3,479,793 525,000 Collected most of
notes, will collect
balance (secured)
Gift tax paid within
3 years 2,561,386 ---
Sanfilippo QTIP --- Distributed; estate
assets 27,020,483 tax paid 4/6/05
Total assets 63,391,909 2,722,000
- 17 -
[*17] On June 5, 2012, SO Owyang conducted a “title check” with respect to the
Hacienda shopping center properties. From this research SO Owyang learned that
on February 3, 2005, these properties had been transferred to Mr. Rajkovich, and
on that same day, as he recorded in his case activity records, Mr. Rajkovich had
taken out “a mortgage against all the parcels for $9,750,000 * * *. What was the
reason for the extraction of the equity, and where is the $9.75 million?” SO
Owyang noted that the Hacienda shopping center properties had been valued at
$1,778,000 on the estate’s Form 706 and made the following entry in his “Case
Activity Records”:
I reviewed the taxpayer’s correspondence of 05/09/2012, in which
William Snyder, the executor, is requesting for a settlement and
appears to be leaving a settlement amount to us. We will not settle.
The asset equity of $9.75 million needs to be explained by the
beneficiary who dissipated it and, if they choose, they can submit an
offer; but they will need to provide current appraisals of all the real
property listed in my history entry of 06/04/2012.
On June 5, 2012, SO Owyang emailed former SO Pobre, asking him
whether he could “recollect your memory” about this matter and answer the
question “What was the reason for the extraction of the equity and where is the
$9.75 million?” According to a June 8, 2012, entry in SO Owyang’s case activity
records, former SO Pobre responded that he had no recollection of any discussions
about a $9.75 million equity extraction. In another email to SO Owyang dated
- 18 -
[*18] June 19, 2012, however, upon reviewing a draft of SO Owyang’s proposed
Appeals case memorandum, which focused primarily on this matter, former SO
Pobre stated that he “would not want to second-guess” the valuation of the estate’s
assets as determined by the previous IRS audit of the estate’s tax return. He also
observed that the IRS “could not have been unaware”, when it previously granted
the estate’s requests for extensions, of the transfer of the estate’s 10% interests in
the Hacienda shopping center properties.
According to SO Owyang’s case activity records, on June 8, 2012, he
reviewed Mr. Rajkovich’s 2006 and 2007 balance sheets, erroneously concluding
that Mr. Rajkovich’s 10% interest (and not a 75.7% interest) in the Hacienda
shopping center property was valued at $27,405,000 and $27,500,000 for 2006
and 2007, respectively.8
VII. Notice of Determination
On June 20, 2012, respondent issued a Notice of Determination Concerning
Collection Action Under Section 6330, sustaining the proposed levy on the ground
that the estate “had failed to provide us with a collection alternative that will
satisfy the estate tax liability.” SO Owyang’s Appeals case memorandum,
8
Mr. Rajkovich’s 2007 balance sheet was submitted to the IRS when the
estate requested an additional extension of time to pay its outstanding tax liability.
- 19 -
[*19] attached to the notice of determination, focuses primarily on the estate’s
transfer to Mr. Rajkovich of the Hacienda shopping center interests and the use of
these property interests, shortly thereafter, by Mr. Rajkovich and others as security
for a $9,750,000 loan. The memorandum states: “It is unknown why the $9.7
million was extracted from the equity of the Hacienda Gardens Shopping Center.”
The memorandum cites Internal Revenue Manual pt. 5.15.1.15(3) (May 9, 2008),
for the principle that “[p]roper valuation of the assets is necessary to determine the
total collection potential of the taxpayer. The value should be based on the fair
market value (FMV).” The memorandum goes on to state:
Because it is with reasonable certainty that the estate was once more
solvent prior to any distributions and had the ability to make
payments, and because of what appears to be moderate fluctuations in
valuation of estate assets, the Appeals Office is unable to confirm the
estate’s true value and, hence, financial verification becomes tenuous
and so the request for any collection alternative is denied.
William J. Snyder’s request for a settlement, for some unknown
amount at some unknown period in time in the future, is denied, in
summary.
* * * * * * *
The proposed levy action is sustained by the Appeals Office to allow
Compliance to collect the unpaid estate tax. The taxpayer’s proposal
of a settlement of some unknown amount at some unknown period in
time is, essentially, no proposal at all; let alone any sort of collection
alternative.
