T.C. Memo. 2016-142
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
THOMAS L. WEINTRAUT, TRANSFEREE, ET AL.,1 Petitioners v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket Nos. 6505-12, 6715-12, Filed July 27, 2016.
6751-12.
Brett J. Miller and Randal J. Kaltenmark, for petitioners.
Stewart Todd Hittinger and Samuel A. Naylor, for respondent.
CONTENTS
FINDINGS OF FACT. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
FFI and Petitioners. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
FFI, Petitioners, and MidCoast. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
1
Cases of the following petitioners are consolidated herewith: Curtis D.
Fankhauser, Transferee, docket No. 6715-12; and Cynthia A. Fankhauser,
Transferee, docket No. 6751-12.
-2-
[*2] Tax Returns. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83
IRS Examination With Respect to FFI and Petitioners. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86
OPINION. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95
Petitioners’ Motion in Limine. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95
Evaluation of Witnesses. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104
Transferee Liability. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105
Section 6901. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105
Feldman v. Commissioner.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107
Transferee Status for Purposes of Section 6901.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112
Liability Under Indiana UFTA. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154
Transfers for Purposes of the Indiana UFTA. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 155
Fraudulent Transfers Under the Indiana UFTA. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 220
Respondent’s Claim for FFI’s
Unpaid 2001 Deficiency Liability. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 222
Respondent’s Claim for FFI’s
Unpaid 2001 Penalty Liability. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 230
Respondent’s Claim for Transferee Interest.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 237
Conclusion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 263
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
CHIECHI, Judge: Respondent determined that petitioner Curtis D.
Fankhauser is liable as a transferee of ffi Corp. for the unpaid deficiency in
-3-
[*3] Federal income tax (sometimes, tax) of $609,037.432 and the unpaid
accuracy-related penalty under section 6662(a)3 of $85,482 of that corporation for
its taxable year 2001, but only to the extent of the net value of the assets that that
corporation transferred to him, which respondent determined in the notice of
liability was $1,824,143.99, as well as interest thereon as provided by law.
Respondent determined that petitioner Cynthia A. Fankhauser is liable as a
transferee of ffi Corp. for the unpaid deficiency in tax of $609,037.434 and the
unpaid accuracy-related penalty under section 6662(a) of $85,482 of that
corporation for its taxable year 2001, as well as interest thereon as provided by
law.5
2
As discussed below, in the respective answers in these cases, respondent
conceded that the Federal unpaid deficiency in tax of ffi Corp. for its taxable year
2001 is $578,338.43.
3
All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect at all
relevant times. All Rule reference are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and
Procedure.
4
See supra note 2.
5
As discussed below, in the notice of liability issued to petitioner Cynthia
A. Fankhauser, respondent did not limit Ms. Fankhauser’s transferee liability to
the extent of the net value of the assets that FFI transferred to her, which respon-
dent determined in that notice was $233,877.44.
-4-
[*4] Respondent determined that petitioner Thomas L. Weintraut is liable as a
transferee of ffi Corp. for the unpaid deficiency in tax of $609,037.436 and the
unpaid accuracy-related penalty under section 6662(a) of $85,482 of that cor-
poration for its taxable year 2001, but only to the extent of the net value of the
assets that that corporation transferred to him, which respondent determined in the
notice of liability was $514,520.35, as well as interest thereon as provided by law.
We must decide whether to sustain respondent’s determinations as modified
by respondent in the respective answers in these cases.7 We hold that we shall to
the extent stated below.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found.
At the time they filed the respective petitions in these cases, petitioners
resided in Indiana.
FFI and Petitioners
On August 28, 1947, certain individuals who were not related to Curtis D.
Fankhauser (Mr. Fankhauser), Thomas L. Weintraut (Mr. Weintraut), and Cynthia
A. Fankhauser (Ms. Fankhauser) incorporated Ewing Foundry, Inc., under the
6
See supra note 2.
7
See supra note 2.
-5-
[*5] laws of the State of Indiana. On February 6, 1959, the articles of incorpo-
ration of Ewing Foundry, Inc., were amended to change its name to Farm Fans,
Inc. On March 30, 1990, the articles of incorporation of Farm Fans, Inc., were
amended to change its name to ffi Corp. (FFI). At all relevant times, FFI was a C
corporation with its principal place of business in Indiana. (We shall refer to the C
corporation that was incorporated as Ewing Foundry, Inc., on August 28, 1947, as
FFI, even though that corporation operated under different names until March 30,
1990, when its name was changed to ffi Corp.)
From 1960 until 2001, FFI was in the business of designing, manufacturing,
and selling equipment used for drying, handling, and conditioning grain. From
1967 until December 20, 2001, FFI had its offices at 5900 Elmwood Avenue,
Indianapolis, Indiana (Elmwood property), where it also conducted all of its sales
operations and its research and development operations.
In November 1989, Mr. Weintraut, who holds a bachelor’s degree in
business and accounting from Indiana University and who was licensed as a
certified public accountant (C.P.A.),8 joined FFI as its chief financial officer
(CFO). Mr. Weintraut took tax classes in college and took tax review courses
8
During 2001 until at least the time of the trial in these cases, Mr. Wein-
traut’s license as a C.P.A. was in an inactive status.
-6-
[*6] while preparing for his C.P.A. examination. Before he joined FFI as its CFO,
Mr. Weintraut had worked as an accountant or as the controller for certain com-
panies. As an accountant, Mr. Weintraut worked on the audit staff, where his
responsibilities included examining the fairness of company financial statements.
Mr. Weintraut’s work as an accountant did not include any tax work. Sometime
after Mr. Weintraut joined FFI as its CFO, he became and remained at all relevant
times FFI’s executive vice president, treasurer, and secretary.
In November 1991, Mr. Fankhauser, who holds a bachelor’s degree in civil
engineering from the University of Missouri,9 joined FFI as its president. On
January 15, 1996, Mr. Fankhauser purchased all of the outstanding stock of FFI.
Richard Thrapp (Mr. Thrapp), who was a partner with the law firm known at the
time of trial as Ice Miller, LLP (Ice Miller), represented him with respect to that
purchase. After Mr. Fankhauser became the sole stockholder of FFI, he remained
at all relevant times its president.10
9
Mr. Fankhauser’s education at the University of Missouri did not include
any classes in accounting or business. At the time of the trial herein, Mr. Fank-
hauser had been using a tax return preparer to prepare his tax returns.
10
We shall sometimes refer collectively to Mr. Fankhauser and Mr. Wein-
traut as FFI’s officers.
-7-
[*7] In 1997, Mr. Fankhauser gave 10 percent of the outstanding stock of FFI to
his spouse, Ms. Fankhauser. Ms. Fankhauser, who studied art for two years at
Kansas State University, was not at any time involved in the operations or the
management of FFI.
On December 30, 1997, Mr. Weintraut purchased 20 percent of the out-
standing stock of FFI from Mr. Fankhauser. On July 13, 2000, Mr. Weintraut
purchased an additional two percent of the outstanding stock of FFI from Mr.
Fankhauser.
From July 13, 2000, until December 20, 2001, Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Wein-
traut, and Ms. Fankhauser owned 68 percent, 22 percent, and 10 percent, respec-
tively, of FFI’s outstanding stock. (During the times Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Wein-
traut, and Ms. Fankhauser owned all the stock of FFI, we shall sometimes refer
collectively to them as the FFI stockholders.) At all relevant times until December
20, 2001, the members of the board of directors of FFI were Mr. Fankhauser and
Mr. Weintraut. (During the times Mr. Fankhauser and Mr. Weintraut were
members of the board of directors of FFI, we shall sometimes refer collectively to
them as the FFI directors).
During 1998 and 1999, the sales revenues of FFI declined as a result of a
series of dry harvest seasons and deteriorating economic conditions. Conse-
-8-
[*8] quently, FFI restructured its operations by cutting costs through significant
staff reductions. By 2000, FFI’s sales revenues had stabilized.
In 2000, the FFI stockholders decided to sell FFI through the sale of their
respective portions of FFI stock or the sale of FFI’s assets. On October 2, 2000,
FFI retained Banc One Capital Markets, Inc. (Banc One),11 to evaluate the market
for the sale of FFI’s stock or FFI’s assets and to solicit and negotiate with pro-
spective buyers of that stock or those assets. FFI made Banc One its exclusive
agent for any transaction in which control of FFI through ownership of its stock or
its assets would be transferred for consideration to another entity in a stock sale,
asset sale, merger, tender or exchange offer, leveraged buyout, joint venture,
recapitalization, restructuring, or other business combination. In October 2000,
Banc One contacted numerous potential buyers of FFI’s stock or FFI’s assets.
In October 2000, the GSI Group, Inc. (GSI), a competitor of FFI in the
business of manufacturing grain equipment, approached FFI and expressed an
interest in acquiring some of FFI’s assets. From October through December 2000,
11
When FFI retained Banc One in 2000, it was in the business of offering
investment banking services and financial advisory services.
-9-
[*9] FFI, with the assistance of its attorney, Mr. Thrapp, engaged in negotiations
for the sale of certain of its assets to GSI (FFI asset sale).12
On December 19, 2000, Mr. Fankhauser and Mr. Weintraut, as owners of 90
percent of FFI’s outstanding stock, signed an asset sale agreement on behalf of FFI
(FFI asset sale agreement). In that agreement, FFI agreed to sell to GSI, and GSI
agreed to purchase from FFI, the following assets: (1) all of FFI’s inventory,
patents, trademarks, trade names, blueprints, orders for products that were to be
provided to FFI customers on dates after the closing date of the FFI asset sale
agreement, and customer lists and (2) a significant portion of FFI’s manufacturing
equipment. In the FFI asset sale agreement, GSI agreed to pay to FFI $6,864,018
and to assume certain of FFI’s liabilities in return for the assets that FFI agreed to
sell to GSI. FFI and GSI agreed in the FFI asset sale agreement that the closing
date of the FFI asset sale to GSI was to be January 2, 2001.
On December 19, 2000, the FFI stockholders and the FFI directors held
respective special meetings at which they approved a plan to liquidate and dis-
solve FFI (December 19, 2000 plan of liquidation) in the event and only in the
event that the FFI asset sale to GSI closed on January 2, 2001, as required by the
12
In the mid-1990s, Mr. Fankhauser and Mr. Weintraut started retaining Mr.
Thrapp to represent FFI in certain matters. Around December 1, 2000, FFI
terminated Banc One’s services.
- 10 -
[*10] FFI asset sale agreement. On January 2, 2001, the FFI asset sale closed
pursuant to the FFI asset sale agreement. Consequently, on that date, the con-
dition precedent to the December 19, 2000 plan of liquidation was satisfied.
On or before May 21, 2001, FFI sold to unrelated third parties for approx-
imately $1,063,645 certain assets that GSI had not agreed to purchase in the FFI
asset sale agreement, including certain of FFI’s automobiles and certain of its
manufacturing equipment (FFI May 21, 2001 asset sale).
FFI anticipated that it would have a significant Federal income tax liability
and a significant State income tax liability (sometimes collectively, Federal and
State income tax liabilities) as a result of the FFI asset sale and the FFI May 21,
2001 asset sale. As of October 1, 2001, FFI had made on the dates indicated the
following Federal estimated income tax payments for its taxable year 2001 totaling
$625,000 (sometimes, FFI Federal 2001 estimated income tax payments):
Date Payment
4/17/2001 $225,000
6/15/2001 225,000
10/1/2001 175,000
Total 625,000
- 11 -
[*11] In addition to the FFI Federal 2001 estimated income tax payments of
$625,000 that FFI had made as of October 1, 2001, it had an overpayment credit of
$3,592 for its taxable year 2001 that was attributable to its taxable year 2000. (We
shall refer to the total (i.e., $628,592) of the FFI Federal 2001 estimated income
tax payments of $625,000 and FFI’s Federal overpayment credit for its taxable
year 2001 of $3,592 as the FFI Federal 2001 income tax payments.)
On October 5, 2001, the FFI stockholders voted to dissolve FFI in accor-
dance with the December 19, 2000 plan of liquidation.
On October 19, 2001, FFI sold for $3,250,000 the Elmwood property (FFI
Elmwood sale) to an unrelated company known as 5900 Elmwood Avenue, LLC
(Elmwood Avenue LLC). Elmwood Avenue LLC paid $1 million of that
$3,250,000 purchase price by executing a promissory note for $1 million (Elm-
wood Avenue LLC note) that was payable to FFI. (We shall sometimes refer
collectively to the FFI asset sale, the FFI May 21, 2001 asset sale, and the FFI
Elmwood sale as the FFI 2001 asset sales.)
On October 19, 2001, FFI took certain steps in preparation for its planned
liquidation and dissolution, including (1) filing articles of dissolution with the
secretary of state of Indiana (Indiana secretary of state); (2) informing the attorney
general of Indiana (Indiana attorney general) and the Department of Workforce
- 12 -
[*12] Development of Indiana that it was dissolving; (3) mailing Form IT-966,
NOTICE OF CORPORATE DISSOLUTION LIQUIDATION OR WITH-
DRAWAL (Form IT-966), to the Department of Revenue of Indiana; and (4)
mailing Form 966, Corporate Dissolution or Liquidation (Form 966), to the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS). Form 966 that FFI completed and mailed to the
IRS indicated that FFI’s “(anticipated) [l]ast month, day, and year of final tax
year” was December 31, 2002.
As of November 30, 2001, FFI had made State estimated income tax pay-
ments for its taxable year 2001 totaling $157,700 (FFI State 2001 income tax
payments). Of those payments, FFI had paid $152,000 to the State of Indiana and
the remaining $5,700 to certain other States.
After the FFI 2001 asset sales, FFI had no operations, no employees
engaged in operations, no income, and no operational assets (except certain
oxidation technology).
FFI, Petitioners, and MidCoast
Mr. Thrapp was aware that FFI had agreed to, and did, sell to unrelated third
parties most of its assets, including all of its operating assets (except certain
oxidation technology), and that it not only intended but also had taken formal
steps to liquidate and dissolve. Nonetheless, on December 7, 2001, he informed
- 13 -
[*13] the FFI officers (i.e., Mr. Fankhauser and Mr. Weintraut) that MidCoast
Credit Corp.13 might be interested in purchasing their FFI stock and the FFI stock
of Ms. Fankhauser at a so-called premium; that is to say, MidCoast might be in-
terested in purchasing all of the FFI stock for an amount that was greater than the
liquidation value of FFI, i.e., the value of FFI’s assets after the payment of its
liabilities, including its Federal income tax liability and its State income liability
for its taxable year 2001.14 Mr. Thrapp informed the FFI officers that the purchase
price for the stock that MidCoast usually paid in deals like the one that it was sug-
gesting to FFI and the FFI stockholders was calculated by using a percentage of
the total of the acquired company’s Federal income tax liability and State income
tax liability, which varied from acquisition to acquisition but was within a range
that MidCoast had established.
At all relevant times, MidCoast was a subsidiary of Shorewood Holding
Corp. (Shorewood) and was part of the consolidated group of corporations for
13
For convenience, we shall sometimes refer to MidCoast Credit Corp. and
any other company that was related to, or that was a designee of, MidCoast Credit
Corp. as MidCoast.
14
Mr. Thrapp had some familiarity with MidCoast because it was a client of
Ice Miller with respect to a transaction that was unrelated to the transactions here-
in and that closed in November 2001. Mr. Thrapp considered the information that
Ice Miller obtained as a result of that representation to be privileged.
- 14 -
[*14] which Shorewood filed consolidated tax returns. At those times, Michael
Bernstein (Mr. Bernstein) and Honora Shapiro (Ms. Shapiro)15 each owned 50
percent of the outstanding stock of Shorewood.
Mr. Thrapp, who was not an attorney specializing in Federal income tax
matters and who was not qualified to provide advice with respect to such matters,16
understood and advised the FFI officers that MidCoast had a Federal income tax
and State income tax deferral strategy (tax strategy) that it considered to be
proprietary and that consequently it would not share any details about that tax
strategy with them. Mr. Thrapp further understood and informed the FFI stock-
holders that MidCoast had used its tax strategy as part of an acquisition methodol-
ogy in which it acquired for cash certain C corporations with cash and certain
Federal and State income tax liabilities. Mr. Thrapp did not know any of the
details of MidCoast’s acquisition methodology or its tax strategy.17 However,
15
Ms. Shapiro died before the trial in these cases.
16
For convenience, we shall refer to an attorney or any other person who
specializes in Federal income tax matters and who is qualified to provide advice
with respect to such matters as a tax professional.
17
Even if Mr. Thrapp had known, through Ice Miller’s representation of
MidCoast, some or all of the details regarding MidCoast’s acquisition meth-
odology and its tax strategy, he would not have been able to disclose any such
details to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser. That was because
(continued...)
- 15 -
[*15] it was Mr. Thrapp’s understanding, which he shared with the FFI officers,
that MidCoast used the cash of an acquired C corporation in order to buy charged-
off debt securities that MidCoast intended to use in its so-called asset recovery
business, but he had no understanding of how MidCoast used those securities as
part of its tax strategy.
Mr. Weintraut and Mr. Fankhauser made only certain limited inquiries of
Mr. Thrapp with respect to MidCoast’s overall acquisition methodology, including
its tax strategy, of acquiring C corporations. However, Mr. Weintraut and Mr.
Fankhauser, directly or through Mr. Thrapp, and Ms. Fankhauser, through Mr.
Fankhauser, knew that MidCoast’s pricing in its acquisition methodology was
inextricably intertwined with its tax strategy.
On December 7, 2001, the day on which Mr. Thrapp informed the FFI
officers about MidCoast’s possible interest in purchasing the stock of FFI, the FFI
officers, Mr. Thrapp, and FFI’s accountants, Patrick Burns (Mr. Burns) and Victor
17
(...continued)
MidCoast was a client of Ice Miller of which Mr. Thrapp was a partner, and Mr.
Thrapp was subject to certain ethical constraints with respect to the disclosure of
any client information.
- 16 -
[*16] Vernick (Mr. Vernick),18 of Katz, Sapper & Miller (Katz accounting firm),
an accounting firm, held a conference call with certain representatives of Mid-
Coast.
Neither the FFI stockholders nor Mr. Thrapp saw any need to, and did not,
press MidCoast’s representatives regarding the details of its acquisition methodol-
ogy, its tax strategy, and its asset recovery business, all of which they understood
were interrelated. Nor did the FFI stockholders or Mr. Thrapp see any need to, or
in fact, inquire through their respective contacts whether there were persons who
were not employed by MidCoast or by Ice Miller and who might be familiar with
MidCoast’s acquisition methodology, its tax strategy, and its asset recovery
business.19
On December 11, 2001, Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fank-
hauser executed an engagement letter (engagement letter dated December 11,
2001) in which they retained Ice Miller to represent FFI and them as stockholders
of FFI with respect to MidCoast’s proposal to purchase the FFI stock. The
18
Mr. Burns and Mr. Vernick died before the trial in these cases.
19
The record does not establish why Mr. Thrapp and the FFI stockholders
did not inquire through their respective contacts whether there were persons who
were not employed by MidCoast or by Ice Miller and who might be familiar with
MidCoast’s acquisition strategy, its tax strategy, and its asset recovery business.
- 17 -
[*17] engagement letter dated December 11, 2001, stated in pertinent part the
following with respect to the potential conflict of interest created by Ice Miller’s
representation of MidCoast that Ice Miller had concluded it needed to explain to
Mr. Fank-hauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser:
MidCoast Conflict of Interest
While we have no direct conflict in this particular matter, i.e.,
we are not representing MidCoast, its affiliates or Other Parties in
connection with this Transaction [contemplated transactions involv-
ing FFI, the FFI stockholders, and MidCoast], we have represented
and currently represent MidCoast and/or its affiliates, and Other
Parties, in connection with other, unrelated matters. All confidential
information that we have obtained about MidCoast, its affiliates and
Other Parties as a result of these representations shall remain confi-
dential. These prior and existing relationships will not prevent Ice
Miller from zealously representing the interests of the Sellers [Mr.
Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser] in connection with
the Transaction, but these relationships are ones that you deserve to
be aware of in connection with retaining us for this Transaction.
As attorneys in Indiana, we are obligated to bring to your
attention Rule 1.7 of the Rules of Professional Conduct applicable to
attorneys in Indiana. Rule 1.7 provides, in pertinent part, as follows:
(a) A lawyer shall not represent a client if the repre-
sentation of that client will be directly adverse to another
client, unless:
(1) the lawyer reasonably believes the representation
will not adversely affect the relationship with the other
client; and
(2) each client consents after consultation.
- 18 -
[*18] (b) A lawyer shall not represent a client if the repre-
sentation of that client may be materially limited by the
lawyer’s responsibilities to another client or to a third
person, or by the lawyer’s own interests, unless:
(1) the lawyer reasonably believes the representation
will not be adversely affected; and
(2) the client consents after consultation.
Based upon the information which has been provided to us, we
do not believe that our representation of the Sellers in connection
with the Transaction will (a) adversely affect the relationship with
MidCoast, (b) be adversely affected by our relationship with Mid-
Coast and/or its affiliates, or any of the Other Parties. Likewise, we
do not believe our relationship with MidCoast would materially limit
our ability to represent the Sellers and FFI. However, we do think
that it is prudent to request your written acknowledgment of our
relationship with MidCoast and consent to our representation of the
Sellers in connection with the Transaction in light of these circum-
stances. Your execution of this letter will constitute such a formal
consent and waiver of any such actual or potential conflicts of
interest.
On December 11, 2001, Olga Parra (Ms. Parra) signed, as the executive vice
president of MidCoast, a consent and waiver of conflict of interest on behalf of
MidCoast.20 Ms. Parra also was the general counsel of MidCoast.
Also on December 11, 2001, Mr. Bernstein sent to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr.
Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser on behalf of MidCoast a nonbinding letter of
20
The record does not establish whether any of the FFI stockholders
executed the engagement letter, but we presume that all of them did so.
- 19 -
[*19] intent (letter of intent) with respect to a proposed acquisition of their FFI
stock by MidCoast that required FFI to redeem as part of that acquisition 75 per-
cent of its stock from its stockholders. The letter of intent21 stated in pertinent
part:
Dear Shareholder(s) [Mr. Weintraut, Mr. Fankhauser, Ms. Fank-
hauser]:
We have received and reviewed certain material regarding ffi Corpo-
ration, an Indiana corporation (the “Company”) that you have pro-
vided to us. This letter of intent (“Letter”) is to set forth the basic
terms pursuant to which MidCoast Credit Corp. and/or its designee
(the “Share Buyer”)[22] shall acquire all of the remaining issued and
outstanding shares of the Company (the “Shares”) from its sharehold-
ers (the “Shareholders”) pursuant to a stock purchase transaction (the
“Proposed Share Transaction”) to occur immediately after or simulta-
neously with the redemption by the Company of approximately
seventy five percent (75%) of the Shares from the Shareholders in
consideration for (i) an assignment of receivables relating to a prom-
issory note [Elmwood Avenue LLC note], including accrued interest,
in the approximate amount of nine hundred twenty nine thousand
dollars ($929,000), (ii) an amount equal to the estimated refund of
21
When referring to the letter of intent, the share purchase and redemption
agreement (discussed below), the transactions described in those documents, and
any other agreement or document associated therewith or related thereto, our use
of terms such as “sale”, “purchase”, “redemption”, “loan”, and similar terms is for
convenience only. Our use of any such terms is not intended to imply, and does
not imply, that any of those transactions was a sale, purchase, redemption, loan, or
similar transaction for Federal income tax purposes.
22
As discussed below, MidCoast designated FFI Acquisition, a limited
liability company, to serve as the “Share buyer” in the “Proposed Share Trans-
action” discussed in the letter of intent.
- 20 -
[*20] Indiana corporate income tax payments made by the company for its
2001 tax year in the approximate amount of one hundred fifty
thousand dollars ($150,000), (iii) an assignment of the right to receive
a refund of the estimated federal corporate income tax payments made
by the Company for its 2001 tax year in the approximate amount of
six hundred thirty six thousand dollars ($636,000),[23] and (iv) the
transfer by the Company to the Shareholders of certain Oxidation
Technology related assets and other scheduled non-cash assets of the
Company (the “Redemption Price”) (the “Proposed Share Redemp-
tion”).
This Letter is intended to provide a framework for us to utilize as we
negotiate the terms and conditions of a definitive share purchase and
redemption agreement (“Definitive Agreement”) pursuant to which
the Proposed Share Transaction and the Proposed Share Redemption
(collectively, the “Transaction”) would be consummated. Accord-
ingly, this Letter does not constitute a legally binding or enforceable
agreement or commitment on the part of the parties to negotiate or
proceed with or toward the Transaction, nor does it purport to set
forth a complete statement of the terms and conditions of the Transac-
tion; provided, however, that in consideration of the time and costs
incurred and to be incurred in proceeding towards a possible Transac-
tion, the provisions in numbered paragraphs 1.3, 1.4, 1.5, 1.6 and 1.7
below (the “Binding Provisions”) shall be legally binding upon the
execution and acceptance of this Letter by those parties.
The Share Buyer contemplates that the basic terms and conditions of
the Proposed Share Transaction shall be as follows:
Section 1.1 Share Purchase Price. The Share Buyer shall
purchase the Shares at the closing of the Proposed Share Transaction
(the “Share Closing”) for a purchase price (the “Share Purchase
Price”) equal to the amount of the Company’s cash as of the Share
Closing less forty nine (49%) of the Company’s combined state and
23
The letter of intent erroneously stated that the FFI Federal 2001 income
tax payments totaled $636,000. The correct total is $628,592.
- 21 -
[*21] federal corporate income tax liability (taking into account any net
operating loss carryforwards) attributable to the Company’s business
operations and any sale, conveyance and/or transfer of its assets
during its 2001 tax year without taking into account any estimated tax
payment made by the Company with respect to such taxes (the
“Deferred Tax Liability”).
The Share Purchase Price shall be reduced by an amount equal to any
Liabilities remaining as of the Share Closing. “Liabilities” shall
include all specifically scheduled Liabilities of the Company, other
than the Deferred Tax Liability and any liability attributable to rea-
sonable and customary professional fees incurred in connection with
the Proposed Share Transaction not to exceed twenty thousand dollars
($20,000), which will not be borne by the Shareholders. If the Trans-
action does not close, the Shareholders will be responsible for the
payment of their professional fees. The parties expressly acknowl-
edge that to the extent that the parties fail to reach agreement on the
number and amount of the Liabilities to be scheduled, the Transaction
will not proceed.
Section 1.2. Conditions Precedent. The following shall be
conditions precedent to the Share Closing:
(a) The Share Buyer’s completion of due diligence to
its satisfaction, as provided in Section 1.6 below,
by the expiration of the Due Diligence Period (as
such term is defined in Section 1.6 below);
(b) The execution by the Share Buyer and the
Shareholders of a Definitive Agreement, with such
terms and conditions as shall be satisfactory to the
Share Buyer and the Shareholders, in their sole
discretion, by December 20, 2001;
(c) No adverse changes to the business or financial
condition of the Company between the date of this
Letter and the Share Closing;
- 22 -
[*22] (d) No breach of warranty, representation or covenant
contained in the Definitive Agreement as of the
Share Closing;
(e) Consummation of the Proposed Share Redemption
immediately prior to or simultaneously with the
Proposed Share Closing;
(f) The occurrence of the Share Closing by December
20, 2001.
* * * * * * *
Section 1.6 Access to Information. The Shareholders shall
provide representatives of the Share Buyer with access to the books,
records, properties, and other relevant information of the Company.
The Share Buyer shall complete its examination of the Company at
the Share Buyer’s expense by the Share Closing (the “Due Diligence
Period”). The Shareholders and their respective agents and represen-
tatives shall cooperate with the Share Buyer and the Share Buyer and
the Share Buyer’s agents and representatives in their due diligence
examination and shall provide the Share Buyer’s agents and represen-
tatives with access to the Company’s books, records, properties,
employees agents and representatives at such reasonable times and
places as the Share Buyer and the Shareholders shall reasonably
agree. If the Share Buyer elects not to proceed with the Proposed
Share Transaction for any reason, it shall so notify the Shareholders
in writing prior to the expiration of the Due Diligence Period.
* * * * * * *
Section 1.8 Definitive Share Agreement. The parties to this
Letter acknowledge and agree that the Shareholders shall be required,
in the event the Shareholders elect to execute a Definitive Agreement,
to make certain representations, warranties and covenants relative to
certain matters in the Definitive Agreement. Those matters are as
follows:
- 23 -
[*23] (a) Each of the Shareholder’ (if other than natural
persons) and the Company’s valid organization
and good standing and the sufficient authority and
capacity to execute, deliver and perform the Share
Agreement and consummate the Proposed Share
Transaction;
(b) The enforceability and binding effect of the Share
Agreement in accordance with its terms;
(c) The Shareholders’ title to and ownership of the
Shares free and clear of any liens, charges or other
encumbrances;
(d) The due and valid issuance of the Shares;
(e) The capital structure of the Company, including a
representation to the effect that the Shares pur-
chased by the Share Buyer constitute one hundred
percent (100%) of all of the issued and outstand-
ing capital stock of the Company;
(f) The lack of any options, warrants, rights of first
refusal, preemptive rights or similar rights or obli-
gations with respect to the Shares and any autho-
rized, but unissued shares of the Company;
(g) The absence of any law, rule, order, document or
agreement that would prohibit or be in conflict
with any of the Shareholders’ or the Company’s
execution of the Share Agreement or the consum-
mation of the Proposed Share Transaction;
(h) Except as specifically scheduled by the Sharehold-
ers, the absence of any litigation and liabilities,
including but not limited to any pending or
threatened environmental litigation or liabilities
relating to any of the Company’s assets;
- 24 -
[*24] (i) The amount of the tax basis in the Company’s
assets giving rise to the Deferred Tax Liability;
(j) The payment of all taxes of the Company (other
than the Deferred Tax Liability), filing of all tax
returns and related tax issues;
(k) The accuracy of the Company’s financial state-
ments; and
(l) Any other warranties, representations, and cove-
nants that is customary and reasonable with re-
spect to transactions of the same nature as the
Proposed Share Transaction.
The Share Buyer shall warrant, represent and covenant that it shall
cause the Company to pay the Deferred Tax Liability to the extent
that the Deferred Tax Liability is due given the Company’s post-
closing business activities and shall file all federal and state income
tax returns on a timely basis related thereto.
Section 1.9 Indemnification. In addition, subject to a
negotiated cap (which the parties believe to be approximately
$2,300,000) and survival period (which the parties believe will be 2
years for all claims other than those claims related to tax Liabilities,
which will survive for the applicable statute of limitations period)
which will attempt to mirror the liability the Shareholders would be
exposed to upon the dissolution and winding up of the Company, the
Shareholders shall indemnify the Company and the Share Buyer and
their respective officers, directors, shareholders, employees or
representatives against any loss, claim, damage or expense, including
attorneys’ fees and costs, which any one or more of them incur as a
result of an alleged or actual (i) act or omission of the Company or
the Shareholders occurring prior to the Share Closing, or (ii) breach
of any warranty, representation or covenant given or made by the
Company or the Shareholders with respect to the Company or its
assets prior to the Share Closing.
- 25 -
[*25] Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser (through Mr. Fank-
hauser) knew, directly or through Mr. Thrapp, that the transactions that MidCoast
had proposed in the letter of intent would result in their receiving a greater amount
of assets--a so-called premium--than they would receive if FFI were to liquidate
and dissolve24 and the Federal and State income tax liabilities that FFI had in-
curred as a result of the FFI 2001 asset sales were to be paid in full. That is why
on December 12, 2001, the day after MidCoast had sent FFI and the FFI
stockholders the letter of intent, Mr. Weintraut on behalf of FFI and the FFI
stockholders signed and accepted the terms of that letter. On the same date, Mr.
Bernstein signed and accepted those terms on behalf of MidCoast.
At no time before or after signing the letter or before the closing of the
transactions to which FFI, the FFI stockholders, and MidCoast agreed in the share
purchase and redemption agreement (discussed below) did Mr. Thrapp or Kyle
Hupfer (Mr. Hupfer )25 with Ice Miller or Mr. Burns or Mr. Vernick26 with the
24
FFI and the FFI stockholders had previously taken formal actions to effect
the liquidation and the dissolution of FFI.
25
Mr. Hupfer, who at all relevant times was an associate with Ice Miller and
who performed certain nontax work for FFI and the FFI stockholders relating to
the MidCoast proposed transactions, was not a tax professional. Consequently, he
was not qualified to, and did not, provide any Federal income tax advice to Mr.
Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser or to FFI with respect to the
(continued...)
- 26 -
[*26] Katz accounting firm inform FFI and the FFI stockholders about possible tax
problems associated with those transactions. Nor did Mr. Thrapp, Mr. Hupfer, Mr.
Burns, or Mr. Vernick recommend to FFI and to the FFI stockholders that they
retain a tax professional to provide advice with respect to the transactions that
MidCoast had proposed in the letter of intent or to which they thereafter agreed in
the share purchase and redemption agreement. FFI and the FFI stockholders did
not retain any tax professional to provide advice with respect to those transactions,
even though FFI had retained tax professionals over the years to provide it with
tax advice with respect to certain matters.
After the various parties accepted the letter of intent, Mr. Thrapp was
responsible for negotiating in large part the agreement among those parties
regarding the transactions that MidCoast had proposed in that letter.27 Mr. Wein-
25
(...continued)
transactions which MidCoast had proposed in the letter of intent or to which they
agreed in the share purchase and redemption agreement. (We shall sometimes
refer collectively to Mr. Thrapp and Mr. Hupfer as petitioners’ attorneys.)
26
The record does not establish that Mr. Burns or Mr. Vernick was a tax
professional.
27
It was Mr. Thrapp who negotiated with MidCoast and was able to obtain
its agreement to pay the attorneys’ fees (up to a stated limit) that Mr. Fankhauser,
Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser were to incur in connection with implement-
ing MidCoast’s proposed transactions.
