146 T.C. No. 9
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
BOHDAN SENYSZYN AND KELLY L. SENYSZYN, Petitioners v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket No. 9721-11. Filed March 31, 2016.
Between 2002 and 2004, PH misappropriated funds from a
business associate, DH. As part of a criminal investigation of PH, a
revenue agent examined records of accounts belonging to Ps, DH, or
related entities and determined that, during 2003, PH received from
DH's accounts $252,726 more than he paid back to DH during that
year. PH later pleaded guilty to and was convicted of criminal
charges, including tax evasion in violation of I.R.C. sec. 7201. Under
a plea agreement, PH agreed to a stipulation that he knowingly and
willfully failed to report $252,726 of taxable income for 2003.
Held: The evidence presented shows that, contrary to the
revenue agent's analysis, PH repaid to DH during 2003 more than the
amount the revenue agent determined PH to have misappropriated
from DH in that year.
Held, further, the purposes of the doctrine of collateral estoppel
do not support its application to uphold whatever minimum
deficiency would be consistent with PH's conviction for tax evasion.
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Held, further, because Ps are not liable for any deficiency in
their Federal income tax for 2003, the fraud penalty R asserts against
PH and the accuracy-related penalty R asserts against PW are not
sustained.
Bohdan Senyszyn and Kelly L. Senyszyn, pro sese.
Marco Franco and Lydia A. Branche, for respondent.
HALPERN, Judge: By notice of deficiency dated February 15, 2011,
respondent determined for petitioners' 2003 taxable year a deficiency in Federal
income tax of $81,746, a fraud penalty of $61,310 against petitioner Bohdan
Senyszyn, and an accuracy-related penalty of $16,349 against petitioner Kelly L.
Senyszyn. The deficiency in tax results primarily from respondent's adjustment
increasing petitioners' 2003 gross income on account of $252,726 of income that
petitioners failed to report. In the answer, because of what he describes as
computational adjustments, respondent asserted an increased deficiency, accuracy-
related penalty, and fraud penalty of $90,496, $67,872, and $18,099, respectively.
Petitioners assign error to respondent's deficiency determination and to the
penalties. They also claim as an affirmative defense that Mrs. Senyszyn qualifies
for relief from joint and several liability for any deficiency under the "innocent
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spouse" rules of section 6015. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references
are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for 2003, and all Rule references are to
the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. We round all dollar amounts to
the nearest dollar.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Background
Petitioners resided in New Jersey when they timely filed their petition.
During the late 1990s and early 2000s, Mr. Senyszyn, then an internal
revenue agent, became increasingly involved in the business affairs of a real estate
developer, David Hook. Mr. Senyszyn persuaded Mr. Hook to give him control
over his business on the basis of Mr. Senyszyn's claims that he could save taxes by
creating new entities. By mid-2002, Mr. Senyszyn had obtained nearly full control
over Mr. Hook's business affairs and accounts.
The Modern Method Trust
In September 2002, as part of his tax planning efforts for Mr. Hook, Mr.
Senyszyn executed an indenture for a trust known as the Modern Method Trust
(trust). The trust indenture identifies Mr. Senyszyn as both grantor and trustee.
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The evidence, however, does not show what assets, if any, Mr. Senyszyn
transferred to the trust upon its formation.1
Mr. Hook later contributed to the trust real property referred to as Lot 70,
allegedly on the understanding that his children were the trust's sole beneficiaries.
The trust indenture, however, identifies both Mr. Hook's and petitioners' children
as beneficiaries.
On November 19, 2003, Mr. Hook sold real property in Lafayette, New
Jersey. Of the total $351,000 sale price for the property, $202,626 was paid to the
trust.
Acquisition of the Hardyston Property
On June 18, 2003, Mr. Hook and Mr. Senyszyn purchased real property in
Hardyston and Wantage Townships, New Jersey (Hardyston property), as joint
tenants with the right of survivorship, paying $450,000. Mr. Hook had intended to
purchase the Hardyston property himself until Mr. Senyszyn advised him that he
lacked sufficient funds. Mr. Senyszyn then offered to pay half of the purchase
price himself. Mr. Senyszyn purported to have paid his share of the price of the
1
The indenture purports to effect a transfer, by Mr. Senyszyn, of those assets
listed on an attached schedule, but the schedule is blank.
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Hardyston property from his own funds, entitling him to a joint interest in the
property.
Petitioners' Original 2003 Federal Income Tax Return
On January 29, 2004, petitioners filed a joint 2003 Form 1040, U.S.