- 20 -
[*20] Discussion
I. Statutory Framework
Section 6331(a) provides that if any person liable to pay any tax neglects or
refuses to pay such tax within 10 days after notice and demand for payment, then
the Secretary is authorized to collect the tax by levy. Section 6330(a) requires the
Secretary to send written notice of the right to an administrative hearing--a so-
called collection due process (CDP) hearing--before a levy is made. Any CDP
hearing is to be conducted by the Commissioner’s Appeals Office. The person
requesting the hearing may raise any relevant issue relating to the unpaid tax or
proposed levy, including challenges to the appropriateness of the collection action
and offers of collection alternatives. If dissatisfied with the Appeals Office’s
determination, the person may seek review in this Court. Sec. 6330(d)(1).
II. Standard of Review
The estate has not challenged its underlying estate tax liability; accordingly,
we review for abuse of discretion respondent’s determination to proceed with the
proposed levy. See Sego v. Commissioner, 114 T.C. 604, 610 (2000); see
also Keller v. Commissioner, 568 F.3d 710, 716 (9th Cir. 2009), aff’g in part T.C.
Memo. 2006-166.
- 21 -
[*21] III. Analysis of Respondent’s Determination
On its Form 12153, submitted July 14, 2011, the estate proposed an offer-
in-compromise (OIC) as a collection alternative. As a result of preliminary
meetings with Mr. Rajkovich and SO Pobre, Mr. Snyder sent a letter on behalf of
the estate on November 8, 2011. The letter proposed compromising the estate’s
liability for a payment of approximately $5 million, to be made by June 30, 2012,
partly with proceeds anticipated from Mr. Rajkovich’s sale of the GMK Oakley
properties to the California Department of Water Resources. Because of the
uncertainty surrounding what proceeds Mr. Rajkovich’s sale of his interests in the
GMK Oakley properties might be expected to yield (SO Pobre recorded in his case
activity records his belief that the sale of these interests could possibly yield up to
three times as much as reflected in the proposed OIC), SO Pobre determined that it
would be appropriate to place the estate’s account in CNC status. Before this
agreement was reduced to writing, however, SO Pobre was transferred from the
Appeals Office and the estate’s case was reassigned to SO Owyang, who
complained to his manager that he was inadequate for the task. This concern
proved to be well founded.
Mr. Snyder promptly reiterated to SO Owyang the collection alternative that
the estate had previously proposed to SO Pobre, which depended largely on Mr.
- 22 -
[*22] Rajkovich’s sale of the GMK Oakley properties. SO Owyang gave it no
meaningful consideration and showed little appreciation of the considerations that
had influenced SO Pobre’s handling of the case up until that time. Instead, SO
Owyang became focused on the issue of whether $9.75 million of “asset equity”
had been “dissipated” from the estate through decedent’s bequest to Mr. Rajkovich
of a 10% interest in the Hacienda shopping center property.
SO Owyang noted that the estate had valued its interest in the Hacienda
shopping center property at only $1,778,000 on its estate tax return, even though
Mr. Rajkovich and three other persons later used this interest as security to obtain
a $9,750,000 loan, shortly after the estate had transferred this interest to Mr.
Rajkovich. SO Owyang also noted that Mr. Rajkovich had reported on his 2006
and 2007 financial statements that his interest in the Hacienda shopping center
property was valued at $27,450,000 and $27,500,000 for 2006 and 2007,
respectively. The clear implication is that SO Owyang believed that the estate had
undervalued the Hacienda shopping center property interest on its estate tax return
and that the undervaluation led to dissipation of assets that should have been
available to pay estate tax.
SO Owyang’s illogical analysis is based on a clearly erroneous view of law
and assessment of the facts. Most notably, SO Owyang’s analysis overlooked that
- 23 -
[*23] the 10% interest Mr. Rajkovich received from the estate represented only a
small fraction of his total interest in the Hacienda shopping center property. Mr.
Rajkovich held a 65.7% majority interest in the property before the estate
transferred the additional 10% interest to him. More fundamentally perhaps,
respondent had already examined the estate’s return, which included the Hacienda
shopping center interests that SO Owyang apparently believed the estate had
undervalued, and had found no fault with the valuation. As former SO Pobre
circumspectly put it in an email sent to SO Owyang, commenting on SO Owyang’s
draft Appeals case memorandum the day before the notice of determination was
issued, he “would not want to second-guess” the valuation of the estate’s assets as
determined by previous IRS audit of the estate’s tax return. In any event, SO
Owyang’s focus on the estate’s valuation of these interests was misplaced in a
CDP proceeding in which the underlying liability was not at issue.