- 27 -
[*27] traut, however, negotiated directly with certain of MidCoast’s represent-
atives the percentage of FFI’s 2001 Federal and State income tax liabilities that
MidCoast was to pay to purchase the stock of the FFI stockholders. In doing so,
Mr. Weintraut attempted to have MidCoast agree to pay a percentage that was at
the high end of the range of percentages to which he understood MidCoast had
agreed in the past as part of its acquisition methodology.
The FFI stockholders did not personally undertake any due diligence efforts
(due diligence) on behalf of FFI or themselves with respect to the transactions that
MidCoast had proposed in the letter of intent. Instead, the FFI stockholders relied
on Mr. Thrapp to conduct due diligence with respect to those transactions.
Mr. Thrapp spent some time performing a limited amount of due diligence
on behalf of FFI, Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser with re-
spect to the transactions that MidCoast had proposed in the letter of intent. At a
time not established by the record, Mr. Thrapp reviewed certain promotional
materials that MidCoast had prepared in which MidCoast represented that it had
been in business since 1958 and had been in the asset recovery business since
1996. In those promotional materials, MidCoast indicated that it acquired corpo-
rations for use in connection with its asset recovery business and continued to
operate those corporations after it acquired them. MidCoast also indicated in
- 28 -
[*28] those promotional materials that it caused the corporations that it acquired to
satisfy their respective tax liabilities as well as other liabilities. Mr. Thrapp did
not perform due diligence with respect to FFI Acquisition, the entity that Mr.
Bernstein formed and that MidCoast designated to serve as the purchaser of the
stock of the FFI stockholders (discussed in more detail below).
Mr. Thrapp claimed to have believed that the limited amount of due dili-
gence that he performed was adequate taking into account the information and the
circumstances with respect to the transactions that MidCoast had proposed in the
letter of intent and the signatories to that letter about which he had knowledge or
an understanding. Mr. Thrapp further claimed to have believed that the knowl-
edge and the understanding that he had with respect to the transactions that Mid-
Coast had proposed in the letter of intent and the signatories to that letter enabled
him to determine and to assess the risks that he concluded those transactions posed
to his clients, FFI and the FFI stockholders. Mr. Thrapp claimed to have held
those beliefs even though (1) he did not know any of the details of MidCoast’s
acquisition methodology, its tax strategy, or its asset recovery business; (2) he was
not a tax professional and thus was not qualified to know of, or be sensitive to, any
tax risks associated with the transactions which MidCoast had proposed or to
which FFI and the FFI stockholders agreed in the share purchase and redemption
- 29 -
[*29] agreement; and (3) he knew (as discussed below) that the funds that were to
be provided to MidCoast in order to effect the acquisition of the FFI stock were to
be returned as of the closing of that transaction to the provider of those funds.
Following the execution of the letter of intent, MidCoast began performing
due diligence with respect to FFI in anticipation that the signatories to that letter
would agree to undertake the transactions that MidCoast had proposed in that
letter and that the closing date of those transactions would be December 20, 2001.
Mr. Weintraut assisted MidCoast’s controller, Carolyn Sesco (Ms. Sesco), and
MidCoast’s independent accountant, Scott Elkins, with respect to that due dili-
gence. Mr. Weintraut spent several days in providing that assistance.
On December 14, 2001, FFI sent by facsimile to Mr. Hupfer preliminary
financial computations (FFI’s preliminary financial computations) that Mr. Wein-
traut had prepared by using FFI’s financial records. According to FFI’s prelimi-
nary financial computations, FFI had for its taxable year 2001 a projected Federal
income tax liability of $801,749 and a projected State income tax liability of
$225,030.
The FFI stockholders and the FFI directors entered into a joint consent
dated December 15, 2001, to revoke FFI’s December 19, 2000 plan of liquidation.
- 30 -
[*30] On December 17, 2001, FFI organized FFW Holdings, LLC (FFW), under
the laws of the State of Indiana. FFW, whose sole member was FFI, was a dis-
regarded entity for Federal tax purposes. FFI formed FFW to serve, inter alia, as a
vehicle to transfer to the FFI stockholders certain of FFI’s cash and noncash assets
and all of its liabilities except its Federal and State 2001 income tax liabilities in
exchange for 75 percent of the outstanding stock of FFI that they owned. On
December 19, 2001, Mr. Weintraut, as executive vice president of FFI, signed
FFW’s operating agreement.
Around December 18, 2001, Mr. Weintraut prepared a balance sheet for FFI
(December 18, 2001 balance sheet) that reflected its assets and its liabilities as of
that date on the assumption that the transactions proposed in the letter of intent
were to occur. According to the December 18, 2001 balance sheet, FFI was to
have the following assets and the following Federal income tax liability and State
income tax liability for its taxable year 2001 after it distributed membership in-
terests in FFW to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser in ex-
- 31 -
[*31] change for 75 percent of the FFI stock that they owned:28 (1) cash of
$875,855.49, (2) the right to a refund of the FFI State 2001 income tax payments
of $157,700, (3) an anticipated Federal income tax liability (anticipated 2001
Federal income tax liability) for FFI’s taxable year 2001 of $794,949.13, and (4)
an anticipated State income tax liability (anticipated 2001 State income tax lia-
28
The December 18, 2001 balance sheet did not show as an asset of FFI the
balance of $11,955.46 in a certain bank account in the name of FFI (FFI’s bank
account balance of $11,955.46). Nor did that balance sheet show as a liability of
FFI certain outstanding checks of $11,955.46 issued by FFI (FFI’s outstanding
checks of $11,955.46). Because FFI’s bank account balance of $11,955.46 and
FFI’s outstanding checks of $11,955.46 were in the same amounts, they offset
each other and had no effect on the share purchase price (discussed below)
calculated in the December 18, 2001 balance sheet. Consequently, for conve-
nience, we shall not refer, except infrequently, to FFI’s bank account balance of
$11,955.46 as an asset of FFI or to FFI’s outstanding checks of $11,955.46 as a
liability of FFI when we discuss the transactions and the events that are relevant to
the issues presented here.
In addition, the December 18, 2001 balance sheet did not show as an asset
of FFI a receivable of $43,926.57 (discussed below) from the Prudential Life
Insurance Co. of America (Prudential), which FFI had never claimed, which the
State of Indiana was holding in the name of FFI, and of which no one associated
with FFI or MidCoast was aware at the time MidCoast proposed the transactions
in the letter of intent and at the time the transactions closed pursuant to the share
purchase and redemption agreement of FFI, the FFI stockholders, and MidCoast.
As a result, the receivable from Prudential of $43,926.57 (Prudential demutual-
ization funds receivable of $43,926.57) had no effect on the share purchase price
calculated in the December 18, 2001 balance sheet. Consequently, for conve-
nience, we shall not refer, except infrequently, to the Prudential demutualization
funds receivable of $43,926.57 as an asset of FFI when we discuss the transactions
and the events that are relevant to the issues presented here.
- 32 -
[*32] bility) for FFI’s taxable year 2001 of $231,151.56.29 (We shall sometimes
refer collectively to the total (i.e., $1,026,100.69) of FFI’s anticipated 2001 Fed-
eral income tax liability and anticipated 2001 State income tax liability that were
shown in the December 18, 2001 balance sheet as FFI’s total anticipated 2001 tax
liability.)
Pursuant to a formula set forth in the December 18, 2001 balance sheet, the
stock purchase price for the stock of FFI that MidCoast was to purchase from the
FFI stockholders was to be determined, as shown in certain computations in that
balance sheet, by reducing FFI’s total assets (i.e., $1,033,555.49) consisting of
cash of $875,855.49 and the right to a refund of the FFI State 2001 income tax
payments of $157,700, which FFI would be considered to own upon effecting the
redemption transaction that MidCoast had proposed in the letter of intent, by 49
percent (i.e., by $502,789.34) of FFI’s total anticipated 2001 tax liability of
29
As noted, Mr. Weintraut made the underlying computations of FFI’s
anticipated 2001 Federal income tax liability and its anticipated 2001 State income
tax liability shown in the December 18, 2001 balance sheet. Those liabilities
totaled $1,026,100.69, which is different from the total (i.e., $1,026,779) of FFI’s
projected Federal income tax liability of $801,749 and its projected State income
tax liability of $225,030 for its taxable year 2001 that were shown in FFI’s
preliminary financial computations that he also prepared. The record does not
establish the reason for that difference.
- 33 -
[*33] $1,026,100.69. The balance of $530,766.15 was to be the purchase price for
the FFI stock that MidCoast was to purchase from the FFI stockholders.
On December 18, 2001, Prudential entered into a demutualization transac-
tion whereby it converted from a mutual insurance company to a stock insurance
company. FFI was a policyholder at the time of that demutualization transaction
and, as such, was entitled to receive certain shares of Prudential stock and a cer-
tain amount of Prudential’s cash. Because FFI did not make a claim to Prudential
for the stock and the cash to which it was entitled as a result of Prudential’s
demutualization, Prudential paid $43,926.57 to the Indiana Attorney General’s
office.30
On December 19, 2001, immediately before the contribution of certain of its
assets to FFW, FFI had the following assets and liabilities:
30
See supra note 28.
- 34 -
[*34] Assets Amounts
Cash $1,045,510.95
Elmwood Avenue LLC note 913,895.43
Real estate in Thief Falls, Minnesota (1)
Cash in escrow from FFI asset sale 197,131.52
Oxidation technology (2)
Refundable utility deposit 1,153.54
Interest receivable on Elmwood Avenue LLC note 19,387.87
Insurance premium refund 2,696.00
Total 2,179,775.31
Liabilities Amounts
Accounts payable to ADP $81.00
Accounts payable to Ronald Cook 620.32
Accounts payable to Citizens Insurance 10,000.00
Accounts payable to Ice Miller 32,454.03
Payments due to retirees 25,684.08
Refunds due dealers 1,046.47
GSI warranty claim adjustment 9,608.09
Accrued property taxes 33,144.21
Contingent payable to Hanover Insurance 10,000.00
Unpaid 2001 anticipated Federal income tax liability3 166,357.13
Unpaid 2001 anticipated State income tax liability4 73,451.56
Total 362,446.89
Excess of assets over liabilities 1,817,328.42
1
The record does not establish the value of the real estate in Thief Falls, Minnesota.
2
3The record does not establish the value of the oxidation technology.
FFI had made payments totaling $628,592 with respect to its anticipated 2001 Federal
income tax liability of $794,949.13.
4
FFI had made payments totaling $157,700 with respect to its anticipated 2001 State
income tax liability of $231,151.56.
- 35 -
[*35] On December 18, 2001, in preparation for the transactions contemplated in
the letter of intent, Mr. Bernstein organized under the laws of the State of Indiana31
FFI Acquisition (FFIA), a limited liability company, to enter into those transac-
tions as MidCoast’s designee. According to FFIA’s operating agreement, Mr.
Bernstein was required to contribute $1,000 in return for his interest as FFIA’s
sole member.32
31
The parties stipulated that FFI Acquisition was organized under the laws
of the State of Indiana as an Indiana limited liability company. In the share
purchase and redemption agreement that FFI Acquisition, FFI, Mr. Fankhauser,
Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser executed, FFI Acquisition represented and
warranted in section 3.2 that “purchaser [FFI Acquisition] is duly organized and
validly existing under the laws of the State of Florida.” In the preamble of that
same agreement, FFI Acquisition is described as an “Indiana Limited Liability
Company”. MidCoast apparently followed virtually the same or a very similar
pattern when it agreed to buy at a so-called premium stock of a C corporation that
held cash resulting from the sale of operating assets and that had Federal and State
income liabilities attributable to those sales. Consequently, MidCoast most likely
had a cookie-cutter type agreement that it used in order to effect the purchase of
the C corporation stock in the instant cases and in other cases with virtually
identical or very similar fact patterns. That would explain, but not justify or
excuse, the inconsistencies between (1) the stipulation of facts in these cases and
the preamble of the stock purchase and redemption agreement and (2) section 3.2
of that agreement.
32
The record does not establish that Mr. Bernstein contributed $1,000 to
FFIA in return for his interest as its sole member. Nor does the record establish
that FFIA had any assets as of the closing of the transactions, which MidCoast had
proposed in the letter of intent or to which FFI, the FFI stockholders, and FFIA
agreed in the share purchase and redemption agreement, or that it had any assets
after that closing other than the stock of FFI.
- 36 -
[*36] On December 19, 2001, FFI contributed the following assets and liabilities33
to FFW:
Assets Amounts
Cash $157,700.00
Elmwood Avenue LLC note 913,895.43
Right to refund of FFI Federal 2001 income tax payments 628,592.00
Real estate in Thief Falls, Minnesota (1)
Cash in escrow from FFI asset sale 197,131.52
Oxidation technology (2)
Refundable utility deposit 1,153.54
Interest receivable on Elmwood Avenue LLC note 19,387.87
Insurance premium refund 2,696.00
Assets total 1,920,556.36
Liabilities Amounts
Accounts payable to ADP $81.00
Accounts payable to Ronald Cook 620.32
Accounts payable to Citizens Insurance 10,000.00
Accounts payable to Ice Miller 32,454.03
Payments due to retirees 25,684.08
Refunds due dealers 1,046.47
GSI warranty claim adjustment 9,608.09
Accrued property taxes 33,144.21
Contingent payable to Hanover Insurance 10,000.00
Liability total 122,638.20
Excess of assets over liabilities 1,797,918.16
1
The record does not establish the value of the real estate in Thief Falls, Minnesota, that
FFI contributed to FFW.
2
The record does not establish the value of the oxidation technology that FFI contributed
to FFW.
33
The assets and the liabilities shown assume that the transactions proposed
in the letter of intent were to occur.
- 37 -
[*37] On December 20, 2001, Stephen J. Shapiro (Mr. Shapiro) executed a
certificate on behalf of FFIA, which included resolutions of Mr. Bernstein dated
December 19, 2001. Those resolutions provided that FFIA, as the designee of
MidCoast, was to enter into the share purchase and redemption agreement with
FFI and the FFI stockholders.
On December 20, 2001, FFIA, FFI, and the FFI stockholders entered into a
share purchase and redemption agreement (SPRA), the terms of which were sim-
ilar but not identical to the terms that MidCoast had proposed in the letter of in-
tent. Mr. Bernstein signed the SPRA on behalf of FFIA; Mr. Weintraut signed it
on behalf of FFI; and Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser signed
it as the FFI stockholders.
The only reason that FFI and the FFI stockholders accepted MidCoast’s
letter of intent and thereafter decided to, and did, enter into the SPRA with Mid-
Coast and the related agreements (discussed below) was that those stockholders
wanted to, and MidCoast agreed that they would, receive a substantially greater
amount--a so-called premium--from the transactions which MidCoast proposed to
them or to which they agreed in the SPRA than they would receive from the
liquidation of FFI after FFI’s total anticipated 2001 tax liability of $1,026,100.69,
which was attributable to the FFI 2001 asset sales, was paid (posttax liquidation
- 38 -
[*38] value). When they accepted MidCoast’s letter of intent and thereafter
entered into the SPRA with MidCoast and the related agreements (discussed
below), Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser knew, as did Mr.
Thrapp, that the only reason that the FFI stockholders would be able to receive
such a premium was that that total anticipated 2001 tax liability would not be paid.
In other words, Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser knew, as did
Mr. Thrapp, that if and only if FFI’s total anticipated 2001 tax liability was not
paid would the FFI stockholders receive the so-called premium.34
34
The respective amounts of the Federal income tax liability and the State
income tax liability of FFI for its taxable year 2001 that were attributable to the
FFI 2001 asset sales were estimated to be $794,949.13 and $231,151.56,
respectively. As discussed below, under the SPRA, the stockholders of FFI were
to retain as of the closing of the transactions under the SPRA, through their
respective ownership interests in FFW that FFI was to distribute to them in the so-
called redemption transaction under the SPRA, the right to a refund of the FFI
Federal 2001 income tax payments of $628,592. FFI, as FFIA’s designee, was to
retain as of the closing of the transactions under the SPRA the right to a refund of
the FFI State 2001 income tax payments of $157,700. Because of those antici-
pated refunds of those respective income tax payments, Mr. Fankhauser, Mr.
Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser knew that none of FFI’s total anticipated 2001 tax
liability of $1,026,100.69 would be paid, thereby enabling them to receive a
substantially greater amount, a so-called premium, from the transactions MidCoast
proposed to them than they would receive from the liquidation of FFI after FFI’s
total anticipated 2001 tax liability of $1,026,100.69 was paid in full.
- 39 -
[*39] Immediately before the closing of the SPRA on December 20, 2001, FFI
had the following assets and liabilities35
Assets Value
Membership interest in FFW1 $1,920,556.36
Cash 875,855.49
Right to refund of FFI State 2001 income tax
payments 157,700.00
Asset total 2,954,111.85
Liabilities Value
Liabilities held by FFW $122,638.20
Anticipated Federal 2001 income tax liability 794,949.13
Anticipated 2001 State income tax liability 231,151.56
Liabilities Total 1,148,738.89
Excess of assets over liabilities 1,805,372.96
1
FFW held the right to a refund of the FFI Federal 2001 income tax
payments totaling $628,592.
The SPRA provided in pertinent part:
This Share Purchase and Redemption Agreement (“Agree-
ment”) is made and entered into on December 20, 2001, by and
among FFI Acquisition, LLC, an Indiana limited liability company
(“Purchaser”), ffi Corporation (formerly Farm Fans, Inc.), an Indiana
corporation (the “Company”) and Curtis D. Fankhauser, Cynthia A.
Fankhauser, and Thomas L. Weintraut, the shareholders of the
Company (each a “Seller,” and collectively the “Sellers”).
35
The assets and the liabilities shown assume that the transactions to which
the parties to the SPRA agreed were to occur.
- 40 -
[*40] WHEREAS, the Sellers own all of the issued and outstanding
common shares of the Company (the “Common Shares”);
WHEREAS, the Company has previously sold substantially all
of the assets of the Company pursuant to those certain documents,
instruments and agreements dated primarily as of January 2, 2001,
and October 12, 2001 by and between the Company and The GSI
Group, Inc. (the “Asset Purchaser”) and 5900 Elmwood Avenue, LLC
and its predecessors and assigns (the “Real Estate Purchaser”) (all of
the documents, instruments and agreements entered into by the parties
in connection with these transactions are listed on Schedule 1.0 and
are hereinafter collectively referred to as the “Asset Purchase Agree-
ments”); and
WHEREAS, the Company contributed cash and certain non-
cash assets to FFW Holdings, LLC, a newly formed Indiana limited
liability company (“Newco, LLC”), and FFW Holdings, LLC as-
sumed only certain specific liabilities of the Company (the “Assumed
Liabilities”) pursuant to a Contribution Agreement dated December
19, 2001 (the “Contribution Agreement”), in exchange for all of the
membership interests of Newco, LLC; and
* * * * * * *
NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the premises and the
mutual promises herein made and in further consideration of the re-
presentations, warranties and covenants contained herein, the parties
agree as follows:
ARTICLE I.
PURCHASE AND SALE OF SHARES
Section 1.1. Sale and Purchase of Shares.
(a) At the Closing [which is deemed effective at 11:59
p.m. on December 20, 2001], subject to the terms
- 41 -
[*41] and conditions of this Agreement, the Company
shall purchase the Redemption Shares from Sellers
and the Sellers shall sell, assign and deliver the
Redemption Shares to the Company, free and clear
of all liens, claims, encumbrances, security inter-
ests and similar interests of any kind or nature
whatsoever (the “Redemption”).
(b) At the Closing, subject to the terms and conditions
of this Agreement, the Purchaser shall purchase
the Purchase Shares from Sellers, and the Sellers
shall sell, assign and deliver the Purchase Shares
to the Purchaser, free and clear of all liens, claims,
encumbrances, security interests and other inter-
ests of any kind or nature whatsoever.
The number of Shares being purchased by the Company, and
the number of Shares being purchased by the Purchaser shall be as set
forth on Schedule 1.1.
Section 1.2. Purchase Price. The aggregate
purchase price for the Shares (the “Purchase Price”) shall
be equal to the sum of the Redemption Value plus the
Purchase Payment, and shall be paid by the Company
with respect to its purchase of the Redemption Shares,
and by the Purchaser with respect to its purchase of the
Purchase Shares, as follows:
(a) At the Closing, the Company shall deliver to
Sellers all of the membership interests of Newco,
LLC (the “Redemption Payment,” or the
“Redemption Value”). The assets and liabilities of
Newco, LLC at that time shall consist solely of
those listed on Schedule 1.2(a).
(b) At the Closing, the Purchaser shall deliver to the
Sellers in cash via wire transfer of immediately
- 42 -
[*42] available funds an amount equal to $530,766.15[36]
in proportion to their ownership interests of the
Company (the “Purchase Payment”).[37]
Section 1.3. Closing. The purchase and sale of the Shares
pursuant to this Agreement (the “Closing”) shall take place at the
offices of Ice Miller, One American Square, Indianapolis, Indiana at
9:00 a.m. on December 20, 2001, or at such other time and place as
the Sellers and the Purchaser mutually agree (which date is desig-
nated the “Closing Date”). For purposes of this Agreement, the
Closing shall be deemed effective as of 11:59 p.m. on the Closing
Date (the “Effective Time”).
ARTICLE II.
REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES OF THE SELLERS
As an inducement to enter into this Agreement, the Sellers
hereby jointly and severally represent and warrant to the Purchaser as
follows:
* * * * * * *
Section 2.10. Retained Assets. Immediately following the
Closing hereunder, the Company’s assets will consist only of (i) cash
in an amount not less than $875,855.49, (ii) $11,955.46 which shall
be in the bank account #0099990437 with Fifth Third Bank to satisfy
36
The amount of the “Purchase Payment” in the SPRA was the amount of
the “Stock Purchase Price” shown in the December 18, 2001 balance sheet.
37
As discussed below, although the FFI stockholders were deemed to have
been paid for their respective stockholdings in FFI “in cash via wire transfer of
immediately available funds”, their respective portions of the so-called purchase
payment for those holdings were placed into an escrow account and were not in
fact distributed to them by wire transfer until December 21, 2001, the day after the
closing.
- 43 -
[*43] outstanding checks (the “Bank Account”) and (iii) a right to receive a
refund of $152,000 from the State of Indiana, and $5,700 from other
states, for 2001 income taxes which were prepaid in 2001 (the “State
Tax Refund”), which shall be free and clear of all liens, claims and
encumbrances of any nature whatsoever.[38]
* * * * * * *
Section 2.13. Tax and Other Returns and Reports. All
federal, state, local and foreign tax returns, reports, statements and
other similar filings required to be filed by the Company or any
Subsidiary including, without limitation, the federal and state income
tax returns for the Company’s and each Subsidiary’s fiscal year ended
December 31, 2000, (collectively the “Tax Returns”) with respect to
any federal, state, local or foreign taxes, assessments, interest, penal-
ties, deficiencies, fees and other governmental charges or imposition,
(including, without limitation, all income tax, unemployment com-
pensation, social security, payroll, sales and use , excise, privilege,
property, ad valorem, franchise, license, school and any other tax or
similar governmental charge or imposition under the laws of the
United States or any state or municipal or political subdivision there-
of or any foreign country or political subdivision thereof) (the
“Taxes”), have been filed with the appropriate governmental agencies
in all jurisdictions in which such Tax Returns are required to be filed,
and all such Tax Returns properly reflect the liabilities of the Com-
pany and each Subsidiary for Taxes for the periods, property or
events covered thereby. All Taxes accrued since the end of the last
tax period or from the date which Tax Returns were last filed, includ-
ing, without limitation, those arising from the operations of the
Company or any Subsidiary up to the Closing, have been accurately
and properly determined and are set forth on Schedule 2.13 hereof
(“Current Taxes”). All Taxes, including, without limitation, the
38
The assets described in section 2.10 of the SPRA are the assets that were
shown in the December 18, 2001 balance sheet (except for FFI’s bank account
balance of $11,955.46 and FFI’s outstanding checks of $11,955.46, see supra note
28).
- 44 -
[*44] Current Taxes and those Taxes which are called for by the Tax Re-
turns, have been or will be paid on or before the Closing Date, other
than the Deferred Tax Liability. The Company and each Subsidiary
has made all deposits required by law to be made with respect to
employees’ withholding and other employment taxes, including,
without limitation, the portion of such deposits relating to taxes
imposed upon it. Neither the Company nor any Subsidiary has
received any notice of assessment or proposed assessment in connec-
tion with any Tax Returns, and there are not pending any tax exami-
nations of or tax claims asserted against the Company or any Subsid-
iary or any of their assets or properties. Neither the Company nor any
Subsidiary has extended, or waived the application of, any statute of
limitations of any jurisdiction regarding the assessment or collection
of any Taxes. There are no tax liens (other than any lien for current
taxes not yet due and payable set forth on Schedule 2.13 hereof) on
any of the assets or properties of the Company or any Subsidiary.
There is no basis for any additional assessment of any Taxes. The
Company has not filed any returns or other documents with the IRS
indicating that the Company would be dissolved or was dissolved or
that it would discontinuing business operations, except that the Com-
pany has filed a Form 966 with the Internal Revenue Service.
* * * * * * *
ARTICLE III.
REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES OF THE PURCHASER
The Purchaser represents and warrants to each of the Sellers as
follows:
Section 3.1. Authorization of Purchaser. When executed
and delivered by the Purchaser, this Agreement will constitute the
valid and legally binding obligation of the Purchaser enforceable
against the Purchaser in accordance with its terms.
- 45 -
[*45] Section 3.2. Corporate Status of Purchaser. Purchaser is
duly organized and validly existing under the laws of the State of
Florida. Purchaser has all requisite legal and corporate power and
authority to own, lease and operate its properties and assets and to
carry on its business as now conducted and as proposed to be con-
ducted, and has all requisite legal and corporate power and authority
to enter into and execute this Agreement and the documents and
instruments related hereto.
Section 3.3. Consents. Purchaser is not required to obtain
any permit, consent, approval, order or authorization from, and is not
required to make any registration, qualification, designation, declara-
tion or filing with, any federal or state governmental authority or third
party in connection with the execution, delivery or performance of
this Agreement or the consummation of the transaction contemplated
hereby.
Section 3.4. Authorization. All actions on the part of
Purchaser necessary for the authorization, execution, delivery and
performance of this Agreement, and the consummation of the transac-
tions contemplated hereby and thereby, has been taken prior to the
Closing. This agreement has been duly executed and delivered by
Purchaser and constitutes a legal, valid and binding obligation of
Purchaser, enforceable against Purchaser in accordance with its terms
and conditions.
Section 3.5. Noncontravention. The execution, delivery and
performance of this Agreement by Purchaser does not and will not, in
any Material Respect, violate, conflict with or result in the breach of
any term, condition or provision of, or require the consent of any
other person under: (a) any existing law, ordinance, or governmental
rule or regulation to which Purchaser is subject; (b) any judgment,
order, writ, injunction, decree or award of any court, arbitrator or
governmental or regulatory official, body or authority which is appli-
cable to Purchaser; (c) the charter documents of Purchaser, or any
securities issued by Purchaser; or (d) any mortgage, indenture, agree-
ment, contract, commitment, lease, plan, authorization, or other
- 46 -
[*46] instrument, document or understanding, oral or written, to which
Purchaser is a party, by which Purchaser may have rights or by which
any of the assets of Purchaser may be bound or affected, or give any
party with rights thereunder the right to terminate, modify, accelerate
or otherwise change the existing rights or obligations Purchaser there-
under.
Section 3.6. Disclosure. Purchaser has not omitted to state to
the Sellers any material fact relating to Purchaser which is necessary
in order to make the representations or warranties of Purchaser con-
tained in this Article III not misleading or which if disclosed would
reasonably affect in any Material Respect the decision of a person
considering a sale of the Shares.
ARTICLE IV.
CONDITIONS OF PURCHASER’S OBLIGATIONS TO CLOSE
The obligations of the Purchaser under this Agreement are
subject to the fulfillment, at or before the Closing, of each of the
following conditions:
* * * * * * *
Section 4.7. Financial Condition and Redemption.
Immediately prior to the Closing, the Company shall possess assets
consisting solely of (i) the right to receive the State Tax Refund, (ii)
cash in an amount not less than $875,855.49, (iii) $11,955.46 which
shall be in the Bank Account, and (iv) the membership interests of
Newco, LLC, and the Company shall be subject to no Liabilities
except its obligations under the Contribution Agreement. The re-
demption by the Company of the Redemption Shares shall have been
closed to the satisfaction of the Purchaser.
* * * * * * *
- 47 -
[*47] ARTICLE VI.
COVENANTS
To the extent applicable, Sellers, Purchaser and the Company
further covenant and agree as follows:
* * * * * * *
Section 6.3. Full Access. Following the Closing, to the
extent necessary, the Sellers will permit representatives of the Pur-
chaser to have full access at all reasonable times to the books, records
(including tax records), contracts and documents of or pertaining to
the Company, any Subsidiary, or the Shares. To the extent the Pur-
chaser takes possession at Closing of any of the books or records of
the Company or any Subsidiary, the Purchaser shall provide the
Sellers, to the extent necessary, access at all reasonable times to such
books and records. Sellers will use their reasonable best efforts to
permit Purchaser or its representatives to have access to the books
and records of the Company that were transferred to the Asset Pur-
chaser and the Real Estate Purchaser upon request.
* * * * * * *
Section 6.7. Survival of Representations and Warranties
and Indemnification Obligations.
(a) The parties agree that the representations and
warranties of the Sellers under this agreement or in any
certificate, schedule, statement, document or installment
furnished hereunder, and the indemnification obligations
of the Sellers under this Agreement as more particularly
set forth in Article IX hereof, shall survive for a period
of two (2) years after the Closing Date, except that the
representations, warranties and obligations, and related
indemnification obligations for breach or nonperfor-
mance thereof, with respect to Taxes and Tax Returns
- 48 -
[*48] shall survive subject only to the applicable statute of
limitations periods, if any, and except that the Sellers’
obligation to indemnify, defend and hold harmless the
Purchaser, any Subsidiary, and the Company under this
Agreement with respect to claims against the Company
arising under the Asset Purchase Agreements shall sur-
vive for as long as the Company has any obligation to (i)
indemnify, defend or hold harmless (or is otherwise
determined to be liable to) any party under any of the
Asset Purchase Agreements arising under such agree-
ment, or (ii) preform any covenant or obligation under
any Asset Purchase Agreement. Additionally, the two
(2) year survival period shall not apply to Liabilities
arising out of Newco, LLC’s failure to satisfy the Liabili-
ties it specifically assumes under the Contribution
Agreement.
(b) The parties agree that the representations and
warranties of the Purchaser under this Agreement or in
any certificate, schedule, statement, document or instru-
ment furnished hereunder and the indemnification obli-
gations of the Purchaser under this Agreement as more
particularly set forth in Article IX hereof shall survive
for a period of two (2) years after the Closing Date.
* * * * * * *
Section 6.10. Taxes and Tax Filings. The Sellers agree, at
their sole cost and expense, to prepare, or cause to be prepared, all tax
returns, other that the state and federal income tax for the fiscal year
ending December 31, 2001, (the “Sellers Tax Returns”) that are due
to be filed after the Closing Date and that relate to any and all re-
quired taxable activities of the Company or any Subsidiary through
and including the Closing Date, and shall file all returns and pay all
taxes in connection therewith. On or before the tenth (10th) business
day before their due date, Sellers will submit to the Company copies
of all such Seller[s] Tax Returns. In addition to the preparation of the
- 49 -
[*49] Sellers’ Tax Returns, Sellers shall also prepare and submit to the
Company all Forms W2 and 1099 for the Company’s employees’ and
independent contractors during the period of Sellers’ ownership of
the Company. The Company shall assist the Sellers in this process if
required. The Sellers agree to assist the Company, upon its request,
in the preparation and filing of all future Tax Returns and in the
application for and procuring of all Tax refunds and agree[] to pro-
vide all documents required by the Company in order to verify or
substantiate the information in any Tax Return or application for a
Tax refund. The Purchaser shall cause the Company to prepare and
file the state and federal income tax returns for the fiscal year ending
December 31, 2001. The Company shall report on its federal and
state income tax returns all gains attributable to the receipt of the
proceeds from the Asset Purchaser and Real Estate Purchaser pursu-
ant to the allocation required by the Asset Purchase Agreements, and
shall pay the applicable tax authorities the Deferred Tax Liability, if
any, resulting from such gain in light of the other post-closing activi-
ties of the Company. The Sellers and Newco, LLC, jointly and
severally, (i) agree to repay to the Company an amount equal to the
difference between $157,700 and the actual amount of the State Tax
Refund actually received by the Company, if any, and (ii) provided
that the Company files its request for the State Tax Refund on or
before January 31, 2002, shall repay an amount equal to the full
amount of the State Tax Refund to the Company if it is not received
within one hundred twenty (120) days of the filing of the application
for refund; provided that neither Sellers nor Newco, LLC shall have
any liability to pay such a deficiency or refund if (y) it results from an
act or omission of the Company after the Closing, or (z) the Company
fails to completely satisfy the Deferred Tax Liability, if any, resulting
from such gain in light of the other post-closing activities of the Com-
pany. Additionally, if the Company has not received the State Tax
Refund within ninety (90) days of filing the application for refund,
the Company shall notify the Sellers and shall allow the Sellers to
pursue the State Tax Refund on its behalf and shall give Sellers all
commercially reasonable assistance in its efforts to collect such
refund[.]
- 50 -
[*50] * * * * * * *
ARTICLE VII.
EVENTS AT CLOSING.
Section 7.1. Simultaneous Occurrence of Events at
Closing. All of the events which are to occur at the Closing under
this Agreement, including but not limited to, the delivery of the Share
certificates and the payment of the Purchase Price and all other
related exchanges shall be deemed to have occurred simultaneously.