Individual Income Tax Return. On that return, petitioners reported wages of
$78,116, gross receipts of $25,850 on Schedule C, Profit or Loss From Business,
and gross receipts of $1,200 on Schedule F, Profit or Loss From Farming.
Petitioners did not report gross income from any other sources on their return, nor
did they otherwise disclose any other sources of income on the return or on a
statement attached to the return.
Mr. Hook's Suit Against Mr. Senyszyn
On May 28, 2004, Mr. Hook filed a civil suit alleging fraud against
petitioners in New Jersey State court. The complaint charges that petitioners
embezzled and converted a minimum of $400,000. At trial, Mr. Hook alleged that
Mr. Senyszyn had embezzled a total of $1 million from 2002 to 2004. In 2006,
Mr. Senyszyn and Mr. Hook joined in deeding all but one parcel of the Hardyston
property to Mr. Hook in partial settlement of Mr. Hook's claim against petitioners.
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Agent DeGrazio's Analysis
Mr. Hook's civil suit led to a Federal criminal investigation of Mr.
Senyszyn. As part of that investigation, Internal Revenue Agent Carmine
DeGrazio was asked to determine the amount of unreported income Mr. Senyszyn
had received in 2003. Agent DeGrazio examined records of accounts belonging to
petitioners, to Mr. Hook, or to related entities--including bank statements,
canceled checks, and supporting documentation--to determine the flow of funds
between Mr. Hook's accounts and Mr. Senyszyn's accounts.
Agent DeGrazio compared the transfers made from Mr. Hook's accounts to
Mr. Senyszyn's accounts with the transfers in the opposite direction and concluded
that Mr. Senyszyn had received $252,726 of net "benefits" from Mr. Hook that
petitioners did not report on their 2003 Form 1040. Agent DeGrazio's calculation
can be summarized as follows:
Item Amount
Benefits to Senyszyn $481,947
Funds returned to Hook 229,221
Total unreported income 252,726
On the premise that Mr. Hook funded the trust, Agent DeGrazio treated the
trust's assets as Mr. Hook's for purposes of his analysis. Thus, Agent DeGrazio
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treated as "benefits" to Mr. Senyszyn his use of trust assets to pay personal and
family expenses.
The $229,221 of funds that Agent DeGrazio determined Mr. Senyszyn to
have returned to Mr. Hook included payments of $104,237 allegedly made by Mr.
Senyszyn to the trust. Because Mr. Senyszyn was "charged with" payments by the
trust for his benefit, Agent DeGrazio explained at trial that "anything that goes
back from Mr. Senyszyn [to the trust] should be credited." Agent DeGrazio
elaborated on his thinking in the following colloquy with Mr. Senyszyn:
Agent DeGrazio: To the extent that we hit you for anything
that came out of that trust account to you,
well, then the other side of the coin is it's
only fair to say that if anything come
from you back to that account, that
should be a credit to you.
Mr. Senyszyn: I agree. That's fair.
Agent DeGrazio: That should absolutely be done.
Among the transfers allegedly made by Mr. Senyszyn to the trust that Agent
DeGrazio credited as repayments was a transfer of $91,437, dated December 31,
2003, and described as "Journaled Funds from B.S. Schwab Acct. #6583".
According to Agent DeGrazio, the reference to "Journaled Funds" indicates that
the transfer was made from Mr. Senyszyn's account with the investment firm
Charles Schwab to the trust's account with the same firm. Because both accounts
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were maintained with the same institution, funds could be transferred between the
two accounts simply by journal entry.
Mr. Senyszyn's Criminal Case
On September 20, 2007, the U.S. Attorney for the District of New Jersey
filed a four-count information in a criminal case against Mr. Senyszyn that
included a charge of tax evasion in violation of section 7201. In support of the tax
evasion charge, the information alleged that Mr. Senyszyn embezzled
approximately $252,726 from Mr. Hook during 2003 and failed to include that
amount in the income reported on petitioners' 2003 Form 1040. The information
also alleged, in support of both the tax evasion count and a separate count under
section 7214(a)(7) (making or signing of fraudulent return by officer or employee
of United States), that Mr. Senyszyn prepared and filed a fraudulent return on
behalf of Mr. Hook's corporation, Modern Method Development, Inc. (MMDI).
Contemporaneous with the U.S. attorney's filing of charges against him, Mr.