Respondent does not attempt in any meaningful fashion to defend SO
Owyang’s analysis in this regard but contends it constitutes harmless error. We
disagree. Error is harmless when it causes no prejudice or does not affect the
ultimate determination in the case. See Estate of Mangiardi v. Commissioner,
T.C. Memo. 2011-24, aff’d, 442 Fed. Appx. 526 (11th Cir. 2011). It seems
- 24 -
[*24] apparent that SO Owyang’s erroneous assumptions lay at the heart of his
ultimate determination to sustain the levy.
Respondent also argues that SO Owyang did not abuse his discretion in
sustaining the proposed levy because the estate failed to submit an OIC under
section 7122. The record shows, however, that the estate had in fact, at SO
Pobre’s request, submitted an OIC as memorialized in Mr. Snyder’s November 8,
2011, letter, and that this offer was rememorialized in Mr. Snyder’s May 9, 2012,
letter to SO Owyang.9 The record also shows that when SO Pobre received the
estate’s proposal he did not question whether it was a proper OIC but instead
determined that a more appropriate collection alternative would be to place the
estate’s account in CNC status, so as to maximize the Government’s chances of a
higher recovery, in the event Mr. Rajkovich’s sale of his Hacienda shopping center
interests yielded greater proceeds than contemplated in the estate’s OIC.
SO Pobre had worked informally with the estate for several months in an
attempt to determine an appropriate collection alternative. The estate had
provided SO Pobre and SO Owyang substantially everything that was requested.
SO Owyang never communicated to the estate that he required a more specific
9
Neither SO Pobre nor SO Owyang requested a Form 656 from the estate,
and there is no indication in the record that they ever raised any issue as to the
adequacy of the estate’s method of proposing an OIC.
- 25 -
[*25] offer than the one SO Pobre had considered. And in considering what might
constitute a proper collection alternative, SO Owyang appeared to give no
meaningful consideration to the effect of the three-way security agreement among
the estate, Mr. Rajkovich, and the IRS--an agreement that, as far as the record
reveals, still remains in place.
On brief respondent cites cases in which we have held that there is neither a
requirement nor a reason that the Appeals officer must wait a certain amount of
time before rendering his determination as to a proposed levy. See, e.g., Murphy
v. Commissioner, 125 T.C. 301 (2005), aff’d, 469 F.3d 27 (1st Cir. 2006); Estate
of Atkinson v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2007-89; Manjourides v.
Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2005-242; Morlino v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo.
2005-203; Clawson v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2004-106. Respondent’s
reliance on these cases is misplaced. As previously discussed, SO Owyang erred
in his factual determinations, did not meaningfully consider the estate’s May 9,
2012, proposal, and did not request the estate to submit a more definite proposal.
It is true, as respondent asserts, that an Appeals officer is under no duty to
negotiate indefinitely and does not necessarily abuse his or her discretion by
rejecting a collection alternative that is based on the possibility of the taxpayer’s
selling his or her properties at some unspecified time in the future. See Kuretski v.
- 26 -
[*26] Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2012-262, at *11, aff’d, 755 F.3d 929 (D.C. Cir.
2014); Vela v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2010-100. But the Appeals officer is
under a duty to provide a fair hearing. SO Owyang’s refusal to meaningfully
consider any collection alternative because of incorrect and illogical factual and
legal assumptions caused the estate to be denied a fair hearing.
We conclude and hold that SO Owyang abused his discretion in determining
to sustain the proposed levy. See Fargo v. Commissioner, 447 F.3d 706, 709 (9th
Cir. 2006) (noting the Commissioner abuses his discretion when his decision is
based on a “clearly erroneous assessment of the facts”), aff’g T.C. Memo. 2004-13;
Antioco v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2013-35, at *20-*22. Consequently, we
will remand this case for a supplemental Appeals Office hearing to consider the
estate’s proposed collection alternatives. Upon remand, the Appeals Office shall
consider any new collection alternative that the estate may wish to propose, taking
into account any changed circumstances. See Eichler v. Commissioner, 143 T.C.
__, __ (slip op. at 17) (July 23, 2014); Alessio Azzari, Inc. v. Commissioner, 136
T.C. 178 (2011) (remanding collection case to Appeals Office upon finding abuse
of discretion).
- 27 -
[*27] To reflect the foregoing,
An appropriate order will be issued.