Section 7.2. Documents to be Delivered by the Sellers.
At the Closing, the Sellers shall deliver to the Purchasers and/or the
Company as applicable:
(a) The certificates for the Shares with a stock power
duly executed in blank for each certificate;
(b) The certificate of the Sellers specified in Section
4.6;
(c) The resignations of the Sellers and the other offi-
cers, employees, agents, and directors of the Com-
pany specified in Section 6.1;
(d) Any Business Records requested by the Purchaser
under Section 6.9;
(e) Any documents or certificates necessary to convey
control over each and every checking, savings, and
other operations accounts of the Company to the
Purchaser, including, without limitation, signature
cards;
- 51 -
[*51] (f) The Articles of Incorporation and By-Laws of the
Company certified by the Secretary of the Com-
pany; and
(g) A release, in form satisfactory to the Purchaser in
its sole discretion, of all claims, liabilities, obliga-
tions, loss, damage or responsibility that any of the
Sellers or Newco, LLC may have against the Com-
pany, including, without limitation, any claims,
liabilities or obligations for indemnification, con-
tribution or otherwise, but specifically excluding
any claims, liabilities or obligations arising out of
this Agreement or the transactions described here-
in, and any rights the Sellers have to enforce the
terms, conditions or obligations of the Asset Pur-
chase Agreements against the Asset Purchaser and
the Real Estate Purchaser.
Section 7.3. Documents to be Delivered by the Purchaser.
At the Closing, the Purchaser shall deliver to the Sellers:
(a) The Purchase Payment owed to each Seller or their
nominee;
(b) The certificate of the executive officer of Pur-
chaser as specified in Section 5.3;
(c) Certified resolutions of the Purchaser authorizing
the transactions contemplated by this Agreement;
(d) An incumbency certificate identifying the execu-
tive officers of Purchaser;
(e) The Articles of Organization and Operating
Agreement of Purchaser certified by the Secretary
of Purchaser within sixty (60) days of the Closing;
- 52 -
[*52] (f) The Stock Pledge Agreement executed by Pur-
chaser; and
(g) The Guaranty executed by MidCoast Credit Corp.
Section 7.4. Documents to be Delivered by the Company.
At the Closing, the Company shall deliver to the Purchasers and the
Sellers:
(a) The Redemption Payment to Sellers;
(b) Certified resolutions of the Company authorizing
the transactions contemplated by this Agreement;
and
(c) An incumbency certificate identifying the execu-
tive officers of the Company;
(d) The professional fees of the Sellers up to $20,000;
and
(e) A Certificate of Existence from the Indiana Secre-
tary of State.
* * * * * * *
ARTICLE IX.
INDEMNIFICATIONS.
* * * * * * *
Section 9.2. Indemnification Obligation of the Purchaser.
After the Closing, the Purchaser will reimburse, indemnify, defend
and hold harmless Sellers and their heirs, legal representatives, suc-
cessors or assigns (an “Indemnified Seller Party”) against and in re-
spect of any and all Indemnified Claims incurred or suffered by any
- 53 -
[*53] Indemnified Seller Party, as to which a Claim Notice is given in
accordance with Section 9.3 within the applicable time period spec-
ified in Section 6.7, and that results from, relates to or arises out of,
(i) any misrepresentation, breach of warranty or nonfulfillment of any
agreement or covenant on the part of the Purchaser under this Agree-
ment, (ii) any misrepresentation in or omission from any certificate,
schedule, written statement, document or instrument furnished to the
Sellers by Purchaser[] pursuant hereto, (iii) a liability or obligation
first arising subsequent to the Closing out of Purchaser’s operation of
the Company or conduct of the Company’s business from and after
the Closing, and (iv) any costs and expenses, including reasonable
attorney[s’] fees and expenses incurred in connection with the en-
forcement of this indemnification.
* * * * * * *
ARTICLE X.
MISCELLANEOUS.
Section 10.1. Expenses. Except for the $20,000 in profes-
sional fees of the Sellers (the “Professional Fees”), whether or not the
transactions contemplated by this Agreement are consummated, the
Sellers, for themselves and the Company, shall pay the Sellers’ and
the Company’s fees and expenses incurred in connection with the
negotiation, preparation and the consummation of all transactions
contemplated by this Agreement, including, without limitation, all
attorneys’, accountants’ and financing fees, and the Purchases like-
wise shall pay its own fees and expenses. In the event that the trans-
action contemplated by this Agreement does not close for any reason
(even as a result of a breach), the Seller shall not be entitled to have
the Professional Fees paid by Purchaser.
* * * * * * *
Section 10.3. Agreement is Entire Contract. This Agree-
ment and the other documents delivered pursuant hereto (including,
- 54 -
[*54] without limitation, the Schedules and Exhibits attached hereto)
constitute the entire contract between the parties hereto relating to the
subject matter hereof, and no party shall be liable or bound to the
other in any manner by any warranties, representations or covenants
except as specifically set forth herein and therein. The terms and
conditions of this Agreement shall inure to the benefit of and be
binding upon the respective heirs, legal representatives, successors
and assigns, of the parties here to, nothing in this Agreement, ex-
pressed or implied, is intended to confer upon any party, other than
the parties here to and their respective heirs, legal representatives,
successors and assigns, any rights, remedies, obligations or liabilities
under or by reason of this Agreement, except as expressly provided
herein.
Mr. Thrapp, who principally negotiated the terms in the SPRA of the
covenants, the representations, the warranties, and the indemnification obligations
of FFIA in the event of any breaches of any of those covenants, representations,
and warranties, believed that those obligations of FFIA were adequate for the
transactions to which FFIA, FFI, and the FFI stockholders agreed in the SPRA.
He held that belief even though FFIA was organized a few days before the closing
of the transactions in the SPRA and even though it had no assets at that time or
after that closing except for the stock of FFI.
On December 20, 2001, FFIA, FFI, the FFI stockholders, and Leagre
Chandler & Millard, LLP (Leagre), entered into an escrow agreement (SPRA
escrow agreement) in which Leagre was designated as escrow agent for the other
parties to that agreement and was to establish and maintain an escrow account
- 55 -
[*55] (Leagre escrow account). Under the terms of that agreement, an unnamed
investor agreed to provide certain funds as a “loan” to FFIA (Shapiro funds) that
FFIA was to use to acquire the stock of FFI that FFIA had agreed to purchase in
the SPRA. All the funds to be deposited under the terms of that escrow agreement
were to be deposited into the Leagre escrow account. The SPRA escrow agree-
ment provided in pertinent part:
This Escrow Agreement (the “Agreement”) is made and en-
tered into this 20th day of December 2001, by and between ffi corpo-
ration, an Indiana corporation (“ffi corporation”), FFI Acquisition,
LLC, an Indiana limited liability company (“FFI Acquisition”), Curtis
D. Fankhauser, Cynthia A. Fankhauser, and Thomas L. Weintraut, all
of which (sic) are Indiana residents and shareholders of ffi corpora-
tion (collectively, the “Shareholders”) and Leagre Chandler &
Millard LLP, as escrow agent (the “Escrow Agent”).
WITNESSETH
WHEREAS, the Shareholders and ffi corporation have entered
into a certain Share Purchase and Redemption Agreement [SPRA]
with FFI Acquisition, LLC, an Indiana limited liability company
(“FFI Acquisition”) dated December 20, 2001 (the “Share Purchase
Agreement”), whereby FFI Acquisition will purchase all of the
outstanding common shares of ffi corporation from the Shareholders
which are outstanding after the Redemption (as defined in the Share
Purchase Agreement) (the “Shares”) in consideration of approxi-
mately $530,766.15, as adjusted pursuant to the Share Purchase
Agreement (the “Share Purchase Price”);
WHEREAS, a certain investor related to FFI Acquisition (the
“Investor”) [Ms. Shapiro] has agreed to loan monies to FFI Acquisi-
tion to be used to fund the Share Purchase Price (the “Investor
- 56 -
[*56] Funds”), and the Escrow Agent has agreed to act as escrow agent
with respect to the Investor Funds in accordance with the terms and
conditions of that certain Escrow Agreement, attached hereto as
Exhibit A (the “Investor Escrow Agreement”); and
WHEREAS, ffi corporation has agreed to deposit certain
monies into escrow with the Escrow Agent to satisfy the terms and
conditions of the Investor Escrow Agreement and to facilitate the
closing under the Share Purchase Agreement.
NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the foregoing, the
mutual covenants of the parties set forth herein and the mutual bene-
fits to be derived herefrom, the parties, intending to be legally bound,
hereby agree as follows:
1. Delivery of Investor Funds into Escrow. The Investor
shall cause the Investor Funds to be delivered, by wire transfer, into
the Escrow Agent’s trust account (the “Escrow Account”) only after
ffi corporation deposits the remaining cash of ffi corporation into the
Escrow Account which is estimated to be $875,855.49 (the “ffi
funds”), and the Escrow Agent agrees to hold and disburse the Inves-
tor Funds and the ffi Funds in accordance with the terms and condi-
tions of this Agreement and the Investor Escrow Agreement.
2. Delivery of Shareholder Funds. At the Closing (as
defined in the Share Purchase Agreement), the Escrow Agent shall
deliver that portion of the Investor Funds to the Shareholders (in the
denominations set forth on the closing statement attached hereto as
Exhibit B (the “Closing Statement”) [Cash Reconciliation and Dis-
bursement Schedule of Escrow Funds by Leagre] required to satisfy
the Share Purchase Price in accordance with the terms and conditions
of the Share Purchase Agreement, provided all of the Shareholder’s
conditions precedent set forth in the Share Purchase Agreement have
been satisfied and the transaction has not been otherwise terminated.
3. Repayment of Investor Funds. At the Closing, the
Escrow Agent shall pay an amount equal to the Investor Funds to the
- 57 -
[*57] Investor, and shall pay the balance in the Escrow Account to FFI
Acquisition or its designee.
4. Delivery Upon Failure to Close. At anytime prior to the
execution of the Closing Statement by all of the Sellers, ffi corpora-
tion may instruct the Escrow Agent to return the ffi Funds to ffi
corporation or its designee, and upon receipt of such instructions, the
Escrow Agent shall cause the ffi Funds to be disbursed in accordance
with the instructions.
On December 20, 2001, FFIA, MidCoast, Ms. Shapiro, and Leagre entered
into an escrow agreement (Shapiro escrow agreement). According to the terms of
the Shapiro escrow agreement, to which the SPRA escrow agreement referred and
which was an attachment to the SPRA escrow agreement, Ms. Shapiro agreed to
provide $550,000 as a “loan” to FFIA (i.e., Shapiro funds). According to the
terms of the Shapiro escrow agreement, FFIA was to use the Shapiro funds to
acquire the stock of FFI that FFIA had agreed to purchase in the SPRA. All of the
funds to be deposited under the terms of the Shapiro escrow agreement were to be
deposited into the same Leagre escrow account into which all of the funds to be
deposited under the terms of the SPRA escrow agreement were to be deposited.
The Shapiro escrow agreement provided in pertinent part:
This Escrow Agreement (the “Agreement”) is made and en-
tered into this 20th day of December, 2001, by and between FFI
Acquisition, LLC, an Indiana limited liability company (“FFI Acqui-
sition”), MidCoast Credit Corp., a New York corporation (“MCC”),
MidCoast Acquisition Corp., a Florida corporation (“MAC”), Honora
- 58 -
[*58] Shapiro, a California resident and a shareholder of MidCoast Credit
Corp. (“Shapiro”), and Leagre, Chandler & Millard, LLP, as Escrow
Agent and counsel to FFI Acquisition, MCC and MAC (the “Escrow
Agent”), and Matthew Dollinger, Floyd Grossman and Jessica M.
Seidman, all as Attorney-in-Fact for Honora Shapiro (collectively the
“Dollinger Firm”).
WITNESSETH
WHEREAS, the shareholders of ffi Corporation, a[n] Indiana
Corporation (“ffi”), and FFI Acquisition have entered into a Share
Purchase Agreement dated as of December 20, 2001 (“Share Purchase
Agreement”), whereby FFI Acquisition intends to purchase all of the
issued and outstanding capital stock of ffi (the “Shares”) from Curtis
D. Fankhauser, Cynthia A. Fankhauser and Thomas L. Weintraut (the
“ffi Shareholders”) in consideration of the payment of the approxi-
mate sum of $550,000.00, as adjusted pursuant to the Share Purchase
Agreement (the “Share Purchase Price”);
WHEREAS, Shapiro has agreed to loan Five Hundred Fifty
Thousand and 00/100 ($550.000.00) Dollars to FFI Acquisition,
MCC and MAC to be used to fund the Share Purchase Price as re-
quired to be paid pursuant to the terms and conditions of the Share
Purchase Agreement (the “Shapiro Funds”), and Leagre, Chandler &
Millard, LLP has agreed to act as settlement agent for the transaction
and as Escrow Agent with respect to the Shapiro funds in accordance
with the terms and conditions of this Agreement.
NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the foregoing, the
mutual covenants of the parties set forth herein and the mutual
benefits to be derived here from, the parties, intending to be legally
bound, hereby agree as follows:
1. Delivery of Shapiro Funds Into Escrow. Shapiro shall
cause the Shapiro Funds to be delivered by wire transfer to the Es-
crow Agent’s trust account (the “Escrow Account”), and the Escrow
Agent agrees to hold and disburse the Shapiro Funds in accordance
- 59 -
[*59] with the terms and conditions of this Agreement. The Escrow Ac-
count is maintained in the name of “Leagre, Chandler & Millard--
Trust Account”, with Hunting National Bank, 201 N. Illinois Street,
Suite 1800, Indianapolis, Indiana 46204 (ABA No.; 044000024), with
an Account Number of 01400666470.
2. Appointment of Attorney-In-Fact. Shapiro hereby
appoints and designates Mathew Dollinger and/or Floyd G. Gross-
man, and/or Jessica M. Seidman, all residents of the State of New
York (“Dollinger Firm”) as her true and lawful attorney-in-fact to:
(i) execute and deliver, in Shapiro’s name, any and all documents,
notices and/or instruments, including, without limitation, checks
and/or drafts for the payment and/or distribution of the Shapiro Funds
as contemplated by this Agreement and the Share Purchase Agree-
ment, and (ii) do and preform all acts on her behalf which are neces-
sary to effect the transaction contemplated by this Agreement and the
Share Purchase Agreement, all with the same force and effect as
though Shapiro was personally present, and Shapiro also hereby
ratifies and confirms that Dollinger Firm shall do by virtue hereof.
The power of attorney granted hereunder shall become effective when
this Agreement is signed by Shapiro, and shall continue in effect for
thirty (30) days from the date of the execution of this Agreement.
3. Delivery of Shapiro Funds. At the Closing (as defined
in the Share Purchase Agreement), the Dollinger Firm, in their discre-
tion, shall authorize and direct the Escrow Agent, in writing, to
deliver the Shapiro funds to FFI Acquisition, MCC and MAC for
delivery to the ffi Shareholders in accordance with the terms and
conditions of the Share Purchase Agreement provided (i) all of the
conditions precedent set forth in the Share Purchase Agreement have
been satisfied to the satisfaction of the Dollinger Firm; (ii) the Trans-
action Settlement Statement has been executed and delivered into
escrow by the parties; and (iii) the Escrow Agent has possession in
escrow of sufficient funds from ffi, or other sources, and authority in
escrow to immediately initiate a wire transfer of the sum of
$550,000.00 to the account of Shapiro. The Escrow Agent shall issue
to the Dollinger Firm written notice via facsimile certifying and
- 60 -
[*60] attesting that (i) the Transaction Settlement Statement has been
executed and delivered by all parties and (ii) the Escrow Agent has in
its possession good funds in the amount of at least $550,000.00,
which have been provided by ffi into the Escrow Account, and that
upon written notice via facsimile from the Dollinger Firm, the Escrow
Agent will proceed to disburse moneys to the parties of the Share
Purchase Agreement in accordance with the Settlement Statement and
simultaneously initiate a wire transfer of the sum of $550,000.00 from
the Escrow Account to the Shapiro Account (as defined below).
Simultaneously with the foregoing written notice, Escrow Agent shall
provide the Dollinger Firm with a copy of the fully executed Settle-
ment Statement. Upon receipt of written authorization from the
Dollinger Firm to release the Shapiro Funds, Escrow Agent hereby
agrees to deliver the Shapiro Funds and the ffi Funds held in Escrow
Agent’s Account in accordance with the terms of this Agreement.
4. Repayment of Shapiro Funds. In connection with the
Closing of the transaction contemplated by the Share Purchase Agree-
ment, ffi and/or the ffi shareholders shall be directed to pay the entire
cash assets of ffi into the Escrow Account, and the Escrow Agent
agrees to hold and disburse an amount equal to the Shapiro Funds in
accordance with terms and conditions of this Agreement. After the
Cash Assets of ffi have been declared to be good funds in the Escrow
Account, the Dollinger Firm, shall, pursuant to paragraph 3 above,
authorize the Escrow Agent, in writing, to forward, by wire transfer,
an amount equal to the Shapiro Funds, without interest, to the follow-
ing: “HSBC Bank, One Old Country Road, Carle Place, New York
11514, BA No. 021-001088 for further credit to Honora Shapiro in
Account No. 020-478658” (the “Shapiro Account”). Simultaneously
with initiation of the wire transfer from the Escrow Account and/or
the payment of the Purchase Price to the ffi Shareholders, the Escrow
Agent shall enter an order with the financial institution where the
Escrow Account is maintained to deliver the sum of $550,000.00 to
the Shapiro Account.
- 61 -
[*61] On December 20, 2001, FFIA, FFI, and the FFI stockholders signed a
document titled “Cash Reconciliation and Disbursement Schedule of Escrow
Funds by Leagre” (cash reconciliation agreement), which also was an attachment
to the SPRA escrow agreement. The cash reconciliation agreement set forth
directions to Leagre, the escrow agent, regarding the manner in which it was to
disburse the respective funds that were to be deposited into the Leagre escrow
account pursuant to the SPRA escrow agreement and the Shapiro escrow agree-
ment. The cash reconciliation agreement showed that FFI, Ms. Shapiro, and Mid-
Coast were to make the following deposits into the Leagre escrow account:
Depositor Amount
FFI $875,855.49
Ms. Shapiro 550,000.00
MidCoast 20,000.00
Total 1,445,855.49
The cash reconciliation agreement instructed the escrow agent, Leagre, to
make the following disbursements from the Leagre escrow account to the
following persons:
- 62 -
[*62]
Distributee Amount
Ms. Shapiro $550,000.00
Mr. Fankhauser 360,920.98
Mr. Weintraut 116,768.55
Ms. Fankhauser 53,076.62
Ice Miller 20,000.00
FFI 345,089.34
Total 1,445,855.49
On December 20, 2001, Mr. Shapiro on behalf of MidCoast and Mr. Fank-
hauser on behalf of FFW signed the guarantee (SPRA guarantee) that section
7.3(g) of the SPRA required. The SPRA guarantee provided in pertinent part:
FOR GOOD AND VALUABLE CONSIDERATION, the
receipt and sufficiency of which are hereby acknowledged, and in
connection with the consummation of the transactions contemplated
in (i) that certain Share Purchase and Redemption Agreement by and
among FFI Acquisition, LLC, an Indiana limited liability company
(“Purchaser”), ffi corporation, an Indiana corporation (“FFI”) and
Curtis D. Fankhauser, Cynthia A. Fankhauser and Thomas Weintraut
(collectively, the “Sellers”) (the “Share Agreement”) and (ii) that
certain assignment by FFI to FFW Holdings, LLC, an Indiana limited
liability company (“Holdings”), immediately prior to and as part of
the transactions contemplated by the Share Agreement, of FFI’s right
to receive a refund of the estimated federal corporate income tax pay-
ments made by FFI for its 2001 tax year (the “Tax Refund”) in the
approximate amount of $636,000 (the “Assignment”), the under-
signed, MidCoast Credit Corp., a Florida corporation (the “Guaran-
tor”), guarantees the payment of the Tax Refund by FFI to Holdings
within five (5) business days of the receipt by FFI of the Tax Refund,
- 63 -
[*63] as required by the terms of the Assignment. Notwithstanding any
other provision of this Guaranty to the contrary, the Guarantor shall
have no liability under this Guaranty unless and until payment of the
Tax Refund is received by FFI. In no event shall FFI’s liability ex-
ceed the amount actually received by FFI with respect to such Tax
Refund. This Guaranty shall continue and be in full force and effect
until the Tax Refund is fully paid to Holdings. Guarantor under-
stands and acknowledges that the Sellers were induced to enter into
the Share Agreement in reliance upon this Guaranty.
* * * * * * *
In the event the payment of the Tax Refund by FFI to Holdings
is held to constitute a preference under any bankruptcy law, or if for
any other reason Holdings is required to refund such payment or pay
the amount thereof to any other party, or if for any reason Holdings is
required to pay, repay or refund to FFI or to any other party any value
received by Holdings from any source in payment of or on account of
the Tax Refund, such payment by FFI or value received by Holdings
shall not constitute a release of Guarantor from any liability under
this Guaranty, but Guarantor shall continue to be liable to the same
extent as if such payment had not been made or such value received,
and Guarantor agrees to pay such amount to Holdings upon demand
and this Guaranty shall continue to be effective or shall be reinstated,
as the case may be, to the extent of any such payment or value.
As agreed to and shown in the cash reconciliation agreement, on December
20, 2001, FFI, Ms. Shapiro,39 and MidCoast made the following deposits into the
Leagre escrow account:
39
Pursuant to paragraph 1 of the SPRA escrow agreement, Ms. Shapiro
made her deposit into the Leagre escrow account only after FFI had made its
deposit into that account.
- 64 -
[*64]
Depositor Amount
FFI $875,855.49
Ms. Shapiro 550,000.00
MidCoast 20,000.00
Total 1,445,855.49
Before the closing of the transactions (SPR transactions) to which the
parties to the SPRA agreed, Mr. Thrapp, one of petitioners’ attorneys, concluded
that as of that closing the Leagre escrow account contained the funds needed to
effect the closing of those transactions, which included the $550,000 that he (and,
as discussed below, Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser) knew
Ms. Shapiro was to deposit into the Leagre escrow account on the day of the
closing. Mr. Thrapp reached that conclusion even though he (and, as discussed
below, Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser) knew that that
$550,000 was to be returned to Ms. Shapiro as of that closing.40 Mr. Thrapp also
knew, and he advised FFI, Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser,
that if FFI were not solvent as of the closing of the transactions to which they and
FFIA (MidCoast’s designee) had agreed in the SPRA and/or if FFI’s funds, as
40
Because the closing of the transactions under the SPRA was to be effective
as of 11:59 p.m. on December 20, 2001, the $550,000 was in fact returned to Ms.
Shapiro by wire transfer on the day after the closing, which Mr. Thrapp (and, as
discussed below, Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser) knew.
- 65 -
[*65] opposed to so-called new money, were used in order to effect the acquisition
by FFIA of the stock of FFI from the FFI stockholders, those stockholders would
be subject to possible claims under the laws of the State of Indiana by the creditors
of FFI. That was because those stockholders, who were so-called insiders, would
have received the assets of FFI.
Each of the FFI stockholders, each of whom had signed the SPRA, the
SPRA escrow agreement to which the Shapiro escrow agreement was attached,
and the cash reconciliation agreement which also was attached to the SPRA
escrow agreement, knew, as did Mr. Thrapp, that the so-called loan of $550,000
that Ms. Shapiro had deposited into the Leagre escrow account on December 20,
2001, before the closing of the transactions under the SPRA but only after FFI had
made its required deposit into that Leagre escrow account, was not evidenced by a
promissory note or other written document and did not bear interest. The FFI
stockholders, as well as Mr. Thrapp, also knew that that purported loan by Ms.
Shapiro was to be deemed repaid as of the closing of the transactions under the
SPRA, which was deemed to occur simultaneously pursuant to that agreement.41
41
Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser also knew, as did Mr.
Thrapp, that although they were deemed to receive as of the closing of the trans-
actions their respective proportionate portions of the purchase price for the
transfer of their FFI stock to FFIA, the wire transfers to their respective bank
(continued...)
- 66 -
[*66] Moreover, each of them knew, as did Mr. Thrapp, that pursuant to the SPRA
and the related agreements (i.e., the SPRA escrow agreement, the Shapiro escrow
agreement, and the cash reconciliation agreement) FFI was to deposit $875,855.49
into the Leagre escrow account as of the closing of the transactions under the
SPRA at 11:59 p.m. on December 20, 2001, and that FFI as FFIA’s designee was
to receive only $345,089.34 from that escrow account as of the closing of those
transactions.42 Each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser also
knew, as did Mr. Thrapp, that the difference between the amount that FFI was to
deposit into the Leagre escrow account (i.e., $875,855.49) and the amount that FFI
as FFIA’s designee was to receive from that escrow account (i.e., $345,089.34)
was equal to $530,766.15. Each of the FFI stockholders knew, as did Mr. Thrapp,
that that difference was equal to the amount of the purchase price that they were to
receive for their FFI stock under the SPRA from, according to the terms of that
agreement, FFIA.
41
(...continued)
accounts of those proportionate portions were not to occur until the day after the
closing of those transactions.
42
As was true of the respective wire transfers to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Wein-
traut, Ms. Fankhauser, and Ms. Shapiro, FFI received a wire transfer on the day
after the closing.
- 67 -
[*67] In addition, each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser
understood, as did Mr. Thrapp, that MidCoast through FFIA was purporting to
purchase FFI stock from them in order to acquire FFI so that MidCoast would be
able to use FFI’s cash in order to buy charged-off debt securities that MidCoast
intended to use in its so-called asset recovery business. However, each of the FFI
stockholders knew, as did Mr. Thrapp, that MidCoast through FFIA agreed in the
SPRA to pay them $530,766.15 in cash for their FFI stock and that as of the
closing of the SPR transactions FFI (FFIA’s designee) was to receive only
$502,789.34 (i.e., cash of $345,089.34 and the right to a refund of the FFI State
2001 income tax payments of $157,700). In other words, each of Mr. Fankhauser,
Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser knew, as did Mr. Thrapp, that MidCoast
through FFIA agreed in the SPRA to pay $530,766.15 in cash in return for only
$502,789.34, which MidCoast purportedly would use in the asset recovery
business that it was to operate in FFI.
Moreover, each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser
knew, as did Mr. Thrapp, or should have known, as Mr. Thrapp should have
known, that Ms. Shapiro’s so-called loan of $550,000 to FFIA was not needed or
used in order to effect the purchase of the FFI stock under the SPRA and that that
so-called loan was mere window dressing designed to make it appear that FFIA,
- 68 -
[*68] not FFI, was providing the funds to be paid to them for the transfer of their
FFI stock to FFIA. In other words, each of the FFI stockholders knew, as did Mr.
Thrapp, or should have known, as Mr. Thrapp should have known, that Ms. Sha-
piro’s so-called loan of $550,000 to FFIA was devoid of any economic substance--
a sham that was designed and intended to make it appear as though FFIA, not FFI,
was providing the funds to be paid to the FFI stockholders for the transfer of their
FFI stock to FFIA. Moreover, each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms.
Fankhauser knew, as did Mr. Thrapp, or should have known, as Mr. Thrapp should
have known, that the source of the funds that they were to receive for the transfer
of their FFI stock to FFIA was FFI, not FFIA. That is to say, each of the FFI
stockholders, as well as Mr. Thrapp, knew, or should have known, that FFI, not
FFIA, was to, and did, pay each of those stockholders each such stockholder’s
proportionate portion of the so-called purchase price (i.e., $530,766.15) that each
was to, and did, receive under the SPRA.
As of the closing of the transactions under the SPRA on December 20,
2001, FFI had no operations, no employees engaged in operations, no income, no
- 69 -
[*69] operational assets, and no liabilities except FFI’s total anticipated 2001 tax
liability of $1,026,100.69.43
On December 20, 2001, in accordance with the terms of the SPRA, the
followings transactions to which the parties agreed in the SPRA closed effective
as of 11:59 p.m. on that date: (1) FFI distributed all of its membership interests in
FFW to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser and received from
them 75 percent of the outstanding stock of FFI (SPR redemption transaction),44
and (2) Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser transferred to FFIA
the remaining 25 percent of the outstanding stock of FFI that they owned and
received $530,766.15 (SPR sale transaction).45 As required by section 7.1 of the
SPRA, the SPR transactions were deemed to occur simultaneously.
On December 20, 2001, Mr. Fankhauser and Mr. Weintraut resigned as
officers, directors, and employees of FFI, as required by the SPRA. After their
resignations, Mr. Weintraut and Mr. Fankhauser had no further involvement in any
43
See supra note 34.
44
Upon FFI’s distribution to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fank-
hauser of all of the membership interests in FFW, they owned 68 percent, 22 per-
cent, and 10 percent, respectively, of FFW’s membership interests.
45
The respective portions of the $530,766.15 that Mr. Fankhauser, Mr.
Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser received are set forth below.
- 70 -
[*70] operations or any management of FFI.46 Nonetheless, as discussed below,
Mr. Weintraut, at Mr. Thrapp’s request, prepared and sent to MidCoast on
December 31, 2001, completed appropriate IRS forms requesting a refund of the
FFI Federal 2001 income tax payments.
At all relevant times after the closing of the transactions under the SPRA on
December 20, 2001, each of the following individuals was a director and/or an
officer of FFI:
Name Position
Mr. Bernstein Director and president
Ms. Sesco Treasurer and assistant secretary
Ms. Parra Secretary
Mr. Shapiro Director and executive vice president
On December 21, 2001, Leagre, as the escrow agent of the SPRA escrow
agreement and the Shapiro escrow agreement and pursuant to the cash reconcilia-
tion agreement, made the following distributions from the Leagre escrow account
to the persons indicated:
46
Ms. Fankhauser was not at any time involved in the operations or the
management of FFI.
- 71 -
[*71]
Distributee Amount
Ms. Shapiro $550,000.00
Mr. Fankhauser 360,920.98
Mr. Weintraut 116,768.55
Ms. Fankhauser 53,076.62
Ice Miller 20,000.00
FFI1 345,089.34
Total 1,445,855.49
1
The funds distributed to FFI were wired into a new account in FFI’s name
at SunTrust Bank (FFI’s SunTrust Bank account) that FFIA and Mr. Bernstein
controlled.
On December 21, 2001, Mr. Bernstein on behalf of MidCoast and FFIA and
in his individual capacity signed an agreement between those two entities and
himself. That agreement provided in pertinent part:
Notwithstanding the ownership of FFI Acquisition, LLC,
MidCoast Credit Corp. is the financial beneficiary of the ffi Corpora-
tion transaction and ownership of ffi Corporation. MidCoast Credit
Corp. shall receive all of the economic benefits of the limited liability
entity.
Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser were not aware of the
above-described agreement until respondent gave them a copy of it in anticipation
of the trial in these cases.
- 72 -
[*72] On December 20, 2001, after the SPR transactions closed simultaneously at
11:59 p.m., FFI did not have any business operations and did not commence any
asset recovery business operations or any asset receivable collection business
operations. At no time after the closing of the SPR transactions did FFI have any
business operations, including any asset recovery business operations or any asset
receivable collection business operations.
On December 20, 2001, after the SPR transactions closed simultaneously at
11:59 p.m., FFI had (1) assets totaling $502,789.34, which consisted of cash of
$345,089.34 and the right to a refund of $157,700 of State 2001 income tax pay-
ments, and (2) an anticipated Federal and State 2001 income tax liability and an
anticipated State income tax liability totaling $1,026,100.69, or a negative net
asset value of $523,311.35.47
On December 21, 2001, FFIA and Willow Holdings, LLC (Willow Hold-
ings), agreed to form FFI Financial, LLC (FFI Financial), and did so on December
24, 2001. Willow Holdings’ sole member was Willow Investment Trust, whose
trustee was Walter E. Schmidt (Mr. Schmidt).
47
See supra note 28 regarding FFI’s bank account balance of $11,955.46,
FFI’s outstanding checks of $11,955.46, and the Prudential demutualization funds
receivable of $43,926.57.
- 73 -
[*73] On December 26, 2001, Mr. Bernstein had $340,000 wired from FFI’s
SunTrust Bank account to a MidCoast account at the Bank of New York.
On a date not established by the record between December 24 and 31, 2001,
FFI Financial and FFI entered into an agreement under which FFI Financial agreed
to, and did, contribute U.S. Treasury bills (T-bills) to FFI, which Willow Holdings
had contributed to it, which had a value of $8,000, and which Willow Holdings
had represented to FFI Financial had a tax basis of $2,962,960. (We shall refer to
the transactions to which FFI Financial and FFI agreed concerning the T-bills as
the T-bill transaction.)
MidCoast, FFI Financial, and FFI received from Manatt, Phelps & Phillips,
LLP (Manatt), a Federal income tax opinion letter dated December 28, 2001
(Manatt opinion letter) regarding the T-bill transaction, for which MidCoast paid
Manatt $10,000. The Manatt opinion letter was based on certain representations
that FFI Financial, FFI, and Willow Holdings were to provide in a letter (represen-
tations letter) to be sent to Manatt (discussed below). The opinion letter stated in
pertinent part:
In accordance with your request, we provide the following
analysis and opinions relating to certain federal income tax conse-
quences of the transaction (the “Contribution”) whereby FFI Finan-
cial, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company (“Parent”), contrib-
uted eight Treasury Bills in the amount of $8,000 and having a
- 74 -
[*74] stated tax basis of $2,962,960 as of the date of Contribution (the
“Assets”) to FFI Corporation, an Indiana corporation (“Subsidiary”).
At the time of the Contribution, Parent owned all of the issued
and outstanding shares of Subsidiary. Subsidiary did not issue any
shares of its stock to Parent as a result of the Contribution because
(according to Parent) issuance of such shares in exchange for the
Assets would have been meaningless (due to the existing ownership
by Parent of 100% of Subsidiary).