Senyszyn signed an agreement to plead guilty to all four of the counts with which
he was charged. Mr. Senyszyn agreed to stipulate at sentencing: "BOHDAN
SENYSZYN knowingly and willfully did not include about $252,726.00 in
additional taxable income that he acquired in 2003." In exchange for Mr.
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Senyszyn's agreement to plead guilty, the U.S. attorney dropped charges against
Mrs. Senyszyn.
On September 20, 2007, Mr. Senyszyn entered a plea of guilty in
accordance with his agreement with the U.S. attorney. Although he subsequently
moved to withdraw his guilty plea to the count of tax evasion, the U.S. District
Court for the District of New Jersey denied the motion and, on February 25, 2008,
it entered judgment pursuant to the plea. Mr. Senyszyn appealed the denial of his
motion to withdraw his guilty plea, and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third
Circuit affirmed the denial. See United States v. Senyszyn, 338 F. App'x 201 (3d
Cir. 2009). Mr. Senyszyn filed a motion to vacate, set aside, or correct his
sentence, and that motion was denied, as well. See Senyszyn v. United States, No.
2:09-cv-6120, 2010 WL 2483541 (D.N.J. June 4, 2010) (order denying motion).
He did not file a direct appeal of his criminal sentence, and his conviction has
become final.
Petitioners' Amended 2003 Federal Income Tax Return
On June 30, 2008, petitioners submitted to respondent a Form 1040X,
Amended U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, for calendar year 2003. The
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) received that return but did not process it. At trial,
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Mr. Senyszyn claimed that he had prepared the amended return at the instruction
of the judge in his criminal case, who directed him to file correct amended returns.
Schedule C of the Form 1040X reports $252,726 of additional gross
income. That schedule treats as "gross receipts or sales" the $481,947 of benefits
Agent DeGrazio determined Mr. Senyszyn to have received from Mr. Hook,
subject to an offset for the $229,221 Agent DeGrazio determined to have been
repaid, resulting in the reported $252,726 of gross income.
The Schedule C also reports undetailed expenses of $476,005, resulting in a
reported net profit of -$223,279. In his testimony, Mr. Senyszyn described the
undetailed expenses as an additional repayment to Mr. Hook that Agent DeGrazio
had omitted from his analysis. According to Mr. Senyszyn, the expenses consist
primarily of two payments deposited in escrow to fund his and Mr. Hook's
purchase of the Hardyston property, evidenced by copies of two checks that were
attached to the Schedule C.
Agent DeGrazio's Alleged "Mathematical Error"
At trial, Mr. Senyszyn agreed that, with one exception, the transfers listed in
Agent DeGrazio's analysis actually occurred in the amounts and on the dates
indicated. The only item to which Mr. Senyszyn takes exception is the alleged
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journal entry transfer of $91,437 on December 31, 2003, from his Charles Schwab
account #6583 to the trust's account.
Agent DeGrazio could not explain at trial how he came up with the $91,437
figure that appears in his analysis. He claimed he would have based the allowance
in Mr. Senyszyn's favor on "some type of document" but could no longer recall
what that document was. He then speculated that he "would have went back to
* * * the Schwab statement." But no transfer of $91,437 appears on the Charles
Schwab account #6583 statement for December 2003.
The monthly statements of the trust's Charles Schwab account #6583 for
2003 show that, while no transfer between Mr. Senyszyn's account and the trust's
account occurred on December 31, 2003, other transfers occurred throughout the
year from Mr. Senyszyn's account to the trust's account that total $595,900. The
amounts and dates (in 2003) of those transfers are as follows:
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Date of transfer Amount
Feb. 27 $50,000
Mar. 19 85,000
Mar. 20 180,000
Mar. 21 30,000
Apr. 29 4,900
May 1 46,000
May 7 48,000
May 19 9,000
June 6 94,000
July 7 6,000
July 17 12,000
July 31 7,000
Aug. 14 7,000
Dec. 4 8,000
Dec. 18 9,000
Total 595,900
Agent DeGrazio omitted those transfers from his analysis.
The statement of the trust's Charles Schwab account #6583 for January 2003
shows a transfer to Mr. Senyszyn's account of $250,000, made on January 3, 2003.
That is the only transfer from the trust's account to Mr. Senyszyn's account that
appears on any of the monthly statements of the trust's account for 2003. Agent
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DeGrazio did not include the January 2003 transfer of $250,000 from the trust's
Charles Schwab account to Mr. Senyszyn's account in his calculation of benefits
received by Mr. Senyszyn during 2003.