For purposes of our opinion, we have examined the following
documents:
1. Letter regarding ownership allocation for FFI Financial,
LLC, dated December 21, 2001[.]
2. Certificate of Formation of FFI Financial, LLC, filed
with the Secretary of State of Delaware dated December 21, 2001.
3. Limited Liability Company Agreement of FFI Financial,
LLC, dated as of December 24, 2001.
4. Unanimous Written Consent of the Sole Member of
Willow Holdings, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company,
concerning FFI Financial, LLC, dated December 24, 2001.
5. Unanimous Written Consent of the Sole Member of FFI
Acquisition, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, concerning
FFI Financial, LLC, dated December 24, 2001.
6. Unanimous Written Consent of the Members of FFI
Financial, LLC, authorizing the Contribution, dated December 26,
2001.
7. Unanimous Written Consent of the Directors of FFI
Corporation authorizing the Contribution dated December 26, 2001.
- 75 -
[*75] 8. Contribution and Assumption Agreement by and
between FFI Financial, LLC, and FFI Corporation, dated December
26, 2001.
Our understanding of the facts related to this opinion letter is
derived in part from our review of copies of the documents listed
above. We have assumed, without independent investigation, that
(a) such copies constitute true, accurate and complete copies of the
originals of such documents; (b) such documents reflect the valid and
binding obligations of the respective parties thereto and are enforce-
able in accordance with their terms; (c) such documents reflect the
entire agreement among the respective parties thereto with respect to
the subject matters thereof; and (d) the transactions that are the
subject of such documents were carried out in accordance with the
terms of such documents. If there were, are or will be material trans-
actions in connection with the Contribution that are not described in
the documents listed above or in your representation letter to us
referred to below, or are not carried out as described therein, our
opinions could be adversely affected.
We have also relied for purposes of this letter on facts set forth
in a representation letter from Parent and Subsidiary to us of even
date herewith. Among the representations in that letter is the repre-
sentation that, for federal income tax purposes, Parent’s tax basis for
the Treasury Bills that Parent contributed to Subsidiary was
$2,962,960 immediately before the Contribution. We have assumed,
without independent investigation, the accuracy and completeness of
all such representations. If such representations at any time are not
true, correct and complete, our opinions could be adversely affected.
The Internal Revenue Service takes the position that genuine
non-tax business purposes must be present in the case of an asset
contribution in order for a transaction to meet the requirements of
Section 351 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the
“Code”). Both Parent and Subsidiary have represented that they have
substantial non-tax business reasons for engaging in the Contribution
and that they entered into the Contribution principally with a view
- 76 -
[*76] towards making an economic profit apart from tax consequences.
According to Parent and Subsidiary, their non-tax business purposes
were as follows: The contributed assets will strengthen the balance
sheet of Subsidiary in preparation for Subsidiary entering into a new
line of business. Subsidiary also will use pre-Contribution assets in
its new business. The new business is that Subsidiary will purchase
portfolios of credit card receivables and collect those receivables.
Subsidiary’s anticipated cumulative internal rate of return from
realization of the receivables, assuming reinvestment of the proceeds
of receivables collection, according to a pro forma cash flow state-
ment prepared by MidCoast Credit Corp. for Subsidiary, on a dis-
counted present value basis (using a 6% discount factor), is 312.41%
over 10 years. Subsidiary will also enter into a collection and man-
agement agreement with MidCoast Credit Corp. in pursuance of this
business.
Any change or inaccuracy in the facts set forth in the docu-
ments specified above or in the above-referenced representations
letter could adversely affect our opinions. We have undertaken no
obligation to monitor subsequent developments after the Contribution
or to analyze them as they may affect the opinions set forth in this
letter.
In rendering these opinions, we have examined such available
documents, laws, regulations and other legal matters as we have
considered necessary or appropriate for purposes of the opinions
expressed herein. We have not made any independent investigation
in rendering these opinions other than as described herein. We have
not been requested to make any such independent investigation.
Our opinions are based upon the Code as of the date hereof, the
legislative history of the Code, currently applicable regulations
promulgated thereunder (including proposed regulations), published
administrative positions of the Internal Revenue Service in revenue
rulings and revenue procedures, and judicial decisions. Such legal
authorities are all subject to change, either prospectively or retroac-
tively. No assurance can be provided as to the effect of any such
- 77 -
[*77] change upon our opinions. We have undertaken no obligation to
update this letter.
The opinions set forth herein have no binding effect on the
Internal Revenue Service or the courts. No assurance can be given
that, if contested, a court would agree with the opinions set forth
herein. The opinions set forth herein represent rather our best legal
judgment as to the likely outcome of the issues addressed herein if
such issues were litigated and all appeals exhausted.
In the case of transactions such as the Contribution, many
federal, state and local income and other tax consequences arise.
We have been asked only to address the issues specifically set forth
below. No opinion is expressed regarding any other issue.
This letter is being issued solely for the benefit of FFI Corpora-
tion and for the benefit of FFI Financial, LLC, as the sole shareholder
of Subsidiary as of the date of the Contribution. It may not be relied
upon by any other person without our prior written consent.
Subject to the foregoing, it is our opinion that, more likely than not:
(a) The Contribution satisfied the requirements of Section 351 of
the Code.
(b) The tax basis for the Assets transferred from Parent to Sub-
sidiary in the Contribution was a carryover tax basis in
accordance with Section 362 of the Code.
(c) Based on the representations made to us in the above-
referenced representations letter from Parent and Subsidiary,
the carryover tax basis for Subsidiary was $2,962,960 for the
Treasury Bills Parent contributed to Subsidiary.
The representations letter dated December 28, 2001, which as of February
15, 2002, Mr. Schmidt had signed on behalf of Willow Holdings, but which Mr.
- 78 -
[*78] Bernstein had not signed on behalf of FFI Financial and FFI, stated in
pertinent part:48
FFI Financial, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
(“Parent”), and FFI Corporation, an Indiana corporation (“Subsid-
iary”), have requested your opinion regarding certain federal income
tax consequences of a transaction (the “Contribution”) whereby
Parent transferred eight Treasury Bills in the amount of $8,000,
having a stated value of $8,000 and having a stated tax basis of
$2,962,960 as of the date of the Contribution (the “Assets”) to Sub-
sidiary.
The undersigned officer of Parent and the undersigned officer
of Subsidiary have full power and authority to commit Parent and
Subsidiary, respectively, to the representations contained in this letter.
Willow Holdings, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company and a
member of Parent (“Willow Holdings”) also represents herein Par-
ent’s tax basis for the Assets immediately prior to the Contribution.
The officer of Willow Holdings signing below has full power and
authority to make such representation. Parent and Subsidiary under-
stand that the conclusions in your opinion letter are dependent in part
on the accuracy of this representations letter and that your opinion
could be adversely affected if this representations letter is not true,
complete and correct.
Parent and Subsidiary have seen a draft of your tax opinion
letter prior to issuance of this representations letter. That draft
opinion letter makes specific reference to certain listed documents.
Parent and Subsidiary understand that your opinion letter could be
adversely affected if there were material transactions in connection
with the Contribution that are not described in those listed documents
or in this representations letter, or were not carried out as described
therein and herein.
48
The record does not establish whether Mr. Bernstein ever signed the
representations letter.
- 79 -
[*79] Parent and Subsidiary have asked you to address solely the
federal income tax consequences of the Contribution that are specifi-
cally set forth in your draft tax opinion letter referred to above.
Parent and Subsidiary are aware that the Contribution may involve
many other tax issues and consequences under the Internal Revenue
Code of 1986, as amended (the “Code”), and other tax statutes.
However, Parent and Subsidiary have not asked you to consider or
render an opinion regarding such other tax issues.
For purposes of your tax opinion, Parent, Subsidiary and
Willow Holdings (as appropriate) represent to you, after due investi-
gation, as follows:
1. All factual statements in your draft tax opinion letter
concerning the Contribution are true, correct and complete.
2. Parent and Subsidiary took all proper actions to transfer
from Parent to Subsidiary beneficial ownership of the Assets. Parent
did not retain any beneficial ownership in the Assets it transferred to
subsidiary.
3. Both Parent and Subsidiary had substantial non-tax
business reasons for engaging in the Contribution. Both Parent and
Subsidiary entered into the Contribution principally with a view
toward making an economic profit apart from tax consequences. The
Contribution will strengthen the balance sheet of Subsidiary in prepa-
ration for Subsidiary entering into a new line of business. Subsidiary
also will use pre-Contribution assets in its new business. The new
business is that Subsidiary will purchase portfolios of credit card
receivables and collect those receivables. Subsidiary’s anticipated
cumulative internal rate of return from realization of the receivables,
assuming reinvestment of the proceeds of receivables collection,
according to a pro forma cash flow statement prepared by MidCoast
Credit Corp. for Subsidiary, on a discounted present value basis
(using a 6% discount factor), is 312.41% over 10 years. Subsidiary
will also enter into a collection and management agreement with
MidCoast Credit Corp. in pursuance of this business.
- 80 -
[*80] 4. Parent and Subsidiary have treated and will treat the
Contribution in a manner that is consistent with its form.
5. At the time of the Contribution and thereafter, Parent
owned 100% of the issued and outstanding shares of Subsidiary. Due
to its ownership of all of the Subsidiary stock, issuance of more Sub-
sidiary shares to Parent in connection with the Contribution would
have been meaningless. For this reason, Subsidiary did not issue
shares to Parent as a result of the Contribution. The members of
Parent formed Parent and made their contributions of assets to Parent
principally for substantial business purposes. These reasons included
strengthening the capitalization of Parent so that Parent could act as a
holding company for Subsidiary and have the flexibility to engage in
future business opportunities in a holding company structure.
6. No stock or securities were or will be issued by Subsid-
iary for services rendered to or for the benefit of Subsidiary in con-
nection with the Contribution. No stock or securities were or will be
issued by Subsidiary for indebtedness of Subsidiary that is not evi-
denced by a security or for interest on indebtedness of Subsidiary
which accrued on or after the beginning of the holding period of
Parent for the debt.
7. Parent neither accumulated receivables nor made any
extraordinary payment of payables in anticipation of the Contribution.
Subsidiary has report and will reported items which, but for the Con-
tribution, would have resulted in income or deduction to Parent in a
period subsequent to the Contribution and such items have and will
constitute income or deductions to Subsidiary when received or paid
by Subsidiary.
8. The Contribution was not the result of solicitation by a
promoter, broker or investment house.
9. Subsidiary did not take the Assets subject to any debt
and did not assume any debt of Parent in connection with the Contri-
bution.
- 81 -
[*81] 10. There was no indebtedness between Subsidiary and
Parent and there was no indebtedness created in favor of Parent as a
result of the Contribution.
11. The Contribution occurred under a plan agreed upon
before the Contribution in which the rights of the parties were de-
fined.
12. There was no plan or intention on the part of Subsidiary
to redeem or otherwise reacquire any Subsidiary stock held by Parent.
13. Taking into account any issuance of additional shares of
Subsidiary stock, any issuance of stock for services, the exercise of
any Subsidiary stock rights, warrants or subscriptions, any public
offering of Subsidiary stock and the sale, exchange, transfer by gift,
or other disposition of any of the stock of Subsidiary held by Parent,
Parent was the sole shareholder and in “control” of Subsidiary within
the meaning of Section 368(c) of the Code at the time of the Contri-
bution. At the time of the Contribution, Parent was not under a bind-
ing obligation, and had no plan or intention, to dispose of any portion
of its stock in Subsidiary following the Contribution.
14. Subsidiary and Parent each paid their own expenses
increased in connection with the Contribution.
15. At the time of the Contribution, Subsidiary was not an
“investment company” within the meaning Section 351(e) of the
Code.
16. Willow Holdings, a member of Parent, represents that,
for federal income tax purposes, Parent’s tax basis for the Treasury
Bills that Parent contributed to Subsidiary was $2,962,960 immedi-
ately before the Contribution.
17. You may rely on the accuracy of the representations
herein for purposes of your tax opinion letter without further inquiry
or independent investigation.
- 82 -
[*82] 18. Parent and Subsidiary hereby consent to your reference
to this representations letter in your tax opinion letter.
19. The undersigned have undertaken such investigation as
the undersigned deemed necessary to ensure the accuracy of the
foregoing representations.
On a date not established by the record between December 20 and 31, 2001,
Mr. Thrapp asked Mr. Weintraut to prepare Form 4466, Corporation Application
for Quick Refund of Overpayment of Estimated Tax (Form 4466). On December
31, 2001, Mr. Weintraut mailed to MidCoast a completed, but unsigned,49 Form
4466, Corporation Application for Form 4466, for FFI (FFI’s Form 4466). That
form showed “total tax from Form 1120” of zero and an “[o]verpayment of
estimated tax” of “$628,592.00”. On January 4, 2002, FFI’s Form 4466, which
Mr. Bernstein had signed on behalf of FFI, was mailed to the IRS. At a time not
established by the record, Ms. Sesco sent a note to Mr. Weintraut informing him
that FFI’s Form 4466 had been sent to the IRS. On January 17, 2002, the U.S.
Department of the Treasury issued a check for $628,592 to FFI with respect to its
taxable year 2001, which FFI endorsed to FFW.
49
Mr. Weintraut did not sign FFI’s Form 4466 on behalf of FFI because
following his resignation on December 20, 2001, he was no longer an officer or a
director of FFI.
- 83 -
[*83] On January 14, 2002, Form 966 that Ms. Sesco had signed on behalf of FFI
was mailed to the IRS. In that form, FFI indicated that it no longer intended to
liquidate as it had indicated in Form 966 that it had submitted to the IRS on
October 19, 2001.
In January 2002, FFI received from the State of Indiana three checks total-
ing $5,756.56 that constituted refunds by that State of certain retail sales tax (retail
sales tax refunds). FFI estimated the respective Federal and State income tax
liabilities on those refunds, deducted 51 percent of those estimated total liabilities
from the $5,756.56 of retail sales tax refunds that it had received, and sent the
balance (i.e. $4,608.26), to FFW.50
Tax Returns
Mr. Weintraut timely filed Form 1040, U.S. Individual Income Tax Return
(Form 1040), for his taxable year 2001. Mr. Fankhauser and Ms. Fankhauser filed
jointly Form 1040 for their taxable year 2001. In those respective forms, Mr.
50
No one associated with FFI or with MidCoast was aware of the retail sales
tax refunds totaling $5,756.56 at the time MidCoast proposed the transactions in
the letter of intent and at the time of the closing of the transactions under the
SPRA. As a result, those refunds had no effect on the share purchase price
calculated in the December 18, 2001 balance sheet (discussed above). Conse-
quently, for convenience, we shall not refer, except infrequently, to the State retail
sales tax refunds as an asset of FFI when we discuss the transactions and the
events that are relevant to the issues presented here.
- 84 -
[*84] Weintraut and Mr. Fankhauser and Ms. Fankhauser reported the gain that
each had realized on December 20, 2001, as a result of the SPR transactions under
the SPRA. Mr. Weintraut and Mr. Fankhauser and Ms. Fankhauser timely paid
their respective Federal income taxes on those respective gains.
On May 13, 2002, the IRS granted FFI an extension of time until September
15, 2002, within which to file Form 1120, U.S. Corporation Income Tax Return
(Form 1120), for its taxable year 2001 (2001 tax return). On September 18, 2002,
respondent received FFI’s 2001 tax return.
In Schedule D, Capital Gains and Losses (2001 Schedule D), attached to
FFI’s 2001 tax return FFI reported a “[s]ale price” of “$655,776”, “[c]ost or other
basis” of “$661,527”, and long-term capital loss of “$5,751” with respect to a
“SALE OF SECURITIES” on January 2, 2001. In the 2001 Schedule D, FFI
reported a “[s]ale price” of “$8,196”, “[c]ost or other basis” of “$2,962,960”, and
long-term capital loss of “$2,954,764” with respect to a sale of T-Bills on Decem-
ber 27, 2001. (We shall refer collectively to the long-term capital losses totaling
$2,960,515 that FFI claimed in the 2001 Schedule D as the claimed 2001 Schedule
D losses.)
In Form 4797, Sales of Business Property, attached to its 2001 tax return,
FFI reported a net gain $1,478,038 (gain from the sale of business property) from
- 85 -
[*85] a “Sales or Exchanges of Property Used in a Trade or Business and In-
voluntary Conversions from Other Than Casualty or Theft”. FFI reduced the gain
from the sale of business property by the claimed 2001 Schedule D losses of
$2,960,515. As a result, FFI reported a net long-term capital loss in the 2001
Schedule D of $1,482,477. Of the portion of that capital loss that was used to
offset the $1,478,038 of gain from the sale of business property, all except $5,751
(i.e., $1,472,287) was attributable to the T-bill transactions (T-bill claimed loss).
FFI also claimed in its 2001 tax return deductions of (1) $771,260 for “legal
and professional” expenses, (2) $35,000 for a “management fee”, and (3) $225 for
a rent expense. After taking into account those three claimed deductions and
certain other deductions in its 2001 return, FFI reported in its 2001 tax return
“[t]axable income” of “$1,007,345”, “[t]otal tax” of “$143,003”, and “tax due” of
“$143,003”. FFI did not pay any part of the tax shown due in its 2001 tax return
when it filed that return. FFI filed Form 1138, Extension of Time for Payment of
Taxes by a Corporation Expecting a Net Operating Loss Carryback, dated March
3, 2002, in which it indicated that it expected a net operating loss for its taxable
year 2002 that would exceed the amount of its taxable income for its taxable year
2001.
- 86 -
[*86] On September 22, 2003, the IRS received FFI’s Form 1120 for its taxable
year 2002 (2002 tax return). In its 2002 tax return, FFI reported negative “[t]ax-
able income” and a net operating loss of $902,722 (2002 NOL). Of the 2002 NOL
of $902,722, FFI carried back (1) $31,048 to its taxable year 1997 and
(2) $871,674 to its taxable year 2001.
On September 23, 2004, the IRS received FFI’s Form 1120 for its taxable
year 2003 (2003 tax return). In its 2003 tax return, FFI reported negative “[t]ax-
able income” and a net operating loss of $14,550 (2003 NOL). FFI carried back
all of the 2003 NOL of $14,550 to its taxable year 2001.
IRS Examination With Respect to FFI and Petitioners
Around July 22, 2005, respondent began an examination of FFI’s taxable
year 2001. Around December 2, 2005, respondent began an examination of FFI’s
taxable year 2002 from which $871,674 of its claimed 2002 NOL of $902,722 had
been carried back to its taxable year 2001. Around July 31, 2008, respondent be-
gan an examination of FFI’s taxable year 2003 from which all of its claimed 2003
NOL of $14,550 had been carried back to its taxable year 2001. FFI was repre-
sented by counsel throughout the IRS’ examination of its taxable years 2001,
2002, and 2003 and the resolution of that examination (discussed below).
- 87 -
[*87] During the period that started in 2005 and ended in 2008, Mr. Bernstein,
who was then president of FFI, executed on behalf of FFI several Forms 872-I,
Consent to Extend the Time to Assess Tax As Well As Tax Attributable to Items
of a Partnership, in which FFI consented to the extension to various dates of the
period of assessment of FFI’s Federal income tax for its taxable years 2001. The
last of those forms that Mr. Bernstein executed around the end of July 2008 ex-
tended the time for assessment of that tax to December 31, 2009.
Around October 27, 2006, respondent assigned the same revenue agent who
was examining FFI’s taxable years 2001 and 2002 to begin a transferee liability
examination with respect to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser
as the stockholders of FFI before the closing of the transactions under the SPRA
on December 20, 2001. Since the IRS’ examination of FFI’s taxable years 2001
and 2002 was still ongoing and respondent had not yet initiated an examination of
FFI’s taxable year 2003 from which FFI had carried a loss back to its taxable year
2001, that transferee liability examination remained inactive until the IRS had
completed its examination of FFI’s taxable years 2001, 2002, and 2003 and had
undertaken collection efforts relating to the respective tax liabilities for those
years with which, as discussed below, FFI agreed.
- 88 -
[*88] On May 31, 2008, the IRS opened a collection file with respect to any un-
paid Federal tax liabilities of FFI and assigned the matter to one of its revenue
officers.
On March 4, 2009, Mr. Bernstein executed on behalf of FFI Form 906,
Closing Agreement (FFI closing agreement), in which FFI and respondent agreed
to certain adjustments to FFI’s Federal income tax for certain of its taxable years,
including its taxable years 2001, 2002, and 2003. Pursuant to the FFI closing
agreement, FFI consented to respondent’s (1) allowance for its taxable year 2001
of a T-bill loss of $147,229, which was only 10 percent of the total T-bill claimed
loss of $1,472,287, (2) disallowance for its taxable year 2001 of (a) rent expenses
of $225, (b) professional expenses of $350,000, (c) management fee expenses of
$35,000, and (d) legal and professional expenses of $10,000, (3) disallowance for
its taxable year 2002 of the 2002 NOL of $902,722, and (4) disallowance for its
taxable year 2003 of the 2003 NOL of $5,813. In the FFI closing agreement, FFI
also consented to the imposition of an accuracy-related penalty under section
6662(a) for its taxable year 2001 that was to be calculated by multiplying one-half
of the 20 percent imposed by that section (or 10 percent) by the amount of the
underpayment for that taxable year that was attributable to respondent’s dis-
- 89 -
[*89] allowance of FFI’s claimed deductions of (1) professional fee expenses of
$350,000, (2) management fee expenses of $35,000, and (3) $650,961 of the 2002
NOL of $902,722, $871,674 of which FFI had carried back to its taxable year
2001. As a result, FFI agreed in the FFI closing agreement to an accuracy-related
penalty under section 6662(a) of $15,126. In addition, FFI consented in the FFI
closing agreement to an accuracy-related penalty under section 6662(a) and (h) for
its taxable year 2001 that was to be calculated by multiplying one-half of the 40
percent imposed by section 6662(h) (or 20 percent) by the amount of the under-
payment for that taxable year that was attributable to respondent’s disallowance of
90 percent (i.e., $1,325,058) of the total claimed T-bill loss of $1,472,287. As a
result, FFI agreed in the FFI closing agreement to an accuracy-related penalty
under section 6662(a) and (h) of $70,356.
On January 15, 2009,51 Mr. Bernstein executed on behalf of FFI Form 4549,
Income Tax Examination Changes (Form 4549), in which FFI consented to the
assessment for, inter alia, its taxable year 2001 of a deficiency in tax of $622,265
51
The parties stipulated that it was on March 15, 2009, that Mr. Bernstein
executed on behalf of FFI Form 4549. That stipulation is clearly contrary to the
facts that we have found are established by the record, and we shall disregard it.
See Cal-Maine Foods, Inc. v. Commissioner, 93 T.C. 181, 195 (1989). The record
establishes, and we have found, from our review of Form 4549, which Mr. Bern-
stein executed and which is part of the record, that he signed that form on January
15, 2009.
- 90 -
[*90] and an accuracy-related penalty under section 6662 totaling $85,482
(collectively, FFI’s unpaid 2001 tax liability).
On June 2, 2009, Mr. Bernstein completed on behalf of FFI Form 433-B,
Collection Information Statement for Businesses (Form 433-B). Form 433-B is a
statement that the IRS requests a taxpayer that operates a business to complete and
that shows the business’s income, expenses, assets, liabilities, and certain other
financial information.52
As part of the revenue officer’s attempt to collect FFI’s unpaid 2001 tax
liability, he performed certain searches for any assets belonging to FFI, but he did
not find any such assets.
On June 2, 2009, respondent filed a notice of Federal tax lien in Marion
County, Indiana, with respect to FFI’s unpaid 2001 tax liability and interest there-
on as provided by law.
On January 13, 2010, respondent sent eight levies to certain banks and other
companies that might have held accounts in FFI’s name or that might have owed
FFI money.53 Those eight levies pertained, inter alia, to any assets of FFI that Mr.
52
Form 433-B that FFI submitted to the IRS is not part of the record, and
nothing in the record establishes the information that was set forth in that form.
53
The U.S. Postal Service returned to respondent a ninth levy that respon-
(continued...)
- 91 -
[*91] Bernstein had shown in FFI’s Form 433-B. Respondent recovered no funds
as a result of the eight levies.
On March 9, 2010, the revenue officer searched respondent’s database for
any income that had been reported as having been paid to FFI. The revenue
officer found no such income reported for any year after 2007.
On March 10, 2010, the revenue officer prepared, and on the next day his
manager signed, Form 53, Report of Currently Not Collectible Taxes (Form 53),
with respect to what that form described as “Cur[rently] Not Collectible Assessed
Balance” totaling $1,144,684.03 for FFI’s taxable years 1997 (assessment of
$77,549.64), 2001 (assessment of $1,066,735.70), and 2007 (assessment of
$398.69). Form 53 showed that certain searches and sources had been checked on
March 9, 2010, in order to determine whether FFI had any assets or income.
On April 2, 2010, the revenue officer prepared a memorandum known as a
“Collectibility Determination Report”. (We shall sometimes refer to the IRS’
collectibility determination report as the CDR.) In the CDR, the revenue officer
discussed the assessments totaling $1,144,684.03 that the IRS had made against
FFI for its taxable years 1997 (assessment of $77,549.64), 2001 (assessment of
53
(...continued)
dent had sent because the addressee was no longer at the address that respondent
had used, and respondent was unable to find a better address.
- 92 -
[*92] $1,066,735.70), and 2007 (assessment of $398.69). In the CDR, the revenue
officer stated in pertinent part: “The assessed tax liabilities of FFI * * * have been
deemed to be currently not collectible * * *. In addition to this finding, FFI was
also deemed to be insolvent.” The revenue officer indicated in the CDR that on
October 26, 2009, certain searches relating to whether FFI owned motor vehicles,
aircraft, watercraft, or real property had been performed on the Accurint database,
which had information from public sources. Those searches disclosed that FFI
owned none of those items except the Elmwood Avenue property. However, a
subsequent review by the revenue officer of Accurint property assessment and
property deeds records revealed that that property had been sold on August 31,
2001. The CDR indicated that certain additional searches had been made to
determine whether FFI owned any assets or had any income, but those searches
disclosed no such assets or income. The revenue officer concluded the CDR with
the following statement: “All reasonable efforts and all required actions have been
taken to determine that the taxes cannot be collected from FFI”.
The revenue officer did not search the State of Indiana’s Web site for
unclaimed property or funds belonging to FFI. The IRS did not attempt to collect
FFI’s unpaid 2001 tax liability from any of the following individuals who was an
- 93 -
[*93] officer and/or director of FFI after the closing of the SPRA on December 20,
2001: Mr. Bernstein, Ms. Shapiro (or her estate), Mr. Shapiro, or Ms. Parra.
The revenue agent whom respondent assigned to conduct the transferee
liability examination with respect to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms.
Fankhauser found no evidence that FFI was active in the asset recovery business
after December 20, 2001.
In 2010, after the IRS had undertaken its collection efforts with respect to
FFI’s unpaid 2001 tax liability and concluded that that liability was currently not
collectible, the IRS reactivated its transferee liability examination with respect to
Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser. It was at that time that Mr.
Fankhauser first learned that FFI’s tax liability for its taxable year 2001 had not
been paid and was informed by the IRS that it was seeking to collect that unpaid
liability from, inter alia, him as a transferee of FFI.
On July 14, 2011, during a so-called fast track Appeals Office conference,
Mr. Fankhauser advised the Appeals Office representative at that conference that
Ms. Fankhauser had recently discovered that the State of Indiana was holding in
excess of $40,000 of unclaimed funds in the name of FFI. Those unclaimed funds
consisted of the Prudential demutualization funds of $43,926.57 that FFI had
never claimed. Thereafter, respondent levied on those funds.
- 94 -
[*94] On December 8, 2011, respondent timely issued respective notices of
liability to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser with respect to
FFI’s total liability for its taxable year 2001 of $694,519.43 (FFI’s 2001 tax
liability). FFI’s total liability consisted of a deficiency in tax of $609,037.43 and
an accuracy-related penalty under section 6662 totaling $85,482, as well as in-
terest thereon as provided by law.
Respondent denied in the respective answers in these cases that “the remain-
ing unpaid tax deficiency of FFI that is set forth in the Notice of Liability as the
amount of $609,037.43” is correct. In the answers, respondent alleged that that
“remaining unpaid tax deficiency * * * is actually $578,338.43, plus I.R.C. § 6662
penalty in the amount of $85,482.00, plus applicable interest.” Respondent’s
concession in the respective answers in these cases reflects that respondent
collected from the State of Indiana the Prudential demutualization funds of
$43,926.57 to which FFI had been entitled. In order to arrive at what respondent
alleges in the answers is “the remaining unpaid tax deficiency of FFI”, respondent
reduced the deficiency in tax of $622,265 for taxable year 2001 to which Mr.
Bernstein had consented on behalf of FFI in Form 4549 by the Prudential demu-
tualization funds of $43,926.57 to which FFI had been entitled. (We shall refer to
FFI’s revised unpaid 2001 deficiency in tax of $578,388.43 and FFI’s unpaid 2001
- 95 -
[*95] accuracy-related penalty of $85,482 as FFI’s unpaid 2001 deficiency
liability and FFI’s unpaid 2001 penalty liability, respectively.)
On March 14, 2013, the office of the Indiana secretary of state admin-
istratively dissolved FFIA. On April 12, 2013, that office administratively
dissolved FFI.
OPINION
Petitioners’ Motion in Limine
Petitioners filed a motion in limine (petitioners’ motion) to exclude the
purported expert report and the purported expert testimony set forth in the report
(purported expert report) of Scott Hakala (Mr. Hakala). After voir dire, we found
Mr. Hakala qualified as an expert in financial economics and financial analysis.
We took petitioners’ motion under advisement and admitted conditionally
into the record Mr. Hakala’s purported expert report and his other testimony at
trial pending our ruling on petitioners’ motion. In the purported expert report, Mr.
Hakala stated in pertinent part:
The purpose of this report is to assist the court in assessing
whether the purported stock sale by the Shareholders of FFI [Mr.
Weintraut, Mr. Fankhauser, and Ms. Fankhauser] to FFI Acquisition,
LLC, is in substance a distribution of cash by FFI to its Shareholders.
My report is being prepared in this regard for use as my direct testi-
mony in US Tax Court. No other use is implied or intended.
- 96 -
[*96] I have been requested by you [respondent], as part of our
assignment, to address four questions.
* * * * * * *
1) Did the shareholders/officers use appropriate due dili-
gence in investigating the potential purchaser prior to
entering into the transaction? No.
Given the structure of the Sale Purchase and Redemption
Agreement, it was highly likely (if not obvious) that the cash paid to
the selling Shareholders of FFI at closing would come from the cash
in the Company and the remainder of the consideration would be paid
in the form of receipt of an assignment of the prepaid federal income
taxes of FFI in 2001. This is confirmed in the closing documents,
particularly in Exhibit B: FFI Acquisition, L.L.C./ffi Corporation--
Cash Reconciliation & Disbursement Schedule of Escrow Funds by
Leagre Chandler & Millard L.L.P. * * *
It is customary for a seller to preform due diligence to ascertain
the source and uses of funds of the purchaser prior to a sale of mate-
rial assets or the company, determine the purchaser’s reputation and
financial resources, and to obtain certain assurances and guarantees
from the purchaser that the seller will not face potential future contin-
gent liabilities in connection with the sale. This is done both to:
(i) ensure that the purchaser has the financial capabilities and reputa-
tion to close the transaction and honor any outstanding guarantees;
and (ii) to ensure the solvency of the Company for sufficient time to
avoid a risk to the seller of payments and assets received by the seller
being regarded as preferential payments in the event of a finding of
insolvency at or near the date of the transaction. This is especially
important in potential “asset-stripping” acquisitions, such as this case,
where it is likely or possible that the buyer will use or distribute some
of the existing assets of the company acquired and, thus, potentially
render the company insolvent at the time of the acquisition. A seller
- 97 -
[*97] would want to be assured that sufficient resources would be retained
within FFI or set aside th[r]ough guarantees or pledges of collateral to
pay any future potential notice of deficiency amounts or taxes in dis-
pute that might arise as a result of federal or state tax audits. Absent
such assurances, there would be a risk that the payments to the selling
Shareholders of FFI would be regarded as preference payments in the
event of a determination of corporate insolvency. If FFI were found
to have been insolvent or rendered insolvent, the seller could be re-
quired to return to the corporate estate a portion of or all of the cash
and assets received as part of the transaction in order to satisfy the
claims of creditors with greater priority.
I found no evidence of due diligence by the Shareholders and
officers of FFI with respect to MidCoast Credit or the principals and
affiliates of MidCoast Credit in any of the materials produced to date.
By contrast, some evidence of such due diligence was observed in
materials produced by Ice Miller, LLP and in certain other materials
with respect to the sale of certain assets and business operations by
FFI to The GSI Group, Inc. effective January 2, 2001. Furthermore,
in their recorded interviews on August 7, 2007, it was clear that no
effort was made by the Shareholders of FFI to perform any such due
diligence on the purchaser of FFI. I similarly found no evidence of
significant due diligence in the materials produced by counsel (Ice
Miller, LLP) for the Shareholders and officers of FFI and FFI relating
to this transaction. The closing presented evidence * * * that the cash
portion of the purchase price of $530,766.15 was paid from the cash
balances of FFI. Additionally, no identified plan or transaction was
available to demonstrate the ability of FFI to avoid federal and state
income taxes as of December 20, 2001. Thus, the use of cash within
FFI to pay the Shareholders of FFI raised a number of issues regard-
ing the ongoing credit-worthiness and solvency of FFI in the future.
These issues would ordinarily be affirmatively addressed in this type
of transaction.
- 98 -
[*98] 2) Was it commercially reasonable for the Shareholders of
FFI to believe that, after the company had significant
capital gains from the liquidation of its assets, the in-
come tax liability on that gain could be avoided by the
sale of the company stock to another person or entity?
No.