OPINION
I. Burden of Proof
The primary factual issue before us is whether, during 2003, Mr. Senyszyn
took from the accounts of his business associate, David Hook, and used for his
own purposes $252,726 more than he repaid to Mr. Hook.
In general, a taxpayer bears the burden of proof. Rule 142(a)(1). However,
section 7491(a) shifts the burden of proof to the Commissioner in certain
situations if the taxpayer raises the issue, introduces credible evidence with respect
to any factual issue relevant to ascertaining the proper tax liability, and
demonstrates compliance with the applicable requirements of section 7491(a)(2).
Because we base our decision regarding the relative amounts that Mr.
Senyszyn took from and repaid to Mr. Hook during 2003 upon a preponderance of
the evidence, we need not assign the burden of proof. See, e.g., Estate of Black v.
Commissioner, 133 T.C. 340, 359 (2009); Estate of Bongard v. Commissioner,
124 T.C. 95, 111 (2005).
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II. Respondent's Threshold Arguments
Respondent suggests that the asserted deficiency and penalties can be
sustained solely on Mr. Senyszyn's stipulation in his criminal tax proceeding.
Although we previously concluded that the stipulation to which Mr. Senyszyn
agreed in his criminal case does not collaterally estop petitioners from challenging
the amount of the deficiency respondent asserts in this civil proceeding, we
acknowledged that Mr. Senyszyn's stipulation is "strong evidence of the
deficiency amount". Senyszyn v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2013-274, at *9-
*11. Respondent alleges that petitioners failed to present credible evidence
contrary to the stipulation and that, consequently, the asserted deficiency and
penalties "should be sustained solely on the basis of Mr. Senyszyn's admission."
As explained below, however, the evidence presented convinces us that Agent
DeGrazio understated the amount that Mr. Senyszyn repaid to Mr. Hook during
2003 and that correction of Agent DeGrazio's error eliminates the asserted
deficiency.
Respondent also argues that petitioners' reporting of $252,726 of additional
income on Schedule C of their 2003 amended return constitutes an admission that
warrants sustaining the asserted deficiency. Although "[s]tatements made in a tax
return signed by a taxpayer may be treated as admissions", Lare v. Commissioner,
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62 T.C. 739, 750 (1974), aff'd without published opinion, 521 F.2d 1399 (3d Cir.
1975), we do not view petitioners' amended 2003 return as an acceptance of Agent
DeGrazio's analysis in its entirety.
While petitioners' amended return reports as income the $252,726 of net
benefits that Agent DeGrazio determined Mr. Senyszyn to have received from Mr.
Hook, that return also claims an additional deduction of $476,005. We reject
petitioners' argument that the $476,005 they reported as a deduction on their
amended return should be treated as a repayment to Mr. Hook in 2003.2
Nonetheless, petitioners' claiming of that deduction means that we cannot treat
their amended return as an admission that Agent DeGrazio accurately computed
both the benefits that Mr. Senyszyn received from Mr. Hook in 2003 and the
amounts Mr. Senyszyn repaid to him in that year.
2
According to petitioners, the $476,005 deduction claimed on their 2003
amended return consists primarily of amounts paid to acquire the Hardyston
property. If Mr. Hook had owned full title to the Hardyston property from its
initial acquisition in 2003, Mr. Senyszyn's provision of some or all of the funds
paid to acquire the property could properly be treated as a repayment to Mr. Hook
in that year. Instead, however, Mr. Senyszyn purported to have provided his share
of the price of the property from his own funds, entitling him to a joint interest in
that property. Therefore, Mr. Senyszyn did not effect any repayment by means of
the Hardyston property until 2006, when all but one parcel of the property was
deeded to Mr. Hook in partial settlement of his civil claim against petitioners.
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III. Agent DeGrazio's Analysis
Having rejected respondent's threshold arguments, we turn to Agent
DeGrazio's analysis and the error that petitioners allege him to have made in his
calculations.
A. The Propriety of Agent DeGrazio's Method
Contrary to petitioners' arguments, we accept the propriety of the method
Agent DeGrazio used to determine the amount of income that they failed to report
on their initial 2003 Federal income tax return. Agent DeGrazio sought to
determine the net flow of funds from Mr. Hook's accounts to Mr. Senyszyn's
accounts by examining records of those accounts. Petitioners appear to argue that
their compliance with the recordkeeping requirements of section 6001 renders
impermissible Agent DeGrazio's analysis of their receipts and expenditures as a
means of identifying and quantifying unreported income. Although respondent
disputes petitioners' claim that they kept adequate books and records, we need not
resolve that question. A taxpayer's maintenance of adequate books and records
does not prevent the Commissioner from determining a deficiency when he
determines that those books and records show income that the taxpayer failed to
report on his return. See Bushnell v. Commissioner, 49 T.C. 296, 307 (1967)
(rejecting Commissioner's analysis of changes in taxpayer's net worth as an
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indirect means of identifying unreported income but upholding deficiency based
on taxpayer's books and records).
In short, the issue before us is not whether Agent DeGrazio's comparison of
the benefits that Mr. Senyszyn received from Mr. Hook in 2003 and the amounts
repaid in that year was an appropriate means of determining the extent to which
petitioners underreported their income for the year. Instead, the issue is whether
Agent DeGrazio correctly computed the relevant amounts.
B. The Alleged "Mathematical Error"
Petitioners offer various reasons why the amounts that Agent DeGrazio
reported as "benefits" to Mr. Senyszyn should not be included in their gross
income. In general, we are unpersuaded by petitioners' arguments about the
taxability of Mr. Senyszyn's use of funds from Mr. Hook's accounts. Most of
those arguments rest on the proposition that petitioners did not actually receive the
amounts in question. Those amounts not received by petitioners that Agent
DeGrazio treated as income, however, were paid for their benefit. It has long been
clear that "[t]he discharge by a third person of an obligation to him is equivalent to
receipt by the person taxed." See Old Colony Tr. Co. v. Commissioner, 279 U.S.
716, 729 (1929).
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In any event, because we find that Mr. Senyszyn returned to Mr. Hook in
2003 more than the $481,947 of benefits that he received from Mr. Hook in that
year, as calculated by Agent DeGrazio, we need not examine in detail the extent to
which petitioners were required to include those benefits in income.3 Mr.
Senyszyn's repayment of more than $481,947 in 2003 entitles petitioners to a
deduction or offset of more than the amount of unreported receipts alleged by
respondent for that year. See James v. United States, 366 U.S. 213, 220 (1961)
(quoting with approval Government's observation on brief that victim's recovery
of misappropriated funds reduces embezzler's income); Chumbook v.
Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1977-108, 1977 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 330, at *14
("Where restitution of wrongfully converted property is made prior to the close of
the year of the wrongful conversion, the restitution offsets what would otherwise
be income, so that no income results from the wrongful conversion.").
The only item included in Agent DeGrazio's analysis that petitioners dispute
in amount as well as tax treatment is the purported transfer of $91,437 made by
journal entry on December 31, 2003, from Mr. Senyszyn's Charles Schwab
3
We view it as unlikely that, in total, Mr. Senyszyn returned to Mr. Hook
more funds than he took. According to Mr. Hook's testimony, however, Mr.
Senyszyn's alleged misappropriation occurred over a three-year period
encompassing 2002 to 2004, while we have before us only one of those years.
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account to the trust's account. Agent DeGrazio readily accepted that any transfers
from Mr. Senyszyn's Charles Schwab account to the trust's account should be
treated as repayments by Mr. Senyszyn to Mr. Hook. But he could not explain at
trial how he came up with the $91,437 figure that appears in his analysis.
Respondent initially dismissed Agent DeGrazio's alleged error on the
grounds that he treated the transfer as a repayment by Mr. Senyszyn to Mr. Hook.
Disregarding the purported transfer, respondent suggested, would simply increase
the asserted deficiency.
But petitioners do not allege that Agent DeGrazio overstated Mr. Senyszyn's
repayments to Mr. Hook. Instead, petitioners allege that Agent DeGrazio
understated those repayments. And the monthly statements of the trust's Charles
Schwab account #6583 for 2003 support petitioners' allegation. Agent DeGrazio's
analysis failed to consider the $595,900 of transfers made from Mr. Senyszyn's
Charles Schwab account to the trust's account during 2003.
Respondent offers two arguments in response to petitioners' claim for an
adjustment of $595,900 in the amount that Mr. Senyszyn repaid to Mr. Hook
during 2003 to correct Agent DeGrazio's "mathematical error". First, respondent
observes that petitioners simply tote up the journal entry transfers going "in one
direction", from Mr. Senyszyn's account to the trust's account, and make no
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allowance for transfers in the other direction. Respondent points to the $250,000
transfer from the trust's account to Mr. Senyszyn's account in January 2003 "[b]y
way of example". But that transfer is not one example among many. It is the only
transfer from the trust's account to Mr. Senyszyn's account that appears on any of
the monthly statements of the trust's account for 2003.