I assume in this opinion certain understandings as to the limited
ability of a corporation with taxable income and capital gains to offset
prior taxable income and capital gains with subsequent losses and,
thus, to recover prior prepaid and paid taxes. That understanding is
obtained by research and prior experience with these issue in the
relevant time period. I offer no opinions as an expert on these issues
* * * * * * *
3) Was the stock sale commercially reasonable--did it have
a legitimate business purpose? No.
I assume in this opinion certain understandings with respect to
the limited ability of a corporation to offset prior capital gains with
subsequent losses and recover prior prepaid and paid taxes as set
forth in my answer to question 2. I offer no opinions as an expert on
these issues.
* * * * * * *
4) Did the terms of the Share Purchase and Redemption
Agreement result in the corporation’s [FFI’s] in-
solvency? Yes.
A post-closing estimated balance sheet for FFI is summarized
in Exhibit B-3. The closing documents show a net cash balance for
FFI of $345,089.34. With the assignment of the prepaid federal
- 99 -
[*99] corporate income taxes to the prior Shareholders of FFI, the only
other asset of FFI was $157,700 in prepaid state corporate income
taxes. As of December 20 and 21, 2001, FFI’s estimated total federal
corporate income taxes for fiscal 2001 were $794,949.13, and FFI’s
estimated state corporate income taxes for fiscal 2001 were
$231,151.56. That represents a total estimated liability of approxi-
mately $1,026,000 for FFI’s corporate income taxes in 2001. Net of
cash and prior state income tax deposits, the shareholders’ equity of
FFI was approximately negative $523,000 as of December 21, 2001.
Thus, FFI fails the balance sheet test for solvency. Additionally, with
no credible evidence of successful operations and ability to avoid
most of the federal and state corporate income taxes by legitimate and
undisputed means, the business fails the cash flow test and capital
adequacy tests.
In support of petitioners’ motion, petitioners argue that the purported expert
report of Mr. Hakala “(1) consists of legal conclusions, (2) contains advocacy, and
(3) is unreliable.”
Rule 702 of the Federal Rules of Evidence, which governs the admissibility
of expert testimony, provides:
A witness who is qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experi-
ence, training, or education may testify in the form of an opinion or
otherwise if:
(a) the expert’s scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge
will help the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in
issue;
(b) the testimony is based on sufficient facts or data;
- 100 -
[*100] (c) the testimony is the product of reliable principles and methods;
and
(d) the expert has reliably applied the principles and methods to
the facts of the case.
Testimony of a proffered expert that expresses a legal conclusion does not
assist the trier of fact and is not admissible. Alumax, Inc. v. Commissioner, 109
T.C. 133, 171 (1997), aff’d, 165 F.3d 822 (11th Cir. 1999); Hosp. Corp. of Am. v.
Commissioner, 109 T.C. 21, 59 (1997). An expert who is merely an advocate of a
party’s position does not assist the trier of fact in understanding the evidence or in
determining a fact in issue. Sunoco, Inc. & Subs. v. Commissioner, 118 T.C. 181,
183 (2002); Snap-Drape, Inc. v. Commissioner, 105 T.C. 16, 20 (1995), aff’d, 98
F.3d 194 (5th Cir. 1996). The determination of whether proffered expert
testimony is helpful to the trier of fact is a matter within our sound discretion. See
Laureys v. Commissioner, 92 T.C. 101, 127 (1989).
In support of their first argument that the purported expert report of Mr.
Hakala “consists of legal conclusions,” petitioners contend that Mr. Hakala’s
respective answers (quoted above) to the four questions in the purported expert
report that respondent asked him to address are conclusions that “are all the
product of legal analysis.” In determining whether we agree with that contention
- 101 -
[*101] of petitioners, we consider Mr. Hakala’s respective answers to those four
questions.
We turn to Mr. Hakala’s answer (quoted above) to the first question in the
purported expert report. The question of whether the due diligence efforts of Mr.
Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser and their attorneys with respect
to the SPR transactions were adequate is a question of fact that we shall consider
in determining what Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser knew or
should have known with respect to those transactions. We do not believe that Mr.
Hakala’s view regarding the adequacy of those due diligence efforts or his com-
parison of those efforts with what is “customary for a seller” in similar transac-
tions is the result or “the product of legal analysis.” We reject petitioners’ argu-
ment that Mr. Hakala’s answer to the first question “consists of legal conclusions”
and is the “product of legal analysis.”54
We turn next to Mr. Hakala’s respective answers (quoted above) to the
second question and the third question in the purported expert report. Mr.
Hakala’s answer to the second question regarding whether it was “commercially
54
We have considered, and also reject, each of petitioners’ two remaining
arguments that Mr. Hakala’s answer to the first question in the purported expert
report should be excluded from the record because those answers represent
“advocacy” and are “unreliable”.
- 102 -
[*102] reasonable” for Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser to
believe that MidCoast would be able to defer FFI’s 2001 anticipated tax liability
and his answer to the third question regarding whether there was a “legitimate
business purpose” for the purported sale of their stock in the SPR transactions
both depended on “certain understandings” that he had. Mr. Hakala described
those understandings in the purported expert report as “understandings as to the
limited ability of a corporation with taxable income and capital gains to offset
prior taxable income and capital gains with subsequent losses and, thus, recover
prior prepaid and paid taxes”. According to Mr. Hakala, “[t]hat understanding is
obtained by research and prior experience with these issues in the relevant time
period. I offer no opinions as an expert on these issues.” We agree with petition-
ers that Mr. Hakala’s respective answers to the second question and the third ques-
tion should be excluded because those answers depended on legal conclusions that
in turn depended on legal analysis.55
We consider finally Mr. Hakala’s answer (quoted above) to the fourth ques-
tion in the purported expert report. The question of whether the terms of the
55
Since we agree with petitioners’ first argument as to why we should
exclude from the record Mr. Hakala’s respective answers to the second question
and the third question in the purported expert report, we did not consider their
remaining two arguments as to why those respective answers should be excluded.
- 103 -
[*103] SPRA resulted in FFI’s insolvency required Mr. Hakala to compare FFI’s
assets and liabilities after the closing of the SPR transactions with its assets and
liabilities before the closing of those transactions. In making that comparison, Mr.
Hakala treated the repayment of the Shaprio funds and the payment of the pur-
chase price to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser as occurring
simultaneously. Mr. Hakala’s treatment of those events as occurring simultane-
ously did not assume, as petitioners argue, “that the [SPR] transaction will be
collapsed, which is a legal conclusion.” Both the SPRA and the SPRA escrow
agreement required that the repayment of the Shaprio funds and the payment of the
purchase price to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser occur
simultaneously, and they did. We reject petitioners’ argument that Mr. Hakala’s
answer to the fourth question “consists of legal conclusions” and is the “product of
legal analysis.”56
We shall grant petitioners’ motion in that Mr. Hakala’s respective answers
to the second question and the third question and any materials in the purported
expert report of Mr. Hakala or any testimony of Mr. Hakala at the trial in these
56
We have considered, and also reject, each of petitioners’ two remaining
arguments that Mr. Hakala’s answer to the fourth question in the purported expert
report should be excluded from the record because that answer represents
“advocacy” and is “unreliable”.
- 104 -
[*104] cases relating to those answers are deemed stricken from the record. We
shall deny petitioners’ motion in that Mr. Hakala’s respective answers to the first
question and the fourth question and any materials in the purported expert report
of Mr. Hakala or any testimony of Mr. Hakala at the trial in these cases relating to
those answers are unconditionally admitted into the record.57
Evaluation of Witnesses
At trial, petitioners and respondent called as witnesses Mr. Weintraut, Mr.
Fankhauser, Mr. Thrapp, and Mr. Hupfer. Respondent called two additional wit-
nesses, Mr. Hakala, whose purported expert report and purported expert testimony
we addressed above, and Richard Wolf (Mr. Wolf), the revenue agent who con-
ducted the examination of FFI’s taxable years 2001, 2002, and 2003 and who
conducted the transferee liability examination with respect to each of Mr. Fank-
hauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser. We found the respective testimonies
of Mr. Weintraut, Mr. Fankhauser, and Mr. Thrapp to be in certain material re-
spects contrary to common sense and/or incredible. We shall not rely on any such
portions of their respective testimonies. See, e.g., Tokarski v. Commissioner,
57
Although we have ruled on petitioners’ motion, we note that, in reaching
our findings and holdings herein, we did not rely on any portion of the purported
expert report and testimony of Mr. Hakala that we unconditionally admitted into
the record.
- 105 -
[*105] 87 T.C. 74, 77 (1986). Generally, we found the respective testimonies of
Mr. Hupfer and Mr. Wolf to be credible but not material to our resolution of the
issues presented.
Transferee Liability
Section 6901
Respondent bears the burden of establishing that each of Mr. Fankhauser,
Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser is liable under section 6901 as a transferee of
property of FFI for FFI’s unpaid 2001 deficiency liability and FFI’s unpaid 2001
penalty liability (to the extent of the net asset value of the assets (i.e., fair market
value derived by reducing value of assets of FFI by its liabilities) that each re-
ceived from FFI), as well as interest thereon as provided by law.58 See sec.
6902(a); see also Rule 142(d).
58
Petitioners bear the burden of establishing that respondent erred in con-
cluding that FFI is liable for the Federal income tax and the accuracy-related
penalty under sec. 6662 for its taxable year 2001, to which FFI consented in Form
4549. See Rule 142(a), (d). Although petitioners claimed in their respective
petitions that those conclusions are erroneous, they stipulated in the stipulation of
facts that they do not take a position with respect to them, and they do not dispute
them on brief. We conclude that petitioners have abandoned the allegations in
their respective petitions that respondent erred in concluding that FFI is liable for
the Federal income tax and the accuracy-related penalty under sec. 6662 for its
taxable year 2001, to which FFI consented in Form 4549.
- 106 -
[*106] Section 6901 provides in pertinent part:
SEC. 6901. TRANSFERRED ASSETS.
(a) Method of Collection.--The amounts of the following
liabilities shall, except as hereinafter in this section provided, be
assessed, paid, and collected in the same manner and subject to the
same provisions and limitations as in the case of the taxes with
respect to which the liabilities were incurred:
(1) Income, estate, and gift taxes.--
(A) Transferees.--The liability, at law or in equity,
of a transferee of property--
(i) of a taxpayer in the case of a tax imposed
by subtitle A (relating to income taxes),
* * * * * * *
(h) Definition of Transferee.--As used in this section, the term
“transferee” includes donee, heir, legatee, devisee, and distributee
* * *.
The Supreme Court of the United States held in Commissioner v. Stern, 357
U.S. 39, 42 (1958), that section 6901 does not create or define a substantive
liability; that section merely provides a procedure by which the Government may
collect from a transferee of property unpaid taxes owed by the transferor of the
property. The existence and the extent of a transferee’s liability are determined
under applicable State law. See id. at 42-45; Hagaman v. Commissioner, 100 T.C.
180, 183-185 (1993).
- 107 -
[*107] Feldman v. Commissioner
Before considering the transferee liability issues that are presented here, we
shall summarize Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d 448, 457, 459 (7th Cir.
2015), aff’g T.C. Memo. 2011-297, 2011 WL 6781006, an opinion of the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit (Court of Appeals), the court in which
appeal in these cases would normally lie.59 In Feldman,60 the Court of Appeals
held that the taxpayers involved there were liable under section 6901 for a certain
Federal income tax liability of a C corporation, Woodside Ranch Resort, Inc.
(Woodside). In reaching that holding, the Court of Appeals first held that for
purposes of section 6901 the taxpayers involved there were transferees of property
of Woodside, the stock of which they had owned before they engaged in a pur-
ported sale of that stock to one of the companies owned or controlled by MidCoast
Acquisition Corp. and/or MidCoast Credit Corp.61 See Feldman v. Commissioner,
59
Because the Court of Appeals issued Feldman after the parties had filed
their respective briefs in the instant cases, we allowed them to file supplemental
briefs in order to address that opinion.
60
Unless otherwise indicated, our references to Feldman are to the Court of
Appeals opinion in Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d 448 (7th Cir. 2015), aff’g
T.C. Memo. 2011-297, 2011 WL 6781006.
61
Certain courts, including this Court, that have considered transferee lia-
bility under sec. 6901 have first addressed whether the taxpayer was liable under
(continued...)
- 108 -
[*108] 779 F.3d at 457. The Court of Appeals next turned to the applicable law of
the State of Wisconsin62 and held (1) that for purposes of that applicable State law
those taxpayers were transferees of property of Woodside, see id. at 459, and (2)
that those taxpayers were liable under that applicable law for Woodside’s unpaid
Federal income tax liability in question, see id. at 457-461.
In reaching its first holding that the taxpayers in Feldman were transferees
of property of Woodside for purposes of section 6901, the Court of Appeals con-
cluded that under the well-established Federal tax law doctrines known as the
substance over form doctrine (Federal substance over form doctrine) and the eco-
nomic substance doctrine (Federal economic substance doctrine) the purported
sale by those taxpayers to MidCoast of their stock in Woodside should be recast or
61
(...continued)
applicable State law for certain unpaid taxes. See, e.g., Starnes v. Commissioner,
680 F.3d 417 (4th Cir. 2012), aff’g T.C. Memo. 2011-63. In that case, the court
held that the taxpayers were not liable under applicable State law. As a result, it
was irrelevant whether the taxpayers were transferees for purposes of sec. 6901.
62
The applicable law of the State of Wisconsin in Feldman v. Commissioner,
779 F.3d at 457, regarding transferee liability was the Uniform Fraudulent Trans-
fer Act (UFTA) in effect in Wisconsin (Wisconsin UFTA). See Wis. Stat. Ann.
secs. 242.01 to 242.13 (West 2015). According to the Court of Appeals, the
Wisconsin UFTA is by its terms expressly supplemented by “principles of law and
equity”. See Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 459 (quoting Wis. Stat. Ann.
sec. 242.10).
- 109 -
[*109] recharacterized as a liquidation in which those taxpayers received cash
from Woodside. See id. at 454-457.
In reaching its second holding that the taxpayers in Feldman were trans-
ferees of property of Woodside for purposes of the applicable law of the State of
Wisconsin, the Court of Appeals first rejected an argument that the Commissioner
of Internal Revenue (Commissioner) had advanced regarding the role of Federal
law in determining transferee status under applicable State law. The Commis-
sioner argued in Feldman, as respondent initially argued here, that if the Court of
Appeals were to recharacterize the transaction in question in Feldman in order to
ascertain transferee status for purposes of section 6901, substantive liability under
State law should be determined by applying that State law to the transaction as
recharacterized under Federal law.63 See id. at 457. The Court of Appeals held in
Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 457-458, that under Commissioner v.
Stern, 357 U.S. 39, the existence and the extent of a transferee’s liability,
including the question of transferee status, are determined under applicable State
63
Respondent acknowledges in respondent’s supplemental brief that the
Court of Appeals in Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 457-460, “agreed with
other circuit courts to require independent determinations of transferee status
under federal law and substantive liability under state law.” In respondent’s
supplemental brief filed in these cases after the Court of Appeals decided Feld-
man, respondent no longer advances that argument.
- 110 -
[*110] law. Having so held, the Court of Appeals turned to an examination of the
applicable law of the State of Wisconsin.
After analyzing the applicable law of Wisconsin, the Court of Appeals held
that under that law (1) the purported sale by the taxpayers to MidCoast of their
stock in Woodside should be recast or recharacterized as a liquidation in which
those taxpayers received cash from Woodside and consequently those taxpayers
were transferees of Woodside, and (2) those transferees were liable for Wood-
side’s unpaid Federal income tax liability in question. See id. at 457-460.
The applicable State law in the instant cases is the UFTA in effect in
Indiana (Indiana UFTA), Ind. Code Ann. secs. 32-2-7-1 to 32-2-7-21 (West 2002),
and not the Wisconsin UFTA that was applicable in Feldman.64 Nonetheless, as
64
After 2002, the Indiana UFTA was placed in another section of the Indiana
Code, namely, Ind. Code Ann. secs. 32-18-2-1 to 32-18-2-21 (West 2015). Ind.
Code Ann. secs. 32-18-2-1 to 32-18-2-21 (West 2015) is virtually identical to its
predecessor, Ind. Code Ann. secs. 32-2-7-1 to 32-2-7-21 (West 2002). For con-
venience, we generally refer to Ind. Code Ann. secs. 32-18-2-1 to 32-18-2-21
(West 2015).
In 1984, the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws
(National Conference) approved and promulgated the Uniform Fraudulent
Transfer Act that had been drafted by a committee that it had appointed to study
the Uniform Fraudulent Conveyance Act (UFCA), which the National Conference
had promulgated in 1918. When promulgated in 1984, UFTA sec. 11, 7A (Part II)
U.L.A. 203 (2006), provided that that act “shall be applied and construed to
effectuate its general purpose to make uniform the law with respect to the subject
(continued...)
- 111 -
[*111] pertinent here and as discussed in detail below, the Indiana UFTA appli-
cable in the instant cases and the Wisconsin UFTA applicable in Feldman are
virtually identical in all material respects. As a result, we find Feldman to be
instructive in resolving various questions under the Indiana UFTA that we shall
consider in determining whether each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms.
Fankhauser is liable under section 6901 as a transferee of property of FFI for FFI’s
unpaid 2001 deficiency liability.65 In considering the issues presented in these
cases, we shall follow the order in which the Court of Appeals in Feldman ad-
dressed the issues presented to it in deciding whether the taxpayers involved
64
(...continued)
of this [Act] among states enacting it.” The respective Indiana UFTA and
Wisconsin UFTA have provisions that are virtually identical to UFTA sec. 11.
See Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-21 (“This chapter shall be applied and construed
to effectuate its general purpose to make uniform the law with respect to the
subject of this chapter among states enacting it.”); Wis. Stat. Ann. sec. 242.11
(“This chapter shall be applied and construed to effectuate its general purpose to
make uniform the law with respect to the subject of this chapter among states
enacting it.”).
65
Certain unpaid additions to tax and interest as provided by law were also
involved in Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d 448. However, we do not find
the opinion of the Court of Appeals or the opinion of this Court to be instructive
or helpful in resolving various questions that we shall consider in determining
whether each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser is liable
under sec. 6901 as a transferee of property of FFI for FFI’s unpaid 2001 penalty
liability, as well as for interest thereon as provided by law.
- 112 -
[*112] there were liable as transferees of property of Woodside for its Federal
income tax liability in question.
Transferee Status for Purposes of Section 6901
It is respondent’s position that each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and
Ms. Fankhauser is a transferee of property of FFI for purposes of section 6901
with respect to the SPR redemption transaction and the SPR sale transaction under
the SPRA. In support of that position, respondent argues that in substance FFI
made various distributions or transfers to each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut,
and Ms. Fankhauser in each of those SPR transactions.66
With respect to the SPR redemption transaction under the SPRA, respon-
dent argues that in form and in substance FFI made distributions or transfers of
FFI’s property to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser in that
transaction.67 As a result, respondent maintains, each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr.
Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser is a transferee of property of FFI for
66
Respondent characterizes the distributions or transfers that respondent
claims FFI made to its stockholders in the SPR redemption transaction and in the
SPR sale transaction under the SPRA as in substance liquidating distributions or
transfers. We do not use that characterization. See infra note 107.
67
Immediately following FFI’s distributions of FFW’s membership interests
to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser, they owned 68 percent, 22
percent, and 10 percent, respectively, of those interests.
- 113 -
[*113] purposes of section 6901 with respect to the SPR redemption transaction
under the SPRA.
Petitioners do not address whether, let alone dispute that, in the SPR
redemption transaction under the SPRA each of them received a distribution or
transfer of property of FFI, namely, a proportionate ownership interest in FFW.
Nor do petitioners address whether, let alone dispute that, each of them is a
transferee of property of FFI for purposes of section 6901 with respect to that
redemption transaction. Instead, as we understand petitioners’ arguments with
respect to the SPR redemption transaction under the SPRA, their focus is on why
they believe that they are not liable as transferees under the Indiana UFTA with
respect to that redemption transaction.
In the light of petitioners’ failure to address whether, and to dispute that, in
the SPR redemption transaction under the SPRA they received distributions or
transfers of property of FFI, namely, respective proportionate ownership interests
in FFW, we conclude that FFI made distributions or transfers of property to Mr.
Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser in the SPR redemption trans-
- 114 -
[*114] action under the SPRA and that each of them is a transferee of property of
FFI for purposes of section 6901 with respect to that transaction.68
With respect to the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA, respondent argues
that in substance FFI made additional liquidating distributions of FFI’s cash to Mr.
Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser in that transaction. As a result,
respondent maintains, each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fank-
hauser is a transferee of property of FFI for purposes of section 6901 with respect
to the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA.
Respondent also argues with respect to the SPR sale transaction that
[t]he “loan” from Shapiro [to FFIA] was a “ruse, recycling, a sham.”
Feldman, 2015 WL 759250, at *8. Remove the Shapiro “loan” from
this transaction [SPR sale transaction] and nothing of consequence
changes--the shareholders [of FFI] get paid the same amount,
[$530,766.15] from the same trust [escrow] account. Id. In the same
way, what remains after disregarding the Shapiro “loan” in FFI is a
transfer of cash from FFI to petitioners via the trust [escrow] account.
In reality, the only money that changed hands was FFI’s cash.
As a result, respondent maintains, each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut,
and Ms. Fankhauser is a transferee of property of FFI for purposes of section 6901
with respect to the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA.
68
The record fully supports our conclusion that FFI made distributions or
transfers of property to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser in the
SPR redemption transaction under the SPRA and that each of them is a transferee
of property of FFI for purposes of sec. 6901 with respect to that transaction.
- 115 -
[*115] Petitioners do not address whether, let alone dispute that, in the SPR
sale transaction under the SPRA in substance FFI made additional distributions or
transfers of FFI’s cash to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser and
that consequently each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser is a
transferee of property of FFI for purposes of section 6901 with respect to the SPR
sale transaction under the SPRA. Instead, as we understand petitioners’ arguments
with respect to the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA, like their arguments with
respect to the SPR redemption transaction under the SPRA, their focus is on why
they believe that they are not liable as transferees under the Indiana UFTA with
respect to that sale transaction.
Petitioners also do not address whether, let alone dispute that, in the SPR
sale transaction under the SPRA the purported loan from Ms. Shapiro was “a
sham” and that “what remains after disregarding the Shapiro ‘loan’ * * * is a
transfer of cash from FFI to * * * [Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fank-
hauser] via the trust [Leagre escrow] account” and that consequently each of Mr.
Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser is a transferee of property of FFI
for purposes of section 6901 with respect to the SPR sale transaction under the
SPRA. Instead, as we understand petitioners’ arguments with respect to the SPR
sale transaction under the SPRA, like their arguments with respect to the SPR
- 116 -
[*116] redemption transaction under the SPRA, their focus is on why they believe
that they are not liable as transferees under the Indiana UFTA with respect to that
sale transaction.
In the light of petitioners’ failure to address whether, and to dispute that, in
the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA they received distributions of cash of
FFI, namely, respective proportionate portions of $530,766.15, we conclude that
each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser is a transferee of
property of FFI for purposes of section 6901 with respect to the SPR sale transac-
tion under the SPRA.69 Nonetheless, for the sake of completeness we shall con-
sider whether each of them received a distribution or transfer of cash of FFI in the
SPR sale transaction under the SPRA, namely, a proportionate portion of
$530,766.15, the purchase price for the purported sale of their FFI stock to
MidCoast, and whether each of them is a transferee of property of FFI for pur-
poses of section 6901with respect to that sale transaction.70
69
As discussed in detail below, the record fully supports our conclusion that
FFI made distributions of cash to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fank-
hauser in the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA and that each of them is a
transferee of property of FFI for purposes of sec. 6901 with respect to that trans-
action.
70
We address in detail only the SPR sale transaction, and not the SPR re-
demption transaction, under the SPRA. That is because in form each of Mr. Fank-
(continued...)
- 117 -
[*117] Respondent contends in respondent’s supplemental brief that
“[p]etitioners’ transaction with MidCoast is in all material respects identical to the
transaction in Feldman” and that “[t]he Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals decision
in Feldman strongly supports” respondent’s position with respect to the SPR sale
transaction under the SPRA.
Petitioners contend in their supplemental brief that “Feldman is factually
distinguishable from the material facts in this case [sic]” and that “although the
equities in Feldman justified the collapse of the transactions at issue there, they do
not do so here”. According to petitioners, “in Feldman * * * the evidence showed
that taxpayer-shareholders knew or should have known that the corporation’s
taxes resulting from its asset sale would not be paid. In this case [sic], however,
the evidence is otherwise.”71 We believe that petitioners’ contentions regarding
the alleged material factual differences between Feldman v. Commissioner, 779
70
(...continued)
hauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser received property directly from FFI in
the SPR redemption transaction--facts that they do not dispute.
71
In their supplemental brief, petitioners point to other alleged differences
between the respective facts in Feldman and in these cases. Most of those alleged
differences appear to relate to whether the taxpayers there and here knew or
should have known that the respective Federal income taxes realized from the
respective sales by the respective C corporations in which the taxpayers there and
here had been stockholders would not be paid.
- 118 -
[*118] F.3d 448, and the instant cases regarding whether they knew or should
have known that FFI’s “taxes from its asset sale would not be paid” are not
relevant to whether they are transferees of property of FFI for purposes of section
6901 with respect to the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA. We shall, how-
ever, consider below in determining whether petitioners are liable as transferees of
FFI under the Indiana UFTA with respect to the SPR sale transaction under the
SPRA whether those contentions are relevant to that determination.
We turn now to the dispute between respondent and petitioners as to
whether, as respondent maintains, the Court of Appeals opinion in Feldman
“strongly supports” respondent’s position that each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr.
Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser is a transferee of property of FFI for purposes of
section 6901 with respect to the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA because the
material facts in Feldman, as they relate to that issue, are “identical” to the ma-
terial facts in these cases. In order to resolve that dispute, we compare below
certain relevant facts, including material facts, which we found there, see Feldman
v. Commissioner, 2011 WL 6781006, and on which the Court of Appeals relied in
- 119 -
[*119] Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 449, and certain relevant facts,
including material facts, which we have found here.72
In Feldman and in these cases, the stockholders of a C corporation that
owned certain appreciated assets, who also were its officers or related to those
officers, decided that it was time to terminate the business of the C corporation
and to sell its stock or its assets. See id. at 450. There and here, the stockholders
were aware that the C corporation’s sale of appreciated assets would generate
significant Federal and State income taxes. See id. In Feldman and in the instant
cases, however, prospective buyers were interested in purchasing the C corpora-
tion’s assets, not its stock. See id. at 450-451. In both instances, the stockholders
agreed to sell the C corporation’s operating assets. In Feldman, one buyer pur-
chased the C corporation’s assets during the year at issue there. See id. at 451. In
the instant cases, different buyers purchased different assets of the C corporation
at different times during the year at issue here. In Feldman, the sale of the C cor-
poration’s assets caused it to realize income that would have resulted in Federal
and State income taxes totaling $750,000. See id. In the instant cases, the sales of
72
We shall usually cite the Court of Appeals’ opinion in Feldman v. Com-
missioner, 779 F.3d at 449, for our recitation of certain facts which we found and
on which the Court of Appeals relied unless the Court of Appeals does not
expressly restate in its opinion a fact that we discuss herein. In that event, we
shall cite our opinion in Feldman v. Commissioner, 2011 WL 6781006.
- 120 -
[*120] the C corporation’s assets caused it to realize income that would have
resulted in Federal and State income taxes totaling $1,026,100.69.
In Feldman, after the sale of the C corporation’s assets the C corporation
had ceased carrying on any active business and had no operating assets; it was “an
‘empty shell’ consisting of cash on hand along with a few notes and receivables.”
Id. at 451. In Feldman, the C corporation planned to liquidate and distribute those
nonoperating assets to its stockholders. See id. at 449-450, 451. In the instant
cases, after the sales of the C corporation’s assets the C corporation had ceased
carrying on any active business, had no operating assets (except certain oxidation
technology), and had nonoperating assets consisting of cash, a note from the buyer
of the Elmwood property, certain interest receivable on that note, a few other
receivables, and certain real property in Minnesota.73 In these cases, the C
73
Ms. Fankhauser learned around July 2011 that the C corporation had
another receivable of which no one associated with FFI or MidCoast was aware in
2001, namely, the Prudential demutualization funds receivable of $43,926.57 that
FFI had never claimed and that the State of Indiana was holding in the name of
FFI. None of the parties to the SPRA knew about that receivable at the time they
were negotiating that agreement or at the closing of the transactions thereunder.
We conclude that that receivable is not material to, and we shall not consider it, in
our discussion of the issues presented. See supra note 28.
- 121 -
[*121] corporation not only had planned but also had taken formal corporate
actions to liquidate and to distribute those nonoperating assets to its stock-
holders.74
In Feldman and in these cases, the C corporation did not, as planned, for-
mally liquidate and distribute its assets to its stockholders. In both instances, a
representative of the C corporation (in Feldman, the C corporation’s accountant
and financial advisor and in the instant cases, the C corporation’s attorney) intro-
duced the C corporation’s stockholders to certain representatives of MidCoast be-
cause MidCoast was interested in buying the stock of the C corporation. See Feld-
man v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 451. In Feldman and in these cases, the C
74
Specifically, on December 19, 2000, the FFI stockholders and the FFI
directors held respective special meetings at which they approved a plan to liquid-
ate and dissolve FFI (i.e., the December 19, 2000 plan of liquidation) in the event
and only in the event that the FFI asset sale to GSI closed on January 2, 2001, as
provided in the FFI asset sale agreement. On January 2, 2001, the FFI asset sale
closed pursuant to the FFI asset sale agreement. Consequently, on January 2,
2001, the condition precedent to the December 19, 2000 plan of liquidation was
satisfied. On October 5, 2001, the FFI stockholders voted to dissolve FFI in
accordance with the December 19, 2000 plan of liquidation. On October 19, 2001,
the day on which FFI sold the Elmwood property, it took certain steps in prepa-
ration for its planned liquidation and dissolution, including (1) filing articles of
dissolution with the Indiana Secretary of State; (2) informing the Indiana Attorney
General and the Department of Workforce Development of Indiana that it was
dissolving; (3) mailing Form IT-966 to the Department of Revenue of Indiana; and
(4) mailing Form 966 to the IRS. Form 966 that FFI completed and mailed to the
IRS indicated that FFI’s “(anticipated ) [l]ast month, day, and year of final tax
year” was December 31, 2002.
- 122 -
[*122] corporation’s stockholders were informed that MidCoast was interested in
buying their stock in a way that would eliminate (in Feldman) or defer (in these
cases) the Federal income tax and State income tax resulting from the sale of the C
corporation’s assets. In Feldman and in these cases, the MidCoast proposal would
enable those stockholders to receive a greater amount, a so-called premium, from
the sale of their stock of the C corporation than they would receive from the
planned liquidation of the C corporation after the payment of all of the C corpora-
tion’s Federal income tax and State income tax attributable to the asset sales. See
id.
In Feldman and in the instant cases, MidCoast sent a letter of intent to the C
corporation’s stockholders in which it proposed a structure to effect the proposed
purchase by it and the proposed sale by those stockholders of their stock in the C
corporation. Under the proposed structure in Feldman, the C corporation was to
redeem 20 percent of its stock that the C corporation’s stockholders owned. In
addition, those stockholders were to sell the remainder of their C corporation stock
to MidCoast (or its designee) for a purchase price that was equal to the amount of
the C corporation’s cash as of the closing reduced by a stated percentage (70 per-
cent) of the C corporation’s anticipated Federal and State income tax liabilities
attributable to the sale of its assets. See id. Under the proposed structure in these
- 123 -
[*123] cases, the C corporation was to redeem 75 percent of its stock that the C
corporation’s stockholders owned. In addition, those stockholders were to sell the
remainder of their C corporation stock to MidCoast (or its designee) for a purchase
price that was equal to the total amount as of the closing of the C corporation’s
cash and the amount of a refund of the FFI State 2001 income tax payments re-
duced by a stated percentage (49 percent) of the C corporation’s anticipated
Federal and State income tax liabilities attributable to the sales of its assets during
2001.
In Feldman and in the instant cases, the stockholders of the C corporation
understood that the corporation’s anticipated Federal and State income taxes
would not be paid. In Feldman, although MidCoast promised to pay those Federal
and State income tax liabilities, the stockholders understood that MidCoast intend-
ed to use certain bad debts and losses that it had purchased from certain credit card
companies in its so-called asset recovery business in order to eliminate those tax
liabilities. See Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 451. In the instant cases,
MidCoast made a qualified promise in the SPRA to “pay the applicable tax author-
ities the Deferred Tax Liability, if any, resulting from such gain in light of other
post-closing activities of the Company.” However, in these cases MidCoast also
represented, and the stockholders of the C corporation understood, that MidCoast
- 124 -
[*124] intended to buy and use charged off debt portfolios in its asset recovery
business in order to defer the C corporation’s anticipated Federal and State income
tax liabilities.
In Feldman and in these cases, the stockholders of the C corporation did
little or no due diligence. In Feldman, the stockholders obtained a Dunn & Brad-
street report on MidCoast and called a few references. See id. at 452. Here,
petitioners themselves did no due diligence. Mr. Thrapp, one of petitioners’
attorneys, read some promotional materials that MidCoast had prepared. Before
the closing of the SPR transactions Mr. Thrapp concluded that as of that closing
the Leagre escrow account contained the funds needed to effect the closing of
those transactions, which included the $550,000 that he (and, as discussed below,
Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser) knew Ms. Shapiro was to
deposit into the Leagre escrow account on the day of the closing.75 Mr. Thrapp
75
All of the distributions to FFIA (or its designee, FFI), the FFI stock-
holders, and Ms. Shapiro that were required to implement the SPRA and the
related agreements (namely, the SPRA escrow agreement, the Shapiro escrow
agreement, and the cash reconciliation agreement) were deemed to be made as of
the closing of the SPRA. The closing of the SPR transactions under the SPRA
was to be deemed effective as of 11:59 p.m. on December 20, 2001, the date of the
closing. Moreover, the SPRA provided that all of the events that were to occur at
the closing under the SPRA, including but not limited to, the delivery of the FFI
stock certificates and the payment of the purchase price and “all other related
exchanges” were to be deemed to occur simultaneously.