Respondent's second argument regarding Agent DeGrazio's alleged math
error is that petitioners failed to identify the source of the funds transferred from
Mr. Senyszyn's Charles Schwab account to the trust's account. Respondent's
argument reflects the premise that, to the extent that the funds moved from Mr.
Senyszyn's account to the trust's account came from Mr. Hook, they should not
count as repayments by Mr. Senyszyn to Mr. Hook. But that premise is mistaken.
If, for example, a taxpayer embezzles $20 from a victim and, in the same year,
returns $15, the taxpayer has $5 of income--not $20. See James, 366 U.S. at 220;
Chumbook v. Commissioner, 1977 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 330, at *14. And the
embezzler's repayment of the embezzled funds reduces his income regardless of
whether the $15 returned was part of the particular funds embezzled from the
victim or instead came from another source. If the embezzled funds count as
income, then, as Agent DeGrazio recognized, the return of those funds (or their
equivalent) counts as an offset to the income.
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On the preponderance of the evidence submitted, we conclude that Mr.
Senyszyn made repayments to Mr. Hook in 2003 of $483,684, computed as
follows:
Item Amount
Repayments determined by Agent DeGrazio $229,221
Erroneous 12/31/03 transfer (91,437)
Transfers from Mr. Senyszyn's account to trust's
account reported on monthly statements 595,900
Transfer from trust account to
1
Mr. Senyszyn's account (250,000)
Corrected amount of repayments 483,684
1
We treat the January 2003 transfer from the trust's Charles
Schwab account to Mr. Senyszyn's account as a subtraction from the
net repayments made by Mr. Senyszyn during that year because
Agent DeGrazio did not include this transfer in his calculation of
benefits received by Mr. Senyszyn during the year.
Therefore, even if we accept Agent DeGrazio's determination that, during 2003,
Mr. Senyszyn took $481,947 from Mr. Hook's accounts and used those funds for
his own purposes, we find that Mr. Senyszyn repaid to Mr. Hook during that year
more than he took. Because any taxable income to Mr. Senyszyn as a result of his
misappropriation should be offset by amounts repaid in the same year, and because
the deficiency that respondent asserted is based entirely on petitioners' omission of
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$252,726 of income, the evidence presented does not support the asserted
deficiency.4
IV. Collateral Estoppel
Although the evidence presented does not support the amount of the
deficiency that respondent asserted--or, indeed, any deficiency at all--we could
apply the doctrine of collateral estoppel to uphold a deficiency in whatever
minimum amount would justify Mr. Senyszyn's conviction under section 7201.
Under the doctrine of collateral estoppel, or issue preclusion, once an issue of fact
or law is "actually and necessarily determined by a court of competent jurisdiction,
that determination is conclusive in subsequent suits based on a different cause of
action involving a party to the prior litigation." Montana v. United States, 440
U.S. 147, 153 (1979). "Collateral estoppel * * * has the dual purpose of
4
Despite our finding that Mr. Senyszyn repaid to Mr. Hook during 2003
more than the amount that Agent DeGrazio determined Mr. Senyszyn to have
misappropriated from Mr. Hook during that year, we reject petitioners' claim for a
refund. Our ancillary jurisdiction to determine overpayments and order refunds is
subject to applicable periods of limitation. Sec. 6512(b). In particular, we cannot
allow a refund if a claim therefor would have been barred by the applicable statute
of limitation had the claim been made on the date of issuance of the notice of
deficiency. See id. para. (3)(B). Because petitioners filed their original return for
2003 on January 29, 2004, before its due date of April 15, 2004, the period of
limitation for a claim for refund of tax for that year ended three years after the due
date of the return, on April 15, 2007. See secs. 6511(a), 6513(a). Thus, the
limitation period expired almost four years before respondent's issuance of a
notice of deficiency on February 15, 2011.
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protecting litigants from the burden of relitigating an identical issue with the same
party or his privy and of promoting judicial economy by preventing needless
litigation." Parklane Hosiery Co. v. Shore, 439 U.S. 322, 326 (1979). It also
"fosters reliance on judicial action by minimizing the possibility of inconsistent
decisions." Montana, 440 U.S. at 154.