- 125 -
[*125] reached that conclusion even though he (and, as discussed below, Mr.
Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser) knew that that $550,000 was to
be returned to Ms. Shapiro as of that closing.76
In Feldman and in the instant cases, the redemption of a portion of the C
corporation’s stock and the sale of the balance of that stock to MidCoast were
effected in essentially the same manner. In both instances, the parties to the trans-
actions used one escrow agent and two escrow agreements. See Feldman v. Com-
missioner, 779 F.3d at 452. In Feldman, the parties to the transactions involved
there used a share purchase agreement and two escrow agreements. The parties to
the first escrow agreement were the C corporation’s stockholders, MidCoast, and
the law firm of Foley & Lardner, which was the escrow agent. The parties to the
second escrow agreement in Feldman were MidCoast, Ms. Shapiro (a 50-percent
owner of MidCoast), her attorney, and Foley & Lardner, which was the escrow
agent. See Feldman v. Commissioner, 2011 WL 6781006, at *6. In the instant
cases, the parties to the SPRA transactions used a share purchase and redemption
76
Because the closing of the transactions under the SPRA was deemed to
occur as of 11:59 p.m. on December 20, 2001, Mr. Thrapp (and, as discussed
below, Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser) knew that the
distributions required by that agreement and the related agreements, including the
$550,000 that was required to be returned to Ms. Shapiro, were to be made by wire
transfers on the day after the closing.
- 126 -
[*126] agreement (SPRA) and two escrow agreements. The parties to the first
escrow agreement were the C corporation’s stockholders (petitioners), the C
corporation, MidCoast,77 and Leagre, which was the escrow agent. The first
escrow agreement in the instant cases incorporated a second escrow agreement.
The parties to that second escrow agreement were FFIA, MidCoast, Ms. Shapiro,
and Leagre, which was the escrow agent.
The parties to the respective transactions (i.e., the redemption transaction
and the sale transaction) in Feldman and in these cases used a newly formed limit-
ed liability company as part of those respective transactions. In Feldman, the
stockholders formed a limited liability company to receive the respective proceeds
of the redemption transaction and the sale transaction. See Feldman v. Commis-
sioner, 779 F.3d at 452. The sole members of the limited liability company were
the stockholders of the C corporation, whose respective percentage membership
77
In these cases, MidCoast had designated FFIA, a limited liability com-
pany, as the buyer of the C corporation (FFI) stock. FFIA was a company which
Mr. Bernstein, the president of MidCoast, had organized under the laws of the
State of Indiana two days before the closing of the SPR transactions under the
SPRA and of which he was the sole member. The record does not establish that
Mr. Bernstein contributed to FFIA the $1,000 that its operating agreement requir-
ed him to contribute in return for his interest as its sole member. Nor does the
record establish that FFIA had any assets as of the closing of the transactions
under SPRA. The record also does not establish that after that closing FFIA had
any assets other than the stock of FFI.
- 127 -
[*127] interests in that company were the same as their respective percentage
stock ownership interests in the C corporation. See Feldman v. Commissioner,
2011 WL 6781006, at *6.
In the instant cases, the C corporation formed a limited liability company
that it wholly owned to serve, inter alia, as a vehicle to transfer to its stockholders
(petitioners) certain of its cash and certain of its noncash assets and all of its liabil-
ities except its Federal and State income tax liabilities in exchange for a specified
percentage of the outstanding stock of the C corporation that they owned. The C
corporation contributed to the newly formed limited liability company the bulk of
its assets, which consisted of certain cash, a note from the buyer of the Elmwood
property, certain interest receivable on that note, a few other receivables, certain
real property in Minnesota, certain oxidation technology, and the right to a refund
to be claimed by the C corporation of certain Federal income tax payments totaling
$628,592 (i.e., the FFI Federal 2001 income tax payments) for its taxable year
2001. In these cases, the C corporation also contributed to the limited liability
company certain nontax liabilities. The net value of the assets (i.e., assets less
- 128 -
[*128] liabilities) that the C corporation contributed to the limited liability
company was at least $1,797,918.16.78
In Feldman, immediately before the closing of the redemption transaction
and the sale transaction the C corporation held certain cash and certain anticipated
Federal and State income tax liabilities.79 See Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d
at 452. In these cases, immediately before the closing of the SPR transactions the
C corporation held all of the membership interests in the limited liability company
to which, as discussed above, it had contributed most of its assets (including the
right to a refund of the FFI 2001 income tax payments), certain cash, and the right
to a refund of State income tax payments (i.e., the State 2001 income tax pay-
ments) that it had made for its taxable year 200180 and had certain anticipated
78
The record does not establish a value for the real estate in Minnesota or
a value for the oxidation technology that FFI contributed to FFW in anticipation of
the closing of the transactions under the SPRA.
79
As stated previously, in Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 451, the
total amount of the Federal and State income tax liabilities of the C corporation
was estimated to be $750,000.
80
In these cases, the C corporation also held $11,955.46 in a bank account
that offset a liability in the same amount consisting of outstanding checks. See
supra note 28.
- 129 -
[*129] Federal and State income tax liabilities.81 In addition, in Feldman and in
these cases, immediately before the closing of the respective transactions there and
here the C corporation had no operations, no employees engaged in operations, no
income, no operational assets (except certain oxidation technology in these cases),
and no liabilities except the anticipated Federal and State income tax liabilities.
See id.
In Feldman and in the instant cases, the redemption transaction as well as
the sale transaction took place. See id. There and here, virtually identical steps
were taken in quick succession in order to effect the closing of the redemption of a
portion of the C corporation stock and the purported sale to MidCoast by the C
corporation’s stockholders of the remaining portion of the C corporation stock that
they owned.
In Feldman, the C corporation redeemed from its stockholders 20 percent of
its outstanding stock and transferred the proceeds from that redemption (i.e.,
$293,728) to the limited liability company in which those stockholders owned the
81
In these cases, the total amount of the anticipated Federal and State income
tax liabilities remaining in the C corporation was estimated to be $1,026,100.69,
which consisted of the anticipated FFI Federal and State 2001 income tax liabi-
lities of $794,949.13 and $231,151.56, respectively.
- 130 -
[*130] membership interests.82 See Feldman v. Commissioner, 2011 WL
6781006, at *6. The parties to the transactions in Feldman then signed on the same
date (closing date) the stock purchase agreement and the two escrow agreements
involved there. At 12:09 p.m. on that date, the C corporation deposited its cash
reserves of $1.83 million into the escrow agent's trust account. At 1:34 p.m. on
the closing date, Ms. Shapiro deposited $1.4 million into the same trust account
purportedly as a loan to MidCoast to fund the stock purchase transaction.83 At
3:35 p.m. on the closing date, $1,344,451, the purchase price for the C corporation
stock that the C corporation stockholders agreed in the stock purchase agreement
to sell to MidCoast, was wired from the escrow agent’s trust account to the limited
liability company as payment to them for that sale. One minute later at 3:36 p.m.
on the closing date, $1.4 million was returned to Ms. Shapiro from that trust
account as repayment of the loan that she had purportedly made to MidCoast. See
Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 452. The day after the date of the
redemption transaction and the closing of the sale transaction, $452,728.84 was
82
In Feldman, the share purchase agreement between the stockholders of the
C corporation and MidCoast was executed immediately after the redemption
transaction took place. See Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 452.
83
In Feldman, there was no promissory note or other writing evidencing Ms.
Shapiro’s purported loan, and it did not bear interest. See Feldman v. Commis-
sioner, 779 F.3d at 456.
- 131 -
[*131] withdrawn from the escrow trust account and deposited into a newly
created bank account of the C corporation that MidCoast, the C corporation’s new
owner, controlled. See id.
In these cases, on December 20, 2001, in accordance with the terms of the
SPRA, the SPRA escrow agreement, the Shapiro escrow agreement, and the cash
reconciliation agreement, FFI deposited $875,855.49 into the Leagre escrow
account. Thereafter, on the same day, Ms. Shapiro deposited $550,000 into the
Leagre escrow account purportedly as a loan84 to FFIA (MidCoast’s designee).85
On December 20, 2001, MidCoast deposited into the Leagre escrow account
$20,000, the maximum amount of professional fees that it had agreed in the SPRA
to pay on behalf of the FFI stockholders.
84
The purported loan of $550,000 that Ms. Shapiro was to make to Mid-
Coast as part of the SPR transactions was not evidenced by a promissory note or
any other writing, and it did not bear interest.
85
Paragraph 1 of the SPRA escrow agreement provided that the $550,000
which the so-called investor (Ms. Shapiro) was to transfer into the Leagre escrow
account as a purported loan was to be transferred by wire into that account only
after FFI transferred its remaining cash of $875,855.49 into that account.
Consistently, paragraph 3 of the Shapiro escrow agreement provided that Ms.
Shapiro was not to transfer any funds into the Leagre escrow account until FFI had
transferred into that account “sufficient funds * * * [for the escrow agent] to
immediately initiate a wire transfer of the sum of $550,000.00 to the account of
Shapiro”.
- 132 -
[*132] Also on December 20, 2001, in accordance with the terms of the
SPRA, the SPRA escrow agreement, the Shapiro escrow agreement, and the cash
reconciliation agreement, the following events occurred simultaneously as of
11:59 p.m.:86 (1) the C corporation distributed its membership interests in the
limited liability company to its three stockholders (petitioners) in exchange for 75
percent of the outstanding stock of the C corporation (SPR redemption trans-
action);87 (2) the C corporation’s stockholders sold the remaining 25 percent of the
outstanding stock of the C corporation that they owned (SPR sale transaction) in
exchange for cash; (3) the escrow agent returned $550,000 from the Leagre escrow
account to Ms. Shapiro; (4) the escrow agent distributed a total of $530,766.15
from the Leagre escrow account to the C corporation’s stockholders; (5) the
escrow agent withdrew $345,089.34 from the Leagre escrow account and
86
Section 1.3 of the SPRA provided that the closing thereunder was deemed
to be effective as of 11:59 p.m. on December 20, 2001. Section 7.1 of the SPRA
provided that “[a]ll of the events which are to occur at the Closing under this
Agreement, including but not limited to, the delivery of the Share certificates and
the payment of the Purchase Price and all other related exchanges shall be deemed
to have occurred simultaneously.”
87
In these cases, on December 19, 2001, in preparation for the closing of the
SPRA transactions on December 20, 2001, the C corporation transferred to the
limited liability company that it had formed three days before the closing date
certain assets, including the right to a refund of the FFI 2001 income tax payments
of $628,592, and certain nontax liabilities.
- 133 -
[*133] deposited those funds into a newly created bank account of FFIA’s
designee, the C corporation that FFIA and Michael Bernstein, MidCoast’s
president, controlled; and (6) the escrow agent distributed $20,000 from the
Leagre escrow account to the law firm that had represented the C corporation’s
stockholders.88
In Feldman and in the instant cases, after the transactions involved there and
here the C corporation had anticipated Federal and State income tax liabilities in a
total amount that exceeded the value of its assets. See Feldman v. Commissioner,
779 F.3d at 452. After the redemption transaction and the sale transaction in
Feldman, the C corporation had (1) $452,728.84 in cash on hand that, as discussed
above, had been withdrawn from the escrow trust account and deposited into a
88
The various deposits into, and the various distributions from, the Leagre
escrow account were effected via wire transfers. The respective bank statements
showed those deposits into the Leagre escrow account as having occurred on
December 20, 2001. Those bank statements showed those distributions from the
Leagre escrow account as having occurred on December 21, 2001. As discussed
above, under the SPRA, the SPRA escrow agreement, the Shapiro escrow agree-
ment, and the cash reconciliation agreement the various distributions that those
respective agreements required were considered to occur simultaneously as of the
closing of the SPRA, which was deemed to occur at 11:59 p.m. on December 20,
2001. For example, the SPRA escrow agreement, which incorporated by reference
the Shapiro escrow agreement and to which the Shapiro escrow agreement and the
cash reconciliation agreement were attached, provided that “[a]t the Closing, the
Escrow Agent shall pay an amount equal to the Investor Funds [$550,000] to the
Investor [Ms. Shapiro], and shall pay the balance in the Escrow Account to FFI
Acquisition or its designee.”
- 134 -
[*134] newly created bank account of the C corporation that MidCoast con-
trolled89 and (2) anticipated Federal and State income tax liabilities totaling
approximately $750,000, or a negative net asset value of approximately $297,271.
See id. After the redemption transaction and the sale transaction in these cases,
the C corporation had (1) assets totaling $502,789.34, which consisted of cash of
$345,089.3490 and the right to a refund of $157,700 of the FFI State 2001 income
tax payments, and (2) anticipated Federal income tax liabilities and anticipated
State income tax liabilities totaling $1,026,100.69, or a negative net asset value of
$523,311.35.91
89
Four days after the closing of the transactions involved in Feldman, Mid-
Coast withdrew $442,000 of the $452,728.84 that had been deposited from the
escrow trust account into a newly created bank account of the C corporation that
MidCoast, the C corporation’s new owner, controlled. See Feldman v. Commis-
sioner, 779 F.3d at 452.
90
The funds distributed to FFI, FFIA’s designee, were wired into a new
account in FFI’s name at SunTrust Bank that FFIA and Mr. Bernstein controlled.
On December 26, 2001, six days after the closing of the SPR transactions, Mr.
Bernstein had $340,000 wired from FFI’s SunTrust Bank account to a MidCoast
account at the Bank of New York.
91
After the redemption transaction and the sale transaction in these cases, the
C corporation also had $11,955.46 in a bank account, but that asset offset a liabil-
ity consisting of outstanding checks in the same amount. In addition, as noted
above, after those transactions the C Corporation had another receivable, which
consisted of the Prudential demutualization funds of $43,926.57, that FFI had
never claimed and that the State of Indiana was holding in the name of the C
(continued...)
- 135 -
[*135] In Feldman and in these cases, after the closing of the respective
transactions there and here the C corporation did not have any business operations
and did not commence any asset recovery business operations or any asset
receivable collection business operations. See id. at 452.
In Feldman and in the instant cases, after the closing of the respective
transactions there and here the C corporation claimed certain losses to offset the
gains from the sale of its appreciated assets that had taken place before the
respective transactions involved occurred. See id. at 453. In Feldman, the Com-
missioner denied the losses claimed and issued a notice of deficiency to the C
corporation. The C corporation did not respond to the notice of deficiency, and
the Commissioner assessed the deficiency, certain additions to tax, and the
accuracy-related penalty under section 6662(a) determined in that notice. Thereaf-
ter, the Commissioner issued notices of liability to the respective former stock-
holders of the C corporation. See Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 453. In
Feldman, those former stockholders stipulated that the “distressed asset/debt tax
shelter” that MidCoast used in an attempt to shelter the gain that the C corporation
had realized from the sale of its appreciated assets was “illegal”, and they did not
91
(...continued)
corporation. See supra note 28.
- 136 -
[*136] challenge the assessment of the Federal income tax liability against the C
corporation. See id.
In the instant cases, respondent denied the losses that the C corporation
claimed. The C corporation entered into a closing agreement with respondent with
respect to, inter alia, those disallowed losses. The C corporation also consented to
the assessment and the collection of Federal income tax of $622,265 and an
accuracy-related penalty under section 6662(a) and (h) of $85,482 for its taxable
year 2001. Thereafter, respondent issued respective notices of liability to the
respective former stockholders of the C corporation (Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Wein-
traut, and Ms. Fankhauser) for FFI’s total income tax liability for its taxable year
2001 of $694,519.43 that consisted of Federal income tax of $609,037.4392 and an
accuracy-related penalty under section 6662(a) and (h) totaling $85,482, as well as
interest thereon as provided by law. Petitioners do not dispute on brief that FFI is
liable for that tax and that penalty, and we concluded that they have abandoned
contesting them. See supra note 58.
92
Respondent conceded in the respective answers in these cases that “the
remaining unpaid tax deficiency of FFI that is set forth in the Notice of Liability as
the amount of $609,037.43 is actually $578,338.43, plus I.R.C. § 6662 penalty in
the amount of $85,482.00, plus applicable interest.” Respondent’s concession
reflects that respondent collected from the State of Indiana the Prudential demutu-
alization funds of $43,926.57 to which FFI had been entitled.
- 137 -
[*137] In Feldman and in the instant cases, the C corporation was admin-
istratively dissolved by the appropriate State authority. See id. at 453.
We have compared relevant facts, including material facts, which we found
in Feldman and on which the Court of Appeals relied, and relevant facts, including
material facts, which we have found in these cases. As a result of that comparison,
we reject petitioners’ contention that the facts in Feldman are not the same in
material respects as the facts that we have found in these cases.93
Moreover, as a result of our comparison of certain facts in Feldman and
certain facts in these cases, we conclude that the Court of Appeals’ opinion in
Feldman strongly supports a finding in these cases that each of Mr. Fankhauser,
Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser is a transferee of property of FFI for purposes
of section 6901 with respect to the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA. We
shall restate certain of the facts that we have found in the instant cases that lead us
to that conclusion.
93
As indicated previously, we believe that petitioners’ contentions regarding
the alleged material factual differences between Feldman v. Commissioner, 779
F.3d 448, and the instant cases regarding whether petitioners knew or should have
known that FFI’s “taxes from its asset sale would not be paid” are not relevant to
whether they are transferees of property of FFI for purposes of sec. 6901 with
respect to the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA.
- 138 -
[*138] After the sales of its operating assets, FFI ceased carrying on any
active business, had no operating assets (except certain oxidation technology), and
had certain nonoperating assets, which consisted of cash, a note from the buyer of
the Elmwood property, certain interest receivable on that note, a few other receiv-
ables, and certain real property in Minnesota. Moreover, after FFI sold its operat-
ing assets, it not only had planned but also had taken formal corporate actions to
liquidate and to distribute its nonoperating assets to its stockholders, Mr. Fank-
hauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser. In addition, during 2001, after FFI’s
2001 asset sales, FFI made total Federal and State income tax payments of
$786,292 that were to be applied against its total Federal and State income tax
liabilities for its taxable year 2001, which were attributable to the gains that it had
realized as a result of the FFI 2001 asset sales.
Although Mr. Thrapp was aware of FFI’s situation as of early December
2001, nonetheless on December 7, 2001, he informed the FFI officers (Mr. Fank-
hauser and Mr. Weintraut) that MidCoast might be interested in purchasing the
stock of FFI at a so-called premium; that is to say, MidCoast might be interested in
purchasing the stock of FFI for an amount that was greater than the posttax liquid-
- 139 -
[*139] ation value of FFI, i.e., the value of FFI’s assets after the payment of its
liabilities, including its Federal and State income liabilities for its taxable year
2001.94
Mr. Thrapp informed Mr. Weintraut and Mr. Fankhauser that the purchase
price for the stock that MidCoast usually paid in deals like the one that it was
suggesting was calculated by using a percentage of the acquired company’s total
Federal and State income tax liabilities, which varied from acquisition to acquisi-
tion but was within a range that MidCoast had established. Mr. Thrapp, who was
not a tax professional, also advised the FFI officers that it was his understanding
that MidCoast had a tax strategy that it considered to be proprietary and that it had
used in connection with its acquisition methodology in which it acquired C
corporations with cash and certain Federal and State income tax liabilities. Mr.
Thrapp did not know any of the details of MidCoast’s acquisition methodology or
its tax strategy.95 However, it was Mr. Thrapp’s understanding, which he shared
94
Mr. Thrapp had some familiarity with MidCoast because it was a client of
Ice Miller on a prior occasion in a transaction that was unrelated to the transac-
tions herein and that closed in November 2001. Mr. Thrapp considered the infor-
mation that Ice Miller obtained as a result of that representation to be privileged.
95
Even if Mr. Thrapp had known, through Ice Miller’s representation of
MidCoast, some or all of the details regarding MidCoast’s acquisition meth-
odology and its tax strategy, he would not have been able to disclose any such
(continued...)
- 140 -
[*140] with the FFI officers, that MidCoast used the cash of an acquired C
corporation in order to buy charged-off debt securities that MidCoast intended to
use in its so-called asset recovery business, but he had no understanding of how
MidCoast used those securities as part of its tax strategy.
Mr. Weintraut and Mr. Fankhauser made only certain limited inquiries of
Mr. Thrapp with respect to MidCoast’s overall acquisition methodology, including
its tax strategy, of acquiring C corporations. However, Mr. Fankhauser, Mr.
Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser knew, directly or through Mr. Thrapp, that Mid-
Coast’s pricing in its acquisition methodology was inextricably intertwined with
its tax strategy.
On December 7, 2001, the same day on which Mr. Thrapp informed the FFI
officers about MidCoast’s possible interest in purchasing the stock of FFI, the FFI
officers, Mr. Thrapp, and FFI’s accountants, Mr. Burns and Mr. Vernick of the
Katz accounting firm, held a conference call with certain representatives of
MidCoast.
95
(...continued)
details to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser. That was because
MidCoast was a client of Ice Miller of which Mr. Thrapp was a partner, and Mr.
Thrapp was subject to certain ethical constraints with respect to the disclosure of
any client information.
- 141 -
[*141] Neither Mr. Thrapp nor any of the FFI stockholders saw any need to,
and did not, press MidCoast’s representatives regarding the details of its tax
strategy. Nor did Mr. Thrapp or any of the FFI stockholders see any need to, or in
fact, inquire through their respective contacts whether there were persons who
were not employed by MidCoast or by Ice Miller and who might be familiar with
MidCoast’s acquisition methodology and its tax strategy.96
On December 11, 2001, Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fank-
hauser executed an engagement letter dated December 11, 2001, in which they
retained Ice Miller to represent FFI and them as stockholders of FFI with respect
to MidCoast’s proposal to purchase the stock of FFI.
On December 11, 2001, Mr. Bernstein sent to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Wein-
traut, and Ms. Fankhauser on behalf of MidCoast a nonbinding letter of intent with
respect to a proposed acquisition of the stock of FFI by MidCoast that required
FFI as part of that proposed acquisition to redeem 75 percent of its stock from its
stockholders. Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser (through Mr.
Fankhauser) knew, directly or through Mr. Thrapp, that the transactions that
96
The record does not establish why Mr. Thrapp and the FFI stockholders
did not inquire through their respective contacts whether there were persons who
were not employed by MidCoast or by Ice Miller and who might be familiar with
MidCoast’s tax strategy.
- 142 -
[*142] MidCoast had proposed in the letter of intent would result in their
receiving a so-called premium, i.e., a greater amount of assets than they would
receive if FFI were to liquidate and the respective Federal and State income tax
liabilities that FFI had as a result of the FFI 2001 asset sales were to be paid in
full. That was why on December 12, 2001, the day after MidCoast had sent the
FFI stockholders the letter of intent, those stockholders signed and accepted the
terms of that letter. When they accepted MidCoast’s letter of intent Mr. Fank-
hauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser knew, as did Mr. Thrapp, that the only
reason that the FFI stockholders would be able to receive that so-called premium
was that FFI’s total anticipated 2001 tax liability, which was attributable to the
sales of its assets in 2001, would not be paid. In other words, Mr. Fankhauser, Mr.
Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser knew, as did Mr. Thrapp, that if and only if that
total anticipated 2001 tax liability was not paid would they receive the so-called
premium that MidCoast had proposed in the letter of intent.
After the FFI stockholders accepted the letter of intent, Mr. Thrapp was
responsible for negotiating in large part the agreement among those parties regard-
ing the transactions that MidCoast had proposed in that letter. Mr. Weintraut,
however, negotiated directly with certain of MidCoast’s representatives as to the
percentage of FFI’s total Federal and State income tax liabilities for its taxable
- 143 -
[*143] year 2001 that MidCoast would pay to purchase the stock of the FFI
stockholders. In doing so, Mr. Weintraut attempted to have MidCoast agree to pay
a percentage that was at the high end of the range of percentages to which he
understood MidCoast had agreed in the past as part of its acquisition method-
ology.
Around December 18, 2001, after Mr. Weintraut completed negotiating with
certain of MidCoast’s representatives as to the percentage of FFI’s total Federal
and State income tax liabilities for its taxable year 2001 that MidCoast would pay
to purchase the stock of the FFI stockholders, Mr. Weintraut prepared a balance
sheet for FFI (i.e., the December 18, 2001 balance sheet) that reflected its assets
and its liabilities as of that date on the assumption that the transactions proposed
in the letter of intent were to occur. According to the December 18, 2001 balance
sheet, FFI was to have the following assets and the following liabilities after it
distributed membership interests in FFW97 to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and
Ms. Fankhauser in exchange for 75 percent of the FFI stock that they owned: (1)
cash of $875,855.49, (2) the right to a refund of the FFI State 2001 income tax
97
FFI formed FFW to serve, inter alia, as a vehicle to transfer to the FFI
stockholders certain of FFI’s cash and noncash assets and all of its liabilities
except its Federal and State income tax liabilities for its taxable year 2001 in
exchange for 75 percent of the outstanding stock of FFI that they owned.
- 144 -
[*144] payments of $157,700, (3) an anticipated Federal income tax liability for
FFI’s taxable year 2001 of $794,949.13, and (4) an anticipated State income tax
liability for FFI’s taxable year 2001 of $231,151.56. Pursuant to a formula set
forth in the December 18, 2001 balance sheet, the stock purchase price for the
stock of FFI that MidCoast was to purchase from the FFI stockholders was to be
determined, as shown in that balance sheet, by reducing those total assets (i.e.,
$1,033,555.49) by 49 percent (i.e., by $502,789.34) of those total liabilities (i.e.,
$1,026,100.69). The balance of $530,766.15 was to be the purchase price for the
stock of FFI.
On December 20, 2001, FFIA (MidCoast’s designee to serve as the pur-
chaser of the FFI stock),98 FFI, and the FFI stockholders entered into the SPRA,
the terms of which were similar but not identical to the terms that MidCoast had
proposed in the letter of intent. The only reason that FFI and the FFI stockholders
decided to, and did, execute the SPRA and the related agreements (i.e., the SPRA
escrow agreement and the cash reconciliation agreement that was attached to the
98
On December 18, 2001, in preparation for the transactions contemplated in
the letter of intent, Mr. Bernstein organized under the laws of the State of Indiana
FFIA as a limited liability company to enter into those transactions as MidCoast’s
designee. Immediately before the closing of the SPR transactions, FFIA had no
assets, and immediately thereafter its only asset was the stock of FFI.
- 145 -
[*145] SPRA escrow agreement)99 was that those stockholders wanted to, and
MidCoast agreed that they would, receive a substantially greater amount, a so-
called premium, from the transactions to which they agreed pursuant to those
documents that than they would receive from the liquidation of FFI after FFI’s
total anticipated 2001 tax liability of $1,026,100.69, which was attributable to
FFI’s 2001 asset sales, had been paid. Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms.
Fankhauser knew, as did Mr. Thrapp, that the only reason that the FFI stock-
holders would be able to receive that substantially greater amount was that FFI’s
total anticipated 2001 tax liability of $1,026,100.69 would not be paid. In other
words, Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser knew, as did Mr.
Thrapp, that if and only if that total anticipated 2001 tax liability was not paid
would they receive the so-called premium.100
99
The Shapiro escrow agreement also was attached to the SPRA escrow
agreement.
100
The respective amounts of the Federal and State income tax liabilities of
FFI for its taxable year 2001 that were attributable to the sales of its assets were
estimated to be $794,949.13 and $231,151.56, respectively. Under the SPRA, the
stockholders of FFI were to retain, through their respective ownership interests in
FFW that FFI was to distribute to them under that agreement, the right to a refund
of the FFI Federal 2001 income tax payments of $628,592, which MidCoast
guaranteed FFI would pay to FFW after FFI received it from the Federal Govern-
ment. FFI, and thus MidCoast, was to retain after the transactions in the SPRA
were effected the right to a refund of the FFI State 2001 income tax payments of
(continued...)
- 146 -
[*146] Each of the FFI stockholders also knew, as did Mr. Thrapp, that the
so-called loan of $550,000 that Ms. Shapiro was to make to FFIA (MidCoast’s
designee) to fund the so-called purchase of the FFI stock was not evidenced by a
promissory note or other written document and did not bear interest. Each of
those stockholders also knew, as did Mr. Thrapp, that that so-called loan of Ms.
Shapiro was to be deposited into the Leagre escrow account on December 20,
2001, but only after FFI had deposited its cash of $875,855.49 into that account on
that day, and that it was to be returned to her as of the closing of the transactions
under the SPRA at 11:59 p.m. on December 20, 2001, which, pursuant to the
SPRA, was deemed to occur simultaneously.101 Moreover, each of Mr. Fank-
100
(...continued)
$157,700. Because of those anticipated refunds of the FFI Federal 2001 income
tax payments and the FFI State 2001 income tax payments, Mr. Fankhauser, Mr.
Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser knew, as did Mr. Thrapp, that none of FFI’s total
anticipated 2001 tax liability of $1,026,100.69 would be paid, thereby enabling
them to receive a substantially greater amount, a so-called premium, from the
transactions to which they agreed in the SPRA than they would receive from the
liquidation of FFI to which they had agreed before Mr. Thrapp told them about
MidCoast’s interest in buying their FFI stock. See supra note 34.
101
Each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser also knew
that although Ms. Shapiro’s so-called loan of $550,000 to FFIA was to be deemed
repaid as of the closing of the SPR transactions, the wire transfer to Ms. Shapiro’s
bank account of $550,000 from the escrow was not to occur until the day after the
closing of those transactions. Similarly, each of them knew that although they
were deemed to receive as of the closing of the SPR transactions their respective
(continued...)
- 147 -
[*147] hauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser knew, as did Mr. Thrapp, that
pursuant to the SPRA, the SPRA escrow agreement, and the cash reconciliation
agreement, FFI was to deposit $875,855.49 into the Leagre escrow account on
December 20, 2001, but it was to receive only $345,089.34 from that Leagre
escrow account as of the closing of the SPRA at 11:59 p.m. on that date.102 Each
of the FFI stockholders also knew, as did Mr. Thrapp, that the difference between
the amount that FFI was to deposit into the Leagre escrow account (i.e.,
$875,855.49) and the amount that it was to receive from the Leagre escrow
account (i.e., $345,089.34) was equal to $530,766.15, which each of them knew,
as did Mr. Thrapp, was the amount of the purchase price that they were to receive
from, according to the terms of the SPRA, FFIA. In addition, each of Mr. Fank-
hauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser understood, as did Mr. Thrapp, that
MidCoast through FFIA was purporting to purchase FFI stock from them in order
to acquire FFI so that MidCoast would be able to use FFI’s cash in order to buy
101
(...continued)
proportionate portions of the purchase price for the transfer of their FFI stock to
FFIA, the wire transfers to their respective bank accounts of those proportionate
portions were not to occur until the day after the closing of those transactions.
102
As was true of the respective wire transfers to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Wein-
traut, Ms. Fankhauser, and Ms. Shapiro, FFI, FFIA’s designee, received a wire
transfer on the day after the closing of the SPR transactions.
- 148 -
[*148] charged-off debt securities that MidCoast intended to use in its so-called
asset recovery business. However, each of the FFI stockholders knew, as did Mr.
Thrapp, that MidCoast through FFIA agreed in the SPRA to pay them $530,766.15
in cash for their FFI stock and that as of the closing of the SPR transactions FFIA
was to receive only $345,089.34 of cash and the right to a refund of the FFI State
2001 income tax payments of $157,700, or a total of $502,789.34. In other words,
each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser knew, as did Mr.
Thrapp, that MidCoast through FFIA agreed in the SPRA to pay $530,766.15 of
cash to acquire the FFI stock from them in order to have access for purported use
in its asset recovery business to only a total of $502,789.34 (i.e., $345,089.34 of
cash and the right to a refund of the FFI State 2001 income tax payments of
$157,700).
In addition, each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser
knew, as did Mr. Thrapp, or should have known, as Mr. Thrapp should have
known, that Ms. Shapiro’s so-called loan of $550,000 to FFIA was not needed or
used in order to effect the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA and that that so-
called loan was mere window dressing designed to make it appear that FFIA, not
FFI, was providing the funds to be paid to them for the transfer of their FFI stock
to FFIA. In other words, each of the FFI stockholders knew, as did Mr. Thrapp, or
- 149 -
[*149] should have known, as Mr. Thrapp should have known, that Ms. Shapiro’s
so-called loan of $550,000 to FFIA was devoid of any economic substance--a
sham that was designed and intended to make it appear as though FFIA, not FFI,
was providing the funds to be paid to the FFI stockholders for the transfer of their
FFI stock to FFIA. Moreover, each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms.
Fank-hauser knew, as did Mr. Thrapp, or should have known, as Mr. Thrapp
should have known, that the source of the funds that they were to receive for the
transfer of their FFI stock to FFIA was FFI, not FFIA. That is to say, each of the
FFI stockholders, as well as Mr. Thrapp, knew, or should have known, that FFI,
not FFIA, was to, and did, pay each of those stockholders each such stockholder’s
proportionate portion of the so-called purchase price (i.e.,$530,766.15) that each
was to receive under the SPRA.
In reaching its holding that the taxpayers in Feldman v. Commissioner, 779
F.3d 448, were transferees of property of Woodside for purposes of section 6901,
the Court of Appeals first observed that the analysis that we had undertaken in
Feldman v. Commissioner, 2011 WL 6781006, which looks beyond the formalities
of certain transactions,
implicates several related, overlapping doctrines used in tax cases and
in other areas of the law for the protection of creditors. Known by
different names--e.g., the “substance over form” doctrine, the
- 150 -
[*150] “business purpose” doctrine, the “economic substance” doctrine--the
animating principle of each is that the law looks beyond the form of a
transaction to discern its substance. * * *[ Feldman v. Commissioner,
779 F.3d at 454.]
Under the Federal substance over form doctrine, it is the substance, not the
form, of a transaction which determines its Federal tax consequences. See
generally Frank Lyon Co. v. Commissioner, 435 U.S. 561, 573 (1978); Gregory v.