We previously determined that, because the exact amount of petitioners'
underpayment of tax was not a necessary element of tax evasion under section
7201, "Mr. Senyszyn's stipulation in his criminal tax proceeding does not
collaterally estop him from challenging respondent's adjustment for unreported
income in this civil proceeding." Senyszyn v. Commissioner, at *10-*11.
Nonetheless, the existence of some underpayment was a necessary element of the
offense for which Mr. Senyszyn was convicted. See Sansone v. United States, 380
U.S. 343, 351 (1965) (listing "the existence of a tax deficiency" among "the
elements of § 7201"). Therefore, we accepted that Mr. Senyszyn's criminal
conviction established the existence of an underpayment by petitioners for 2003
but not its exact amount. Senyszyn v. Commissioner, at *12-*13; see also
Anderson v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2009-44, 2009 WL 454182, at *19
(holding that prior conviction of tax crimes established fraud for purposes of
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statute of limitations and penalties with amounts of deficiencies and penalties to
be determined by trial), aff'd, 698 F.3d 160 (3d Cir. 2012).
Although the existence of some tax deficiency is a necessary element of the
offense described in section 7201, prior cases do not establish a minimum amount
necessary to support a conviction. Some U.S. Courts of Appeals have suggested
that section 7201 requires a "substantial" deficiency. E.g., United States v.
McKee, 506 F.3d 225, 235-236 (3d Cir. 2007) (holding that, while "the
government need not allege or prove the precise amount of additional tax due and
owning" to support a charge of tax evasion under section 7201, the evidence must
"establish a substantial tax deficiency"); United States v. Mounkes, 204 F.3d 1024,
1028 (10th Cir. 2000) ("To establish th[e] offense [described in section 7201], the
government must prove * * * the existence of a substantial tax liability[.]");
United States v. Wilson, 118 F.3d 228, 236 (4th Cir. 1997) (listing "a substantial
tax deficiency" among the elements of a violation of section 7201); Heasley v.
United States, 218 F.2d 86, 90 (8th Cir. 1955) ("[T]he offense here is not one
requiring exact proof as to the amount of net income evaded but whether or not the
defendant attempted to evade a substantial amount of net income tax."). But see
United States v. Daniels, 387 F.3d 636, 641 (7th Cir. 2004) ("We take this
opportunity to clarify the law in this Circuit: the government need not charge a
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substantial tax deficiency to indict or convict under 26 U.S.C. § 7201."). Despite
some courts' references to a "substantiality" requirement, we have found no case in
which a defendant avoided conviction because the determined deficiency was too
small. See id. at 641 n.2 ("Defendants conceded at oral argument that no court has
held that an insubstantial tax deficiency is not punishable under 26 U.S.C. §
7201."); see also United States v. Cunningham, 723 F.2d 217, 231 (2d Cir. 1983)
("While it is true that at some point a court may as a matter of law find that the
liability avoided was insubstantial, the threshold is a low one[.]").
In Parklane Hosiery Co., 439 U.S. at 331, the Supreme Court granted "broad
discretion" to trial courts in regard to plaintiffs' attempts to use collateral estoppel
offensively, to prevent a defendant from relitigating a claim previously lost to a
different claimant. The Court's determination in that regard was grounded in its
recognition that, in many cases, the purposes underlying collateral estoppel would
not support its use by plaintiffs. When the use of collateral estoppel in a tax
deficiency case is offensive or defensive is not entirely clear. In deficiency cases,
we have before us not a plaintiff and defendant but a petitioner and respondent. In
Meier v. Commissioner, 91 T.C. 273, 283 n.11 (1988), we suggested that the
classification of an attempted use of collateral estoppel in a deficiency case as
offensive or defensive should turn on which party has the burden of proof. Given
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the concerns addressed in Parklane Hosiery Co. regarding offensive collateral
estoppel, however, we believe it appropriate to treat the use of the doctrine to
uphold a deficiency against petitioners as offensive because Mr. Senyszyn was a
defendant in his prior criminal case. In any event, we read Parklane Hosiery Co.
as standing for a broader principle, that collateral estoppel need not be applied,
regardless of the labels that might be affixed to its use, when the purposes of the
doctrine do not support its application.