Helvering, 293 U.S. 465 (1935); Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 455;
Grojean v. Commissioner, 248 F.3d 572 (7th Cir. 2001), aff’g T.C. Memo. 1999-
425. The Court of Appeals affirmed our finding, see Feldman v. Commissioner,
2011 WL 6781006, at *10-*14, that in substance the purported stock sale involved
there was a liquidation. See Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 455-457.
Under the Federal economic substance doctrine, a transaction that does not
have economic substance, that is to say, a transaction which does not change a
taxpayer’s position “in a meaningful way” and for which the taxpayer does not
have a nontax business purpose, will not be respected for Federal tax purposes.103
See Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 455; see also Gregory v.
103
According to the Court of Appeals in Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d
at 455, the Federal economic substance doctrine “borrows heavily from both the
business-purpose and substance-over-form doctrines.” Under the business pur-
pose doctrine, a transaction must have a valid nontax business purpose in order to
be respected for Federal tax purposes. See Gregory v. Helvering, 293 U.S. 465,
469 (1935); Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 455.
- 151 -
[*151] Helvering, 293 U.S. 465; Grojean v. Commissioner, 248 F.3d 572. The
Court of Appeals affirmed our findings, see Feldman v. Commissioner, 2011 WL
6781006, at *10-*14, that the purported stock sale involved there had no nontax
business purpose and no economic substance. See Feldman v. Commissioner, 779
F.3d at 455-457.
Under the so-called sham transaction doctrine established in Federal tax law
(Federal sham transaction doctrine),104 a transaction that is devoid of any economic
substance and with no nontax purpose105 is a sham which will not be respected for
Federal tax purposes.106 See generally Frank Lyon Co. v. Commissioner, 435 U.S.
104
Although the Court of Appeals did not mention that we relied on the
Federal sham transaction doctrine in Feldman, we did. See Feldman v. Commis-
sioner, 2011 WL 6781006, at *10-*14.
105
In determining whether a transaction is an economic sham, certain courts
consider the factors of lack of economic substance and no nontax purpose to be
disjunctive. Other courts consider those factors to be conjunctive. We need not
decide which test for the economic sham transaction doctrine to apply here. That
is because we find below both lack of economic substance and no nontax purpose.
106
In Falsetti v. Commissioner, 85 T.C. 332, 347 (1985) (citing Frank Lyon
Co. v. Commissioner, 435 U.S. 561, 572 (1978)), we defined the term “sham in
substance”, also known as economic sham, as “the expedient of drawing up papers
to characterize transactions contrary to objective economic realities and which
have no economic significance beyond expected tax benefits.” In other words, a
sham in substance is merely a mislabeling of what actually occurred. See Glass v.
Commissioner, 87 T.C. 1087, 1176 (1986), aff’d sub nom. Yosha v. Commission-
er, 861 F.2d 494 (7th Cir. 1988).
(continued...)
- 152 -
[*152] at 572-573; Knetsch v. Commissioner, 364 U.S. 361 (1960); Gregory v.
Helvering, 293 U.S. 465; Karr v. Commissioner, 924 F.2d 1018 (11th Cir. 1991),
aff’g Smith v. Commissioner, 91 T.C. 733 (1988). The Court of Appeals affirmed
our finding, see Feldman v. Commissioner, 2011 WL 6781006, at *12-*14, that
the purported loan of Ms. Shapiro involved there was a sham that was “devoid of
substance”. See Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 456.
We consider each of the Federal substance over form doctrine, the Federal
economic substance doctrine, and the Federal sham transaction doctrine, although
closely related and overlapping doctrines in Federal tax law, to be an independent
or alternative basis under which we shall reach our ultimate findings as to whether
each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser is a transferee of
property of FFI for purposes of section 6901 with respect to the SPR sale trans-
action under the SPRA.
106
(...continued)
As is true of other doctrines established in Federal tax law that look to the
substance, and not the form, of a transaction, the Federal economic substance
doctrine and the Federal sham transaction doctrine are closely related to, and
borrow from, each other. In fact, some courts believe that the Federal sham trans-
action doctrine is another name for the Federal economic substance doctrine. See,
e.g., Superior Trading, LLC v. Commissioner, 728 F.3d 676, 680-681 (7th Cir.
2013), aff’g 137 T.C. 70 (2011); Yosha v. Commissioner, 861 F.2d at 497-498.
- 153 -
[*153] Based upon our examination of the entire record before us, we find
that, in determining whether each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms.
Fankhauser is a transferee of property of FFI in the SPR sale transaction under the
SPRA for purposes of section 6901, under each of the Federal substance over form
doctrine, the Federal economic substance doctrine, and the Federal sham trans-
action doctrine (1) Ms. Shapiro’s purported loan here, like Ms. Shapiro’s pur-
ported loan in Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 456, was a sham that was
devoid of any economic substance; (2) the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA,
like the purported stock sale involved in Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at
455-457, had no nontax business purpose; (3) Ms. Shapiro’s purported loan here,
like Ms. Shapiro’s purported loan in Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 456,
had no nontax business purpose; (4) the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA, like
the purported stock sale involved in Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 455-
457, had no economic substance; (5) Ms. Shapiro’s purported loan here, like Ms.
Shapiro’s purported loan in Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 456, should be
disregarded; (6) the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA, like the purported stock
sale involved in Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 455-457, should be dis-
regarded; and (7) FFI, not FFIA, made a distribution or transfer of FFI’s funds in
the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA to each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Wein-
- 154 -
[*154] traut, and Ms. Fankhauser, like the C corporation, not MidCoast, made to
each of its stockholders in Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 459, of each
such stockholder’s proportionate portion of the purchase price (i.e., $530,766.15)
that each such stockholder was to receive for their stock under the SPRA.107
Based upon our examination of the entire record before us, we find that
under each of the Federal substance over form doctrine, the Federal economic
substance doctrine, and the Federal sham transaction doctrine each of Mr. Fank-
hauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser is a transferee of property of FFI for
purposes of section 6901 with respect to the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA.
Liability Under Indiana UFTA
It is respondent’s position that each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and
Ms. Fankhauser is liable under the Indiana UFTA as a transferee of property of
FFI with respect to the SPR redemption transaction and the SPR sale transaction
under the SPRA for FFI’s unpaid 2001 deficiency liability and FFI’s unpaid 2001
107
Respondent characterizes the distributions or transfers made to the FFI
stockholders in the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA as in substance liquid-
ating distributions or transfers from FFI. We do not have to characterize those
distributions or transfers as “liquidating” or any other type of distributions or
transfers in order to conclude, as we do, that FFI made a distribution or transfer of
its property to each of the FFI stockholders as part of the SPR sale transaction
under the SPRA and that each of them is a transferee of FFI’s property for pur-
poses of sec. 6901 with respect to that transaction.
- 155 -
[*155] penalty liability.108 In support of that position, respondent argues (1) that
for purposes of the Indiana UFTA in substance FFI made various distributions or
transfers to each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser in the
SPR redemption transaction and the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA and
(2) that those distributions or transfers were fraudulent under each of the two so-
called constructive fraud provisions in Ind. Code Ann. secs. 32-18-2-14(2) and
32-18-2-15.
Transfers for Purposes of the Indiana UFTA
With respect to the SPR redemption transaction under the SPRA,
respondent argues that for purposes of the Indiana UFTA in form and in substance
FFI made a distribution or transfer of its property, namely, a proportionate
ownership interest in FFW, to each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms.
Fankhauser in that transaction.109
108
Respondent also claims that each petitioner is liable for interest as provid-
ed by law with respect to FFI’s unpaid 2001 deficiency liability and FFI’s unpaid
2001 penalty liability.
109
As of the closing of the SPR redemption, which pursuant to the terms of
the SPRA was deemed to occur simultaneously with the closing of the SPR sale
transaction, Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser owned 68 per-
cent, 22 percent, and 10 percent, respectively, of FFW’s membership interests.
- 156 -
[*156] Petitioners do not address whether, let alone dispute that, in the SPR
redemption transaction under the SPRA each of them received a distribution or
transfer of property of FFI, namely, a proportionate ownership interest in FFW.
Instead, as we understand petitioners’ arguments with respect to the SPR redemp-
tion transaction under the SPRA, their focus is on why they believe that any such
transfers that FFI made to them were not fraudulent under either of the construc-
tive fraud provisions in the Indiana UFTA.
In the light of petitioners’ failure to address whether, and to dispute that, in
the SPR redemption transaction under the SPRA they received distributions or
transfers of property of FFI, namely, respective proportionate ownership interests
in FFW, we conclude that for purposes of the Indiana UFTA FFI made a distribu-
tion or transfer of property to each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms.
Fankhauser in the SPR redemption transaction under the SPRA.110
With respect to the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA, respondent argues
that for purposes of the Indiana UFTA in substance FFI made a distribution or
transfer of its property, namely, a proportionate portion of $530,766.15 (the total
purchase price for their FFI stock), to each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and
110
The record fully supports our findings that FFI made distributions or
transfers of property to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser in the
SPR redemption transaction under the SPRA.
- 157 -
[*157] Ms. Fankhauser in that transaction.111 In support of that argument, re-
spondent relies on Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d 448, and advocates the use
in these cases of the type of State law equitable principles on which the Court of
Appeals relied in that case.
In considering respondent’s arguments with respect to the SPR sale transac-
tion under the SPRA, we bear in mind, and respondent and petitioners agree, that
resolution of the issue of whether for purposes of the Indiana UFTA in substance
FFI made a distribution or transfer of its property to each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr.
Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser in the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA
depends on the law of the State of Indiana. We also bear in mind, and the parties
also agree, that in resolving that issue we must apply the law of the State of
Indiana in the manner in which the Supreme Court of Indiana (Indiana Supreme
Court) has indicated it would apply that law. See Commissioner v. Estate of
Bosch, 387 U.S. 456, 465 (1967). If the Indiana Supreme Court has not addressed
the issue, we must apply what we find to be the law of the State of Indiana after
111
As of the closing of the SPR sale transaction, which pursuant to the terms
of the SPRA was deemed to occur simultaneously with the closing of the SPR
redemption transaction, distributions of $360,920.98, $116,768.55, and
$53,076.62 totaling $530,766.15 were deemed made to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr.
Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser, respectively. That is to say, as of that closing,
distributions of 68 percent, 22 percent, and 10 percent of the purchase price of
$530,766.15 were deemed made to those respective FFI stockholders.
- 158 -
[*158] having given “proper regard” to relevant rulings of other courts of the State
of Indiana. See id.
In considering respondent’s arguments with respect to the SPR sale transac-
tion under the SPRA, we also bear in mind, and respondent and petitioners also
agree, that (1) the issue of whether for purposes of the Indiana UFTA it is appro-
priate to use certain equitable principles to disregard the form of certain transac-
tions (here, the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA) in order to ascertain whether
there was a transfer of a debtor’s property (here, FFI’s property) to its stockholders
(here, Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser) is an issue that the
Indiana Supreme Court has not addressed;112 (2) the definition of the term “trans-
fer” in the Indiana UFTA, like the definition of that term in the Wisconsin UFTA
involved in Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d 448, is very broad, compare Ind.
Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-10 with Wis. Stat. Ann. sec. 242.01(12); (3) the Indiana
UFTA, like the Wisconsin UFTA involved in Feldman, is flexible and expressly
incorporates equitable principles that look to substance, rather than form, compare
112
As discussed below, however, certain Federal courts construing the
Indiana UFTA have addressed that question in Boyer v. Crown Stock Distrib. (In
re Crown Unlimited Mach., Inc.), Adv. No. 04-1085, 2006 WL 6401548 (Bankr.
N.D. Ind. Oct. 13, 2006), aff’d, Boyer v. Crown Stock Distrib., Inc., 2009 WL
418275 (N.D. Ind. Feb. 17, 2009), aff’d in part, rev’d in part, 587 F.3d 787 (7th
Cir. 2009).
- 159 -
[*159] Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-20 with Wis. Stat. Ann. sec. 242.10; and (4)
the Indiana Supreme Court would, and therefore we should, look to certain eq-
uitable principles in determining whether for purposes of the Indiana UFTA in
substance FFI made a distribution or transfer of its property to each of the FFI
stockholders in the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA.
At least as far as petitioners are concerned, the parties disagree over which
equitable principles the Indiana Supreme Court would use in order to determine
whether for purposes of the Indiana UFTA in substance FFI made a distribution or
transfer of its property to each of the FFI stockholders in the SPR sale transaction
under the SPRA.113 Petitioners believe that which equitable principles the Indiana
113
In an attempt to distinguish the holdings of the Court of Appeals in
Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d 448, petitioners advance many of the
arguments that we address here in a supplemental brief that the Court allowed
petitioners, as well as respondent, to file after that opinion was issued. We did not
give the parties the opportunity to file responsive briefs to their respective
supplemental briefs. Consequently, we do not know whether respondent believes
that which equitable principles the Indiana Supreme Court would use is material to
resolving the issues under the Indiana UFTA presented here. Nor do we know
whether respondent considers the so-called equitable collapsing doctrine that
petitioners maintain is the only equitable doctrine that the Indiana Supreme Court
would apply to be materially different from the equitable substance over form
principles and the equitable sham transaction principles, which are established in
the law of Indiana and on which, as discussed below, respondent relies, or from
any other equitable principles that are consistent with Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-
2-20 that “the principles of * * * equity * * * supplement this chapter [of the
Indiana Code codifying the Indiana UFTA].”
- 160 -
[*160] Supreme Court would use is critical to their position that in substance FFI
did not make any such distribution or transfer. That is because, petitioners
maintain, the substance over form equitable principles established in Wisconsin
law (Wisconsin substance over form principles) that the Court of Appeals used in
Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 458-460, and the “equitable doctrines from
federal tax law, such as step transaction and substance over form”114 that respon-
dent advocates we use in these cases “differ from the equitable collapsing
114
Petitioners assert in various places in their supplemental brief that respon-
dent is arguing that certain equitable tax doctrines established in the Federal tax
law are to be used in determining whether for purposes of the Indiana UFTA in
substance FFI made a distribution or transfer of its property to each of Mr. Fank-
hauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser in the SPR sale transaction under the
SPRA transaction. Those assertions are unfounded, see supra note 63, and we
reject them.
- 161 -
[*161] doctrine[115] [that petitioners advocate we use here] in that they do not
require any showing of knowledge”.116
Before turning to petitioners’ argument, we note that we have serious reser-
vations regarding petitioners’ contention that the equitable collapsing doctrine that
they urge we use here is materially different from the equitable substance over
form principles established in Indiana law (Indiana substance over form princi-
ples) that respondent advocates we use in these cases and that we conclude are
materially the same as the Wisconsin substance over form principles that the Court
of Appeals used in Feldman. In fact, in Boyer v. Crown Stock Distrib. (In re
115
Petitioners provide the following description of the equitable collapsing
doctrine, also known as the collapsing doctrine, which they found in an opinion of
the U.S. Bankruptcy Court of the District of New Jersey that that court had marked
“NOT FOR PUBLICATION”: “The ‘collapsing’ doctrine is essentially an equit-
able doctrine allowing a court to dispense with the structure of a transaction or
series of transactions.” Route 70 & Mass., L.L.C. v. Bank (In re Route 70 &
Mass., L.C.C.), Adv. No. 09-01473 (MBK) 2011 WL 1883856, at *5 (Bankr. D.
N.J. May 17, 2011) (We shall refer to the equitable doctrine that petitioners urge
we use in these cases as the equitable collapsing doctrine.)
116
As discussed more fully below, petitioners contend that “case law from
other jurisdictions * * * utilizes the equitable collapsing doctrine which, in this
case [sic], requires that Respondent prove that Petitioners knew or should have
known that FFIA and/or MidCoast was going to cause FFI’s taxes to not be paid.”
According to petitioners, respondent has failed to carry that burden of proof. (For
convenience, we shall often refer to the requirement that petitioners contend
should be imposed on respondent in these cases and that, as discussed below,
certain courts have imposed on creditors in certain other cases as the knowledge
requirement.)
- 162 -
[*162] Crown Unlimited Mach., Inc.), Adv. No. 04-1085, 2006 WL 6401548, at
*3 (Bankr. N.D. Ind. Oct. 13, 2006), aff’d, Boyer v. Crown Stock Distrib., Inc.,
2009 WL 418275, at *7 (N.D. Ind. Feb. 17, 2009), aff’d in part, rev’d in part, 587
F.3d 787 (7th Cir. 2009), a case involving the application of the same constructive
fraud provisions of the Indiana UFTA (i.e., Ind. Code Ann. secs. 32-18-2-14(2)
and 32-18-2-15) on which respondent is relying here and which we discuss in
detail below, the U.S. Bankruptcy Court (bankruptcy court) and the U.S. District
Court (District Court) described “collapsing” or “recharacterizing” the trans-
actions involved there as what would occur if Indiana substance over form
principles that require that the substance of a transaction to prevail over its form
were determined to be appropriate principles to use given the facts and circum-
stances of the case.117 See Alterman v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2015-231, at
*47-*48 (referring interchangeably to the equitable principle in Florida law of
“collapsing transactions” and “the equitable doctrine of substance over form”
under the Florida UFTA).
117
In interpreting the Indiana UFTA, we may rely on, inter alia, the inter-
pretation by a bankruptcy court or other Federal court. See, e.g., Leibowitz v.
Parkway Bank & Trust Co. (In re Image Worldwide, Ltd.), 139 F.3d 574, 577 (7th
Cir. 1998).
- 163 -
[*163] We also have serious reservations regarding petitioners’ contention
that only cases using the equitable collapsing doctrine have, before applying that
doctrine, required a creditor to show that a purported transferee of the debtor knew
or should have known that the debt would not be paid. See id. at *48 (requiring
the Commissioner to show “actual or constructive knowledge” by the purported
transferee before applying “the equitable doctrine of substance over form” under
the Florida UFTA).
Despite the serious reservations that we have, we turn now to petitioners’
argument regarding the equitable principles which they contend the Indiana
Supreme Court would use and which we believe they are advocating in an effort to
persuade us that Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d 448, is materially distin-
guishable from, and thus inapposite to, the instant cases. We start by summarizing
the parties’ respective positions as to which equitable principles they maintain the
Indiana Supreme Court would use in determining whether for purposes of the
Indiana UFTA in substance FFI made a distribution or transfer of its property to
each of the FFI stockholders in the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA.
Respondent argues that Indiana courts, including the Indiana Supreme
Court, use Indiana substance over form principles in various contexts, including
most notably Indiana tax cases. Respondent maintains that those courts, including
- 164 -
[*164] the Indiana Supreme Court, would use those same principles in determin-
ing whether for purposes of the Indiana UFTA the SPR sale transaction under the
SPRA in substance was a liquidation of FFI in which FFI made distributions or
transfers of its cash totaling $530,766.15 to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and
Ms. Fankhauser. According to respondent, the Indiana Supreme Court’s use of
Indiana substance over form principles would lead it to conclude that for purposes
of the Indiana UFTA that SPR sale transaction in substance was a liquidation of
FFI in which FFI made distributions or transfers of its cash totaling $530,766.15
to the FFI stockholders.
We understand respondent also to be arguing in the alternative that the
Indiana Supreme Court would use the equitable principles of the sham transaction
doctrine established in the law of Indiana (Indiana sham transaction doctrine) in
various contexts, including Indiana tax cases.118 According to respondent,
118
Even if respondent were not relying in the alternative on the Indiana sham
transaction doctrine, we would, and we do, nonetheless consider it here in deter-
mining whether for purposes of the Indiana UFTA in substance FFI made a
distribution or transfer of its property to each of the FFI stockholders in the SPR
sale transaction under the SPRA. In this connection, while respondent is relying
principally on Indiana substance over form principles, certain of the arguments
that respondent advances in relying on those principles overlap with the equitable
principles of the Indiana sham transaction doctrine (discussed in more detail
below). We note that the Indiana Supreme Court held in Ind. Dep’t of State
Revenue v. Belterra Resort Ind., LLC, 935 N.E.2d 174, 179 (Ind. 2010), that
(continued...)
- 165 -
[*165] [t]he “loan” from Shapiro [to FFIA] was a “ruse, recycling, a sham.”
Feldman, 2015 WL 759250, at *8. Remove the Shapiro “loan” from
this transaction [SPR sale transaction] and nothing of consequence
changes--the shareholders [of FFI] get paid the same amount,
[$530,766.15] from the trust same [escrow] account. Id. In the same
way, what remains after disregarding the Shapiro “loan” in FFI is a
transfer of cash from FFI to petitioners via the trust [escrow] account.
In reality, the only money that changed hands was FFI’s cash.
Petitioners counter that, in determining whether for purposes of the Indiana
UFTA in substance FFI made a distribution or transfer of its property to each of
118
(...continued)
“‘[a] transaction structured solely for the purpose of avoiding taxes with no other
legitimate business purpose will be considered a sham for [Indiana] taxation
purposes.’ Belterra, 900 N.E.2d at 517 (citing Gregory v. Helvering, 293 U.S.
465, 469-70, 55 S.Ct. 266, 79 L.Ed. 596 (1935)).” As is true in Federal tax law,
the Indiana sham transaction doctrine is similar in material respects to Indiana
substance over form principles. As is also true in Federal tax law, the Indiana
sham transaction doctrine also is similar in material respects to the so-called step
transaction doctrine established in Indiana law (Indiana step transaction doctrine).
Indeed, the Indiana Supreme Court concluded in Belterra Resort Ind., LLC, 935
N.E.2d at 179 (citing Mason Metals Co. v. Ind. Dep’t of State Revenue, 590
N.E.2d 672, 675 (Ind. T.C. 1992), and Bethlehem Steel Corp. v. Ind. Dep’t of
State Revenue, 597 N.E.2d 1327, 1331 (Ind. T.C. 1992)): “In Indiana, the sub-
stance, rather than the form, of transactions determines their tax consequences.
* * * In this case the [Indiana use] tax consequences * * * must be analyzed under
the judicially created ‘step transaction’ doctrine to determine their substance.”
(Citation omitted.) (citing Gregory v. Helvering, 293 U.S. at 469-470). All of the
different Indiana equitable principles or doctrines that the Indiana Supreme Court
uses in a variety of cases, including different types of Indiana tax cases, were
developed because the Indiana courts, including the Indiana Supreme Court,
believed it necessary and appropriate to look beyond the form of a transaction to
its substance. This is precisely what the UFTA, including the Indiana UFTA and
the Wisconsin UFTA that the Court of Appeals applied in Feldman v. Commis-
sioner, 779 F.3d 448, requires.
- 166 -
[*166] Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser in the SPR sale
transaction under the SPRA transaction, the Indiana Supreme Court would use the
equitable collapsing doctrine. In advancing that position, petitioners acknowledge
that, in the absence of any authority in Indiana law expressly addressing whether a
transfer has occurred for purposes of the Indiana UFTA, “the Indiana Supreme
Court could look to the statute and reason by analogy as was done in Feldman.”
However, petitioners maintain that the Indiana Supreme Court would not do what
the Court of Appeals did in Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d 448. That is
because, petitioners contend, when faced with an issue like the issue under the
Indiana UFTA presented in these cases, the Indiana Supreme Court would, and the
Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit would “presumes that the Indiana
Supreme Court will”, (1) ascertain the majority view regarding that issue of other
jurisdictions that have adopted the UFTA and (2) follow that majority view.
According to petitioners, the majority view is that the equitable collapsing doc-
trine would be applied in determining whether in substance there was a transfer of
a debtor’s property for purposes of the UFTA. In contrast, the Wisconsin sub-
stance over form principles that the Court of Appeals used in Feldman represents,
according to petitioners, a minority view that is distinguishable from that majority
- 167 -
[*167] view. As a result, petitioners maintain: “Feldman is distinguishable as a
matter of law and has no application here.”
An additional reason offered by petitioners in support of their position that
the Indiana Supreme Court would use the equitable collapsing doctrine is that that
court would want to avoid the conflict that petitioners claim would be created if
respondent’s equitable doctrines were used between (1) Ind. Code Ann. sec.
32-18-2-20, which incorporates equitable principles into the Indiana UFTA, and
(2) Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-21, which requires the application and the con-
struction of the Indiana UFTA in a manner that effectuates the general purpose of
the model UFTA of making that law uniform among the jurisdictions that enact it.
Before addressing petitioners’ argument that the Wisconsin courts’ use of
equitable substance over form principles under the Wisconsin UFTA, see Feldman
v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 459, represents a minority view, we note that the
equitable collapsing doctrine, as described by petitioners in their supplemental
brief, see supra note 115, would appear to allow a court to do in material respects
essentially the same thing as Wisconsin substance over form principles, Indiana
substance over form principles, and the Indiana sham transaction doctrine (as well
as other Indiana equitable principles such as the Indiana step transaction doctrine)
allow a court to do; that is to say, all of those equitable principles or doctrines
- 168 -
[*168] allow a court to look beyond the form of a transaction to the substance of
the transaction.119
We turn now to petitioners’ argument that the Wisconsin courts’ use of
equitable substance over form principles under the Wisconsin UFTA, see Feldman
v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 459, represents a minority view. In Feldman, the
Court of Appeals held: “In light of the broad definition of ‘transfer’ in Wisconsin
fraudulent-transfer law and the general applicability of substance-over-form
analysis, the shareholders are properly deemed to be transferees under state law as
well as federal.” Id. Before the Court of Appeals declared that holding, it set out
the legal framework in which it reached it. That framework consisted of the
following legal principles established by the UFTA and adopted by the Wisconsin
UFTA: (1) the term “transfer” in the Wisconsin UFTA, like the definition of that
term in the UFTA adopted by other jurisdictions, is defined “very broadly”;
(2) “state fraudulent-transfer law is itself flexible and looks to equitable principles
like ‘substance over form,’ just like the federal tax doctrines [substance over form,
business purpose, and economic substance]”; (3) Wisconsin, like other jurisdic-
tions that have adopted the UFTA, “has long followed the general rule that
‘[e]quity looks to substance and not to form’”; and (4) “Wisconsin courts use the
119
See supra note 118.
- 169 -
[*169] ‘substance over form’ principle in a variety of contexts, most notably
including tax cases.”120 Id. at 458-459 (quoting Cunneen v. Kalscheuer, 206 N.W.
917, 918 (Wis. 1926)).
As for the first principle that the term “transfer” in the Wisconsin UFTA,
like the definition of that term in the UFTA adopted by other jurisdictions, is
defined “very broadly” and the third principle that Wisconsin, like other jurisdic-
tions that have adopted the UFTA, “has long followed the general rule that
‘[e]quity looks to substance, and not to form’”, petitioners do not dispute, and we
conclude, that they are valid principles under the Indiana UFTA.121
120
In support of its conclusion that “Wisconsin courts use the ‘substance
over form’ principle in a variety of contexts, most notably including tax cases”, the
Court of Appeals cited examples of Wisconsin caselaw involving not only
Wisconsin tax issues, as petitioners allege, but also Wisconsin nontax issues.
Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 459.
121
Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-2-7-10 (West 2002) in effect in 2001 defined the
term “transfer” to mean “any mode of disposing of or parting with an asset or an
interest in an asset whether direct or indirect, absolute or conditional, or voluntary
or involuntary. The term includes payment of money, release, lease, and creation
of a lien or other encumbrance.” That definition of the term “transfer” was in all
material respects identical to the definition of that term in Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-
18-2-10 (West 2015) that was in effect after 2001. The definition of the term
“transfer” in the Indiana UFTA in effect in and after 2001 is in all material
respects identical to the definition of that term in the Wisconsin UFTA. Compare
Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-2-7-10 (West 2002) and Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-10
(West 2015) with Wis. Stat. sec. 242.01(12).
(continued...)
- 170 -
[*170] As for the second principle that “state fraudulent-transfer law is itself
flexible and looks to equitable principles like ‘substance over form,’ just like the
federal tax doctrines [substance over form, business purpose, and economic
substance]”, in positing that principle the Court of Appeals relied on Boyer, 587
F.3d at 793, a case that it had decided under the Indiana UFTA. See Feldman v.
Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 459. The Court of Appeals had concluded in Boyer
that the “[f]raudulent conveyance doctrine . . . is a flexible principle that looks to
substance, rather than form, and protects creditors from any transactions the debtor
engages in that have the effect of impairing their rights, while ensuring that the
debtor can continue to do business and assuring third parties that transactions done
with the debtor at arm’s length will not be second-guessed.” Boyer, 587 F.3d at
793 (alteration in Boyer) (quoting Douglas G. Baird, Elements of Bankruptcy 153-
154 (4th ed. 2006)).122 We agree with the Court of Appeals’ conclusion in Boyer
121
(...continued)
The Indiana Supreme Court, like the Supreme Court of Wisconsin that the
Court of Appeals cited in Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 459, has long
followed the general principle that equity looks to substance, and not to form (the
third principle set forth above). See, e.g., State ex rel. McGonigle v. Madison
Circuit Court, 193 N.E.2d 242, 250 (Ind. 1963); Otis v. Gregory, 13 N.E. 39, 43
(Ind. 1887).
122
In Boyer, 587 F.3d 787, the Court of Appeals did not even mention, let
alone use, what petitioners call the collapsing doctrine or the equitable collapsing
(continued...)
- 171 -
[*171] involving the Indiana UFTA, on which it relied in Feldman v. Commis-
sioner, 779 F.3d at 459, involving the Wisconsin UFTA, that the second principle
set forth above in Feldman is a valid principle under the Indiana UFTA.
As for the fourth principle that “Wisconsin courts use the ‘substance over
form’ principle in a variety of contexts, most notably including tax cases” (Wis-
consin substance over form principles), petitioners do not dispute, and we con-
clude, that Indiana courts, like Wisconsin courts, “use the substance over form
principle in a variety of contexts, most notably including tax cases.”123 Petitioners
do, however, contend that respondent is wrong in asserting that we may rely on
122
(...continued)
doctrine in determining whether in substance there was a transfer of the debtor’s
property to certain persons for purposes of applying the constructive fraud pro-
visions of the Indiana UFTA. However, as discussed previously, in the pro-
ceedings below in that case, both the bankruptcy court and the District Court
described “collapsing” or “recharacterizing” the transactions involved there as
what would occur if Indiana substance over form principles that require that the
substance of a transaction to prevail over its form were determined to be appro-
priate principles to use given the facts and circumstances of the case. See Boyer v.
Crown Stock Distrib., Inc., 2009 WL 418275, at *7; In re Crown Unlimited Mach.,
Inc., 2006 WL 6401548, at *3.
123
See, e.g., Belterra Resort Ind., LLC, 935 N.E.2d at 179 (citing Belterra
Resort Ind., LLC v. Ind. Dep’t of State Rev., 900 N.E.2d 513, 517 (Ind. 2010));
Walter v. Balogh, 619 N.E.2d 566, 568 (Ind. 1993); Bethlehem Steel Corp. v. Ind.
Dep’t of State Rev., 597 N.E.2d 1327, 1331-1332 (Ind. T.C. 1992); Monarch
Beverage Co. Inc. v. Ind. Dep’t of State Rev., 589 N.E.2d 1209, 1215 (Ind. T.C.
1992).
- 172 -
[*172] Indiana tax cases as support for using Indiana substance over form prin-
ciples for purposes of the Indiana UFTA. We believe that the Court of Appeals,
which decided Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d 448, would, and we do, reject
petitioners’ contention. In determining whether each of the C corporation’s stock-
holders involved in Feldman was a transferee of property of the C corporation for
purposes of the Wisconsin UFTA with respect to the purported sale transaction
involved in that case, the Court of Appeals relied on, inter alia, Wisconsin tax
cases that had applied substance over form principles.124
We have examined the holding and the rationale of the Court of Appeals
that “[i]n light of the broad definition of ‘transfer’ in Wisconsin fraudulent-
transfer law and the general applicability of substance-over-form analysis, the
shareholders [of the debtor-C corporation in question] are properly deemed to be
transferees under state law as well as federal.” Id. 459. We have also examined
the legal framework in which it reached that holding and rationale. See id. at 458-
459. We conclude that nothing in that holding, that rationale, or that legal frame-
work provides any support for petitioners’ argument that the Wisconsin courts’
use of Wisconsin substance over form principles under the Wisconsin UFTA
124
See supra note 120.
- 173 -
[*173] represents a minority view.125 In fact, the holding and the rationale of the
Court of Appeals and the legal framework in which it reached that holding in
Feldman refute that argument, and we reject it.126
We conclude that, in determining whether for purposes of the Indiana
UFTA in substance FFI made a distribution or transfer to each of Mr. Fankhauser,
Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser in the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA,
the Indiana Supreme Court would use the same type of analysis that the Court of
Appeals used in Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d 448, when it was making a
similar determination under the Wisconsin UFTA. That is to say, the Indiana
Supreme Court would use Indiana substance over form principles. We further
conclude in the alternative that, in making that determination, the Indiana Supreme
Court would use the same type of analysis that the Court of Appeals used in
125
In the light of the conclusions of the Court of Appeals in Feldman v.
Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 458-460, that the principles under the Wisconsin
UFTA are consistent with the principles of the UFTA, we believe that if the Court
of Appeals had believed that the Wisconsin courts’ use of Wisconsin substance
over form principles under the Wisconsin UFTA reflected a minority view, it
would have expressly so stated. It did not.
126
We also reject the second argument of petitioners regarding the alleged
conflict that would be created between Ind. Code Ann. secs. 32-18-2-20 and 32-
18-2-21 if Indiana substance over form principles, and not the equitable collapsing
doctrine, were used. That argument is premised upon petitioners’ view, which we
have rejected, that the law of Wisconsin, as articulated by the Court of Appeals in
Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 459, represents a minority view.