Therefore, we consider whether the purposes of collateral estoppel support
applying the doctrine to uphold a deficiency in petitioners' 2003 Federal income
tax. We have not previously faced the question of whether a taxpayer's prior
conviction for tax evasion requires the determination of a deficiency when the
evidence shows that none exists. In Anderson v. Commissioner, 2009 WL
454182, at *19, we rejected the taxpayer's argument that determining the existence
of a fraud penalty before determining its amount was premature. We denied the
possibility that the taxpayer's underpayment, and thus fraud penalty, might
ultimately be determined to be zero. In other words, we surmised that, if presented
with the issue we face today, we would find some underpayment, "however
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small", by reason of collateral estoppel. Id. Obviously, our prior speculation on
the question was dictum.5
Now confronted with a record that puts squarely before us the question that
was merely hypothetical in Anderson, we conclude that the purposes of the
doctrine would not be served by upholding a deficiency unsupported by the
evidence presented. Upholding a minimum deficiency would not promote judicial
economy: Even after Mr. Senyszyn's conviction under section 7201, we were
required to hear this case to determine the amount of petitioners' deficiency. And
any inconsistency between Mr. Senyszyn's prior criminal conviction and a
decision that petitioners are not liable for any deficiency would not undermine
"reliance on judicial action", cf. Montana, 440 U.S. at 154, because the
inconsistency would result not from conflicting findings by different courts but
instead from Mr. Senyszyn's entry of a guilty plea to a charge that the evidence--at
least as presented to us--would not support.6 Therefore, we decline to apply the
5
Barrow v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2008-264, does not compel
application of collateral estoppel to reach a result contrary to the evidence. In
Barrow, we applied the doctrine only to determine, in the face of the
Commissioner's failure of proof, the portion of the taxpayer's deficiency
attributable to fraud.
6
Mr. Senyszyn did not explain why he agreed to the stipulation of
unreported income for 2003 as part of his plea agreement if, in fact, he repaid to
(continued...)
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doctrine of collateral estoppel to uphold whatever minimum deficiency would be
consistent with Mr. Senyszyn's conviction under section 7201.7
6
(...continued)
Mr. Hook during that year more than he took. Our puzzlement over his motives,
however, does not prevent us from concluding, on the basis of a preponderance of
the evidence presented to us, that Agent DeGrazio erred in his analysis and that
Mr. Senyszyn, at least during 2003, repaid to Mr. Hook more than he
misappropriated.
7
For purposes of our analysis, we have accepted that the conditions of
collateral estoppel are present despite the existence of alternative grounds for Mr.
Senyszyn's conviction under sec. 7201. Mr. Senyszyn's preparation and filing of a
fraudulent return on behalf of MMDI were themselves sufficient grounds to justify
his conviction for tax evasion. Although the existence of an underpayment is a
necessary element of the offense described in sec. 7201, Sansone v. United States,
380 U.S. 343, 351 (1965), the deficiency need not be that of the defendant, e.g.,
United States v. Wilson, 118 F.3d 228 (4th Cir. 1997) (evidence of defendant-
attorney's efforts to assist client in concealing assets from IRS sufficient to support
conviction under sec. 7201). Because Mr. Senyszyn's conviction under sec. 7201
was justified by his preparation and filing of a fraudulent return on behalf of
MMDI, the determination that, in addition, he omitted income from his own return
could be viewed as having been unnecessary to the conclusion reached in his
criminal case. See, e.g., Restatement, Judgments 2d, sec. 27, cmt. i (1982) ("If a
judgment of a court of first instance is based on determinations of two issues,
either of which standing independently would be sufficient to support the result,
the judgment is not conclusive with respect to either issue standing alone."). The
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, however, to which appeal of the
present case would lie absent a stipulation to the contrary, see sec. 7482(b)(1)(A),
has rejected the position of the Second Restatement and decided to "follow the
traditional view that independently sufficient alternative findings should be given
preclusive effect", Jean Alexander Cosmetics, Inc. v. L'Oreal USA, Inc., 458 F.3d
244, 255 (3d Cir. 2006). Even if we disagreed with the Court of Appeals, we
would under Golsen v. Commissioner, 54 T.C. 742, 757 (1970), aff'd, 445 F.2d
985 (10th Cir. 1971), apply in the present case the traditional view that, when a
(continued...)
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V. Conclusion
For the reasons explained above, we conclude that petitioners are not liable
for any deficiency in their Federal income tax for 2003. The absence of a
deficiency renders the remaining issues moot: The penalties that respondent
asserted depend on deficiencies, and the joint and several liability of Mrs.
Senyszyn is irrelevant in the absence of a deficiency.
Decision will be entered for
petitioners.
7
(...continued)
prior judgment is based on alternative grounds, each is given preclusive effect
against the parties or their privies.