- 174 -
[*174] Boyer, 587 F.3d at 793, with respect to the Indiana UFTA. That is to say,
the Indiana Supreme Court would use the equitable “‘flexible principle [under the
Indiana UFTA] that looks to substance, rather than form, and protects creditors
from any transactions the debtor engages in that have the effect of impairing their
rights, while ensuring that the debtor can continue to do business and assuring
third parties that transactions done with the debtor at arm’s length will not be
second-guessed.’” Id. (quoting Baird, supra, at 153-154); see also Cont’l Cas. Co.
v. Symons, 817 F.3d 979, 993 (7th Cir. 2016) (“[A] basic precept of fraudulent-
transfer doctrine * * * [is] substance trumps form.” (citing Boyer, 587 F.3d at
793)). In addition, we conclude in the alternative that, in determining whether for
purposes of the Indiana UFTA in substance FFI made a distribution or transfer to
each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser in the SPR sale trans-
action under the SPRA, the Indiana Supreme Court would use the same type of
analysis that it and other Indiana courts have used in a variety of cases under
which a transaction that is a sham and devoid of economic substance is disre-
garded. That is to say, the Indiana Supreme Court would use the Indiana sham
transaction doctrine.127
127
There are other equitable principles, e.g., the Indiana step transaction
doctrine, that we conclude in the alternative the Indiana Supreme Court would use
(continued...)
- 175 -
[*175] We address next whether petitioners are correct in their contention
that only the equitable collapsing doctrine “requires that Respondent prove that
Petitioners knew or should have known that FFIA and/or MidCoast was going to
cause FFI’s taxes to not be paid.” As we indicated previously, the equitable
collapsing doc-trine relies on equitable principles that are not materially different
from, inter alia, Indiana substance over form principles, which in turn are
materially the same as Wisconsin substance over form principles that the Court of
Appeals used in Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d 448. In fact, as also noted
above, some courts have referred interchangeably to the equitable principles of
collapsing transactions and the equitable principles of substance over form. See,
e.g., Alterman v. Com-missioner, T.C. Memo. 2015-231 at *47-*48 (involving the
Florida UFTA); In re Crown Unlimited Mach., Inc., 2006 WL 6401548, at *3
(involving the Indiana UFTA), aff’d, Boyer, 2009 WL 418275, at *7. Moreover,
as we also indicated above, in certain cases that have referred interchangeably to
the equitable principles of collapsing transactions and the equitable principles of
substance over form, certain courts have, before using those principles under the
127
(...continued)
under the Indiana UFTA, provided that those other Indiana equitable principles do
what the equitable principles that the Indiana UFTA, as well as the UFTA adopted
by other jurisdictions, do; that is to say, look to substance, rather than form. See
Boyer, 587 F.3d at 793.
- 176 -
[*176] applicable State UFTA, required a creditor to show that a purported
transferee of the debtor knew or should have known that the debt would not be
paid. See, e.g., Alterman v. Commissioner, at *48 (involving the Florida UFTA).
Furthermore, as petitioners point out, in certain cases that have referred only to the
equitable principles of collapsing transactions, certain courts have, before using
those principles under the applicable State UFTA, required a creditor to show that
a purported transferee of the debtor knew or should have known that the debt
would not be paid. See, e.g., Starnes v. Commissioner, 680 F.3d 417 (4th Cir.
2012) (involving the North Carolina UFTA), aff’g T.C. Memo. 2011-63; HBE
Leasing Corp. v. Frank, 48 F.3d 623 (2d Cir. 1995) (involving the New York
Uniform Fraudulent Conveyance Act).128 However, none of the cases imposing
the knowledge requirement involved the Indiana UFTA.129
The only cases that we have found involving the Indiana UFTA in which
the court used equitable principles that look to substance, rather than form, in
determining whether there was a transfer of the debtor’s property to certain
128
Certain jurisdictions, such as the State of New York, did not adopt the
UFTA but retained the UFCA that, like the UFTA, is designed to protect creditors
from fraudulent conveyances or transfers
129
Nor did any of the cases imposing the knowledge requirement involve the
Wisconsin UFTA.
- 177 -
[*177] persons are Boyer, 587 F.3d 787, and Cont’l Cas. Co., 817 F.3d 979. We
discuss only Boyer, 587 F.3d 787. That is because the Court of Appeals in Cont’l
Cas. Co., 817 F.3d at 991-997, relied on the so-called alter ego theory, and not on
the Indiana UFTA, to hold certain individuals liable for fraudulent transfers to
certain corporations that they owned and controlled.
In Boyer, a bankruptcy proceeding, Crown Unlimited Machine, Inc. (old
Crown), sold all of its assets to a newly formed corporation (new Crown), which
changed its name after that sale (Crown sale) to the name of the seller, in exchange
for $3.1 million in cash and a $2.9 million promissory note (note) that was secured
by all of the company’s assets. (We shall sometimes refer to (1) the cash and the
note that new Crown transferred to old Crown as the sales proceeds and (2) the
payment of the cash proceeds by new Crown to old Crown as the cash sales pro-
ceeds payment.) Pursuant to an understanding of the parties to the Crown sale,
immediately before the closing old Crown transferred $590,328 from its bank
account to a separate bank account and then distributed those funds as dividends
to its stockholders (preclosing dividend distributions). See Boyer, 587 F.3d at
790-791. At the closing, new Crown transferred the sales proceeds to old Crown
in exchange for its then remaining assets. After the closing, old Crown distributed
the cash that it had received as part of the sale price to its stockholders and ceased
- 178 -
[*178] being an operating company. In each of the two years after the closing,
pursuant to the terms of the note, new Crown made a payment to old Crown of
$100,000 on the note (collectively, postclosing note payments), which it distribut-
ed to its stockholders. See id.; see also In re Crown Unlimited Mach., Inc., 2006
WL 6401548, at *1-*2. (We shall refer to all of the events that occurred relating
to the old Crown sale, including those that are not recited herein but are recited in
In re Crown Unlimited Mach., Inc., as the old Crown sale transaction.)
After the closing of the Crown sale, new Crown began operating the busi-
ness in which old Crown had been engaged before the sale of old Crown’s assets,
but new Crown was not successful. New Crown began bankruptcy proceedings
about three and a half years after it purchased old Crown’s assets. There were not
enough funds in new Crown to pay its unsecured creditors, and the trustee in bank-
ruptcy (trustee) brought an adversary action against old Crown as the initial trans-
feree and its stockholders (old Crown stockholders)130 as the subsequent and im-
mediate or mediate transferees. In that action, the trustee acknowledged (1) that in
form new Crown had purchased old Crown’s assets and made transfers of certain
funds to old Crown to pay for those assets and (2) that if the form of the trans-
130
The old Crown stockholders were members of the same family. See In re
Crown Unlimited Mach., Inc., 2006 WL 6401548, at *1.
- 179 -
[*179] action were to be respected, (a) old Crown would be the initial transferee to
whom an affirmative defense might be available under Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-
2-18 and (b) the old Crown stockholders would be subsequent and immediate or
mediate transferees to whom an affirmative defense might be available under 11
U.S.C. sec. 550(b) (2012). However, the trustee maintained (1) that the substance
of the Crown sale of assets should prevail over its form131 and (2) that if the sub-
stance were to prevail, the transaction should be collapsed and recharacterized as a
stock sale by the old Crown stockholders to new Crown that was financed by
encumbering the assets of old Crown, i.e., a leveraged buyout (LBO). In that
event, according to the trustee, new Crown, the debtor, would be considered to
have purchased the stock of the old Crown stockholders with funds secured by old
Crown’s assets, thereby allowing those stockholders to “cash out any equity” in
old Crown, which served as a mere conduit for those stockholders of the stock
purchase price and whose business remained burdened with the resulting debt. As
a result, the trustee contended, (1) new Crown, the debtor, would be considered to
have made distributions to the old Crown stockholders that were fraudulent
transfers under each of the constructive fraud provisions in Ind. Code Ann. secs.
131
We shall refer to the trustee’s theory that the substance of the Crown sale
of its assets should prevail over its form as the trustee’s substance over form
theory.
- 180 -
[*180] 32-18-2-14(2) and 32-18-2-15,132 and (2) those stockholders would be con-
sidered initial transferees (not subsequent and immediate or mediate transferees) to
whom no affirmative defenses would be available under 11 U.S.C. sec. 550(b).
See Boyer, 2009 WL 418275, at *3.
Before considering the trustee’s substance over form theory, the bankruptcy
court did not first require, as petitioners urge we must do in these cases, a showing
by the trustee that the old Crown stockholders knew or should have known that
new Crown’s debts would not be paid. Id. at *3-*4. Although the bankruptcy
court was unwilling to accept, and in fact rejected, the trustee’s substance over
form theory under which the entire transaction would be collapsed and recharac-
terized as an LBO, it did so for the following reasons. The bankruptcy court had
concluded that acceptance of the trustee’s substance over form theory “not only
unnecessarily complicates this matter, but also inaccurately characterizes what
transpired, overlooks significant facts and would operate to deprive the individual
defendants [i.e., the old Crown stockholders] of the defenses that [11 U.S.C.]
132
The constructive fraud provisions of the Indiana UFTA on which the
trustee relied in Boyer, 587 F.3d 787, In re Crown Unlimited Machine, Inc., 2006
WL 6401548, aff’d, Boyer, 2009 WL 418275, are the same constructive fraud
provisions on which, as discussed herein, respondent relies in these cases.
- 181 -
[*181] §550(b) gives to subsequent transferees [but not to initial transferees].”133
In re Crown Unlimited Mach., Inc., 2006 WL 6401548, at *3.
Having rejected the trustee’s substance over form theory, and having accept-
ed the form of the entire old Crown sale transaction, the bankruptcy court held that
the preclosing dividend distributions did not involve “property of the debtor [new
Crown]. * * * [and that] [a]t the time that dividend was paid, the money belonged
to the debtor’s seller [old Crown] * * * and not to the debtor. Thus, it was not ‘a
transfer made * * * by [the] debtor’ and, as such, cannot be avoided as fraudulent
under either I.C. 32-18-2-14 or I.C. 32-18-2-15.” Id. at *11.
The bankruptcy court then addressed whether, having accepted the form of
the entire old Crown sale transaction, the transfers by new Crown, the debtor, to
old Crown were “avoidable transfers” under each of the two constructive fraud
provisions in Ind. Code Ann. secs. 32-18-2-14(2) and 32-18-2-15. In addressing
that issue, the bankruptcy court observed that “since fraudulent conveyance laws
are intended to protect a debtor’s creditors, the transaction is to be evaluated from
their perspective, not that of the defendant/transferee.” Id. at *6. After a thorough
133
The bankruptcy court stated that “[c]ollapsing the transaction would
transform the individual defendants from subsequent transferees into initial
transferees and deprive them of * * * defenses [available only to subsequent
transferees under 11 U.S.C. sec. 550(b)].” In re Crown Unlimited Mach., Inc.,
2006 WL 6401548, at *4.
- 182 -
[*182] analysis of the facts and the law, the bankruptcy court held that the cash
sales proceeds payment and the postclosing note payments were fraudulent trans-
fers by new Crown, the debtor, to old Crown.134 See id. at *4-*14.
The bankruptcy court next turned to the questions under 11 U.S.C. sec. 550
as to what the trustee was entitled to recover and from whom. That court conclud-
ed that old Crown was the initial transferee and that the old Crown stockholders
were the subsequent and immediate or mediate transferees under that provision.
The bankruptcy court observed: “Just because a [fraudulent] transfer is recover-
able, as here, from the initial transferee [old Crown] does not automatically mean
134
We note that, in considering each of the constructive fraud provisions in
the Indiana UFTA, the bankruptcy court indicated that, in determining whether a
debtor made a transfer “without receiving a reasonably equivalent value in ex-
change for the transfer” under Ind. Code Ann. secs. 32-18-2-14(2) and 32-18-2-
15(1), it must consider all of the facts and circumstances, including “the good faith
of the transferee and whether the * * * [transfer] was the result of an arms length
transaction”. In re Crown Unlimited Mach., Inc., 2006 WL 6401548, at *8.
However, the bankruptcy court concluded that those other considerations are not
determinative of whether reasonable equivalent value was given by the transferee
under those provisions. See id. In support of that conclusion, that court cited
Mellon Bank, N.A. v. Official Comm. of Unsecured Creditors of R.M.L. (In re
R.M.L., Inc.), 92 F.3d 139, 148-154 (3d Cir. 1996). In In re R.M.L., Inc., a
bankruptcy proceeding involving 11 U.S.C. sec. 548, the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the Third Circuit held that the debtor involved in that case did not receive
reasonably equivalent value, despite the good faith of the transferee, the arms
length nature of the transaction, and the charging of market rates for the fees in the
transaction. See id.; see also In re Crown Unlimited Mach., Inc., 2006 WL
6401548, at *8.
- 183 -
[*183] that it is also recoverable from the subsequent transferees. Section 550(b)
[of 11 U.S.C.] gives immediate and mediate transferees affirmative defenses that
are not available to the initial transferee.” In re Crown Unlimited Mach., Inc.,
2006 WL 6401548, at *14.
The affirmative defense (good faith defense) that the old Crown stock-
holders (the immediate or mediate transferees) raised was that they took property
of new Crown, the debtor, “for value, * * * in good faith, and without knowledge
of the voidability of the transfer”.135 11 U.S.C. sec. 550(b). The old Crown stock-
135
Old Crown claimed an affirmative defense under Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-
18-2-18(d), which allows, inter alia, “a good faith transferee or obligee * * * to the
extent of the value given the debtor for the transfer or obligation, * * * a right to
retain any interest in the asset transferred * * * [or] a reduction in the amount of
the liability on the judgment.” See In re Crown Unlimited Mach., Inc., 2006 WL
6401548, at *12-*13. The bankruptcy court rejected that affirmative defense
because it found that old Crown was not a good faith transferee under Ind. Code
Ann. sec. 32-18-2-18(d). Id. In reaching that finding, the bankruptcy court noted
that “[w]hether the recipient of a fraudulent conveyance qualifies as a good faith
transferee is a question of fact * * * which largely turns on * * * [the] knowledge
[of the transferee] at the time of the transaction sought to be avoided.” In re
Crown Unlimited Mach., Inc., 2006 WL 6401548, at *13. The bankruptcy court
indicated that although there was little agreement among courts as to the appropri-
ate legal standard for the affirmative defense under Ind. Code Ann. sec. sec. 32-
18-2-18(d) and similar provisions under the UFTA enacted by other jurisdictions,
a court must take “an objective approach to determine what the transferee knew or
should have known such that the transferee does not act in good faith when it has
sufficient knowledge to place * * * [the transferee] on inquiry notice of the void-
ability of the transfer.” Id. (quoting Dobin v. Hill (In re Hill), 342 B.R. 183, 203
(Bankr. D.N.J. 2006)). As discussed below, the bankruptcy court applied a similar
(continued...)
- 184 -
[*184] holders had the burden of proving their entitlement to that affirmative
defense. The bankruptcy court expressly found that, except for one of the old
Crown stockholders named Steven Stroup II (Mr. Stroup II), who was old Crown’s
president and its majority stockholder and who negotiated the sale of old Crown’s
assets to new Crown, see In re Crown Unlimited Mach., Inc., 2006 WL 6401548,
at *1, the old Crown stockholders did not have a “high degree of involvement in
the transaction or his [Mr. Stroup II] knowledge of its details.” Id. at *14. The
bankruptcy court further found that “it appears that they [old Crown stockholders
except Mr. Stroup II] were more or less content to let Mr. Stroup II make the
necessary decisions and run things.” Accordingly, the bankruptcy court found that
those stockholders “had no reason to know of the possibly fraudulent nature of the
transaction that resulted in the distributions they received”. Id. at *14.
The findings of the bankruptcy court that the old Crown stockholders took
property “in good faith” for purposes of 11 U.S.C. sec. 550(b) did not, however,
lead that court to conclude that the old Crown stockholders, except for Mr. Stroup
II, had proved their entitlement to the affirmative defense under that provision.
135
(...continued)
test in determining whether the old Crown stockholders, as immediate or mediate
transferees, took property “in good faith” for purposes of the affirmative defense
under 11 U.S.C. sec. 550(b) (2012).
- 185 -
[*185] That was because those stockholders also had to prove that they took
property “for value”. With respect to that question, the bankruptcy court conclud-
ed that “value for the purpose of [11 U.S.C.] § 550(b)(1) ‘looks to what the trans-
feree gave up’”. Id. at *15 (quoting Bonded Fin. Servs., Inc. v. European Am.
Bank, 838 F.2d 890, 897 (7th Cir. 1988)). The bankruptcy court found that the old
Crown stockholders “gave nothing in exchange for their distributions from Crown
Stock [old Crown]”. According to that court, “[t]hose distributions were made,
not in return for some exchange of property or services, or the payment of an
antecedent debt, but solely on account of their status as shareholders in the
company. Such distributions are not an exchange of anything and do not con-
stitute value for purposes of [11 U.S.C.] § 550(b).” Id. at *15. Consequently, the
bankruptcy court held that none of the old Crown stockholders was entitled to the
affirmative defense under 11 U.S.C. sec. 550(b). Id. at *15.
The bankruptcy court decision in Boyer was appealed to the U.S. District
Court for the Northern District of Indiana. The District Court affirmed the bank-
ruptcy court decision.136 See Boyer, 2009 WL 418275. The District Court, like
136
The District Court did not reach the issue presented on appeal by old
Crown and the old Crown’s stockholders that the bankruptcy court had erred in
holding that the transfers by new Crown to old Crown in the old Crown sale
transaction were avoidable transfers under the constructive fraud provisions in
(continued...)
- 186 -
[*186] the bankruptcy court, rejected the trustee’s substance over form theory and
as a result found, as the bankruptcy court had found, that the preclosing dividend
dis-tributions were paid when the funds with which those distributions were made
belonged to old Crown, and not to new Crown, the debtor. Consequently, the
District Court held, as the bankruptcy court had held, that those distributions were
not transfers made by new Crown, the debtor, and therefore may not be avoided as
fraudulent under Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-14(2). See Boyer, 2009 WL
418275, at *8.
The District Court judgment in Boyer was appealed to the Court of Appeals
for the Seventh Circuit. The Court of Appeals affirmed in part and reversed in
part that judgment. See Boyer, 587 F.3d 787. The reversal was with respect to the
District Court’s holding that the preclosing dividend distributions were not trans-
fers made by new Crown, the debtor, to the old Crown stockholders and therefore
may not be avoided as fraudulent under Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-14(2). As
was true of the bankruptcy court and the District Court, the Court of Appeals
began its analysis of the issues presented with what it described as “the trustee’s
136
(...continued)
Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-15. That was because it had affirmed the bankruptcy
court’s decision that those transfers were avoidable transfers under the construc-
tive fraud provisions in Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-14(2). See Boyer, 2009 WL
418275, at *13.
- 187 -
[*187] argument for recharacterizing the [old Crown sale] transaction” as a sale by
the old Crown stockholders of the stock of old Crown, i.e., an LBO, instead of a
sale by old Crown of its assets. See id. at 791-792. The Court of Appeals
acknowledged that the old Crown sale of its assets differed “in two formal
respects” from a so-called conventional LBO in which an investor purchases the
stock of a corporation from its stockholders with the proceeds of a loan that is
secured by the corporation’s assets. The first formal difference, according to the
Court of Appeals, was that the old Crown sale involved the purchase of old
Crown’s assets and not its stock. The second formal difference, according to the
Court of Appeals, was that “despite a load of debt and a dearth of cash, the
corporation [new Crown] limped along for three-and-a-half years before col-
lapsing into the arms of the bankruptcy court.” See id. at 793.
Despite the two formal differences from a conventional LBO that the Court
of Appeals found in the old Crown sale transaction, it indicated that “whether one
calls it an LBO or not is not critical”. However, the Court of Appeals indicated
that “if one has to call the overall [old Crown sale] transaction something, the
something is an LBO.” Id. at 787. What was critical to the Court of Appeals was
determining when an LBO is legitimate and when it is a fraudulent transfer. The
Court of Appeals observed that, in making that determination with respect to the
- 188 -
[*188] old Crown sale transaction, it must bear in mind that the “‘[f]raudulent
conveyance doctrine . . . is a flexible principle that looks to substance, rather than
form, and protects creditors from any transactions the debtor engages in that have
the effect of impairing their rights, while ensuring that the debtor can continue to
do business and assuring third parties that transactions done with the debtor at
arm’s length will not be second-guessed’.” Boyer, 587 F.3d at 787 (alteration in
Boyer) (quoting Baird, supra, at 153-154). As far as the Court of Appeals was
concerned, if the preclosing dividend distributions were “part and parcel of the
transaction that fatally depleted new Crown’s assets, it was part and parcel of a
fraudulent conveyance.” Id. at 793.
The Court of Appeals then addressed whether there was any significance to
the first formal difference between the old Crown sale transaction and a conven-
tional LBO in which the stock, and not the assets, of a corporation is purchased.
The court dismissed that formal difference as “of no conceivable significance”,
pointing out that an LBO can also take the form of an asset purchase. See id. at
793. The Court of Appeals explained that although the acquisition was “nomi-
nally of the assets of old Crown * * * [, it was] actually of the ownership of the
company; for old Crown distributed the money it received in the sale forthwith to
its shareholders and from then on existed only as a shell.” Id. at 793-794. The
- 189 -
[*189] Court of Appeals continued its explanation and stated: “New Crown
operated under the same name as its predecessor, and its trade creditors and other
unsecured creditors were not even told about the transaction. That reticence
would be normal if the stock of a corporation were sold, rather than its assets; but
in a sale of its assets, the seller’s creditors would expect to be notified that they
would henceforth be dealing with a different firm.” Id. at 794.
The Court of Appeals next addressed what it had called the second formal
difference between the old Crown sale transaction and a conventional LBO, i.e.,
“despite a load of debt and a dearth of cash, the corporation limped along for
three-and-a-half years before collapsing into the arms of the bankruptcy court.”
See id. at 793. The court first explained that a company might be insolvent, that is
to say, it liabilities exceeded its assets, and nonetheless might continue to operate
as long as it was able to raise enough money to pay its debts as they became due,
or perhaps longer if its creditors were forbearing. However, the Court of Appeals
concluded that that was not the financial situation in which new Crown found
itself as a result of the terms of the old Crown sale transaction. According to the
court, that sale transaction reduced new Crown’s ability to borrow on favorable
terms because, in order to buy old Crown’s assets, new Crown had encumbered all
of the assets of old Crown that new Crown owned after that transaction as
- 190 -
[*190] collateral for the money that it borrowed to make that purchase. Moreover,
the Court of Appeals continued, “new Crown was forced to engage in continual
borrowing during its remaining life, and on unfavorable terms.” Boyer, 587 F.3d
at 794. That was because, according to the Court of Appeals, most of old Crown’s
cash had been committed to making the preclosing dividend distributions to the
old Crown stockholders and the postclosing note payments to old Crown and to
paying almost $500,000 annually in order to service the note to the bank repre-
senting the loan that financed its purchase of the old Crown assets. The Court of
Appeals pointed out that seven months before it began bankruptcy proceedings
new Crown had “run up $8.3 million in debt and its assets were worth less than
half that amount.” Id. As far as the court was concerned, new Crown had made
payments and incurred obligations because of the old Crown sale trans-action for
which it received nothing in return except the $500 capital contribution of its sole
stockholder and certainly did not receive “reasonably equivalent value”. As a
result, the Court of Appeals found that even if new Crown was not in fact in-
solvent when it started its business after the old Crown sale transaction, it “began
life with ‘unreasonably small’ assets given the nature of its business.” Id. The
court emphasized that it was this difference between insolvency on the day an
LBO is effected and having at that time such meager, i.e., “unreasonably small”,
- 191 -
[*191] assets that bankruptcy is “a consequence both likely and foreseeable” that
is the difference between insolvency and “unreasonably small” assets in the LBO
context. Id. The Court of Appeals found that new Crown “was naked to any fi-
nancial storms that might assail it” because of its commitments as a result of the
old Crown sale transaction. The court thus affirmed the bankruptcy court’s find-
ing that new Crown survived for three and a half years after the old Crown sale
transaction “only on ‘life support’”. Id. at 794-795. Consequently, the Court of
Appeals held that “the statutory condition for a fraudulent conveyance [under Ind.
Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-14(2)] was satisfied--or so at least the bankruptcy judge
could and did find without committing a clear error.”137 Id. at 795.
The Court of Appeals then turned to the preclosing dividend distributions,
which the lower courts (i.e., the bankruptcy court and the District Court), having
rejected the trustee’s substance over form theory, had found were payments made
by old Crown before that transactions closed and thus were not transfers under the
137
The Court of Appeals had observed earlier in Boyer that a corporate
transfer is fraudulent within the meaning of Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-14(2),
“even if there is no fraudulent intent, if the corporation didn’t receive ‘reasonably
equivalent value’ in return for the transfer and as a result was left with insufficient
assets to have a reasonable chance of surviving indefinitely.” Boyer, 587 F.3d at
792 (citing Rose v. Mercantile Nat’l Bank of Hammond, 844 N.E.2d 1035, 1054
(Ind. Ct. App. 2006), vacated in part on other grounds, 868 N.E.2d 772 (Ind.
2007)).
- 192 -
[*192] Indiana UFTA by new Crown, the debtor, to those stockholders. The Court
of Appeals found that those distributions were “an integral part of the LBO”. In so
finding, the court pointed out that dividends are rare for family-owned companies
like old Crown, that they represented 50 percent of its profits for the year before
the old Crown sale transaction closed, which was unreasonably large given that
company’s cash needs, and that the old Crown stockholders had thereby drained
old Crown of its cash, a fact which was not known by its then current and future
unsecured creditors. See Boyer, 587 F.3d at 794. From those findings, the Court
of Appeals held: “These indications that the dividend was part of the fraudulent
transfer rather than a normal distribution of previously earned profits--that it
wasn’t an ordinary dividend but rather the withdrawal of an asset vital to the
acquiring firm [new Crown, the debtor]--were sufficient to place a burden on * * *
[old Crown and the old Crown stockholders] of producing evidence that it was a
bona fide dividend, a burden they failed to carry.” Id. at 796.
In so holding with respect to the preclosing dividend distributions, the Court
of Appeals did not first impose, let alone make any reference to, the knowledge
requirement that petitioners argue is a prerequisite under the Indiana UFTA before
it is permissible to apply equitable principles to determine whether in the SPR sale
transaction under the SPRA there was a transfer under the Indiana UFTA of FFI’s
- 193 -
[*193] property to each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser.
In fact, the knowledge requirement that petitioners urge we adopt for purposes of
the Indiana UFTA here was not satisfied in Boyer as to any of the old Crown
stockholders except Mr. Stroup II. As discussed previously, the bankruptcy court
expressly had found when it was considering the so-called good faith defense
under 11 U.S.C. sec. 550(b) raised by the old Crown stockholders that the old
Crown stockholders did not have a “high degree of involvement in the transaction
or his [Mr. Stroup II] knowledge of its details.” In re Crown Unlimited Mach.,
Inc., 2006 WL 6401548, at *14. The bankruptcy court further found that “it
appears that they [old Crown stockholders except Mr. Stroup II] were more or less
content to let Mr. Stroup II make the necessary decisions and run things.” Id.
Accordingly, the bankruptcy court found that those stockholders “had no reason to
know of the possibly fraudulent nature of the transaction that resulted in the dis-
tributions they received”. Id. The Court of Appeals did not disturb those findings
of the bankruptcy court.138
Several years after the Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit decided
Boyer, 587 F.3d 787, it again was asked in Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d
138
The District Court also did not disturb the findings of the bankruptcy
court regarding the lack of knowledge and thus good faith of the old Crown stock-
holders except Mr. Stroup II. See Boyer, 2009 WL 418275.
- 194 -
[*194] 448, whether the creditor there (the Commissioner) was required to satisfy
the knowledge requirement before the court would use applicable State law
equitable principles (namely, Wisconsin substance over form principles) in
determining whether under the applicable State’s (namely, Wisconsin’s) UFTA
there was a transfer of the debtor’s property to the debtor’s stockholders in the sale
transaction involved in that case. See id. at 459. Consistent with what it had
implicitly found in Boyer, 587 F.3d at 787, under the law in Indiana, including the
Indiana UFTA, the Court of Appeals explicitly held that under the law of
Wisconsin, including the Wisconsin UFTA, “due diligence and lack of knowledge
of illegality is simply beside the point” in determining whether the sale transaction
involved in that case could be “recast” or “recharacterized” under the Wisconsin
UFTA as a transfer by the debtor to its stockholders. See Feldman v.
Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 459-460.
In rejecting the knowledge requirement in Feldman, the Court of Appeals
relied on Badger State Bank v. Taylor, 688 N.W.2d 439, 447-449 (Wis. 2004).
See Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 459. According to the Court of
Appeals, “[t]he Wisconsin Supreme Court has explained that subjective intent and
good faith play no role in the application of the constructive-fraud provisions of
- 195 -
[*195] Wisconsin’s UFTA.” (Badger conclusion)139 Id. We have found no
jurisdiction that has enacted the UFTA which has rejected the principle embodied
in the Badger conclusion.140 To the contrary, we have found authority indicating
that the Badger conclusion under the Wisconsin UFTA that the Wisconsin
Supreme Court articulated in Badger State Bank is generally accepted by the State
of Indiana as well as other jurisdictions that have enacted the UFTA.
In Manning v. Wallace (In re First Fin. Assocs., Inc.), 371 B.R. 877, 899
(Bankr. N.D. Ind. 2007), involving, inter alia, the constructive fraud provisions of
the Indiana UFTA, the bankruptcy court concluded that “[a] ‘constructively fraud-
ulent conveyance’ * * * [under the Indiana UFTA] has nothing to do with the
intent or motivation surrounding the transfer. Instead, its fraudulent nature is
determined solely by the circumstances of the transaction itself.”141
139
In Badger State Bank v. Taylor, 688 N.W.2d 439, 447-449 (Wis. 2004),
the Wisconsin Supreme Court did not have before it the issue of whether to
“recast” or “recharacterize” a transaction under the Wisconsin UFTA when it
reached the Badger conclusion as restated by the Court of Appeals in Feldman and
quoted in the text.
140
We are persuaded that if the Court of Appeals had believed that other
jurisdictions had rejected the Badger conclusion, it would have expressly so stated.
It did not. See Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 459-460.
141
As was true of the Wisconsin Supreme Court in Badger State Bank, 688
N.W.2d 439, the bankruptcy court did not have before it in Manning v. Wallace
(continued...)
- 196 -
[*196] Moreover, the holding of the Court of Appeals in Boyer that there
were transfers from new Crown, the debtor, to the old Crown stockholders under
the Indiana UFTA when they received the preclosing dividend distributions neces-
sarily was premised on that court’s belief that subjective intent and good faith
have no role in the application of the constructive fraud provisions of the Indiana
UFTA.142 See Boyer, 587 F.3d at 796; see also Nesco, Inc. v. Cisco, No. CV 205-
142, 2005 WL 2493353 (S.D. Ga. Oct. 7, 2005) (involving Georgia UFTA); Inter-
pool Ltd. v. Patterson, 890 F. Supp. 259, 268 n.7 (S.D.N.Y. 1995) (involving
Florida UFTA); In re Petters Co. Inc., 494 B.R. 413, 432, n.25 (Bankr. D. Minn.
2013) (involving Minnesota UFTA); Rose v. Mercantile Nat’l Bank of Hammond,
141
(...continued)
(In re First Fin. Assocs. Inc.), 371 B.R. 877 (Bankr. N.D. Ind. 2007), the issue of
whether to “recast” or “recharacterize” a transaction under the Indiana UFTA
when it reached the conclusion quoted in the text.
142
As discussed above, the Court of Appeals (and the District Court) did not
disturb the express findings of the bankruptcy court, when it was considering the
so-called good faith defense under 11 U.S.C. sec. 550(b) raised by the old Crown
stockholders, that the old Crown stockholders (except Mr. Stroup II) did not have
a “high degree of involvement in the transaction or his [Mr. Stroup II] knowledge
of its details.” In re Crown Unlimited Mach., Inc., 2006 WL 6401548, at *14.
Nor did the Court of Appeals (or the District Court) disturb the bankruptcy court’s
express findings that “it appears that they [old Crown stockholders except Mr.
Stroup II] were more or less content to let Mr. Stroup II make the necessary
decisions and run things”, id., and that therefore those stockholders “had no reason
to know of the possibly fraudulent nature of the transaction that resulted in the
distributions they received”, id.
- 197 -
[*197] 844 N.E.2d 1035, 1054 (Ind. Ct. App. 2006) (involving Indiana UFTA),
vacated in part on other grounds, 868 N.E.2d 772 (Ind. 2007); Orthotec, LLC v.
Healthpoint Capital, LLC, 2013 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2340, at *25 (N.Y. Sup. Ct.
2013) (involving California UFTA); Sease v. John Smith Grain Co., 479 N.E.2d
284, 287 (Ohio Ct. App. 1984) (involving Ohio UFTA);143 UFTA Prefatory Note,
7A (Part II) U.L.A. 5-6 (2006).
We conclude that the Indiana Supreme Court will not impose, and that the
Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit will hold that the Indiana Supreme Court
will not impose, the knowledge requirement before using Indiana substance over
form principles in order to determine whether FFI made a distribution or transfer
under the Indiana UFTA of its property to each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut,
and Ms. Fankhauser in the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA. See Boyer, 587
F.3d 787.
Assuming arguendo that, contrary to our holding, the Court of Appeals for
the Seventh Circuit were to conclude that the Indiana Supreme Court would im-
pose the knowledge requirement before using Indiana substance over form prin-
143
As was true of Badger State Bank, 688 N.W.2d 439, and In re First Fin.
Assocs., Inc., 371 B.R. 877, the courts in the cases in the string citation in the text
did not have before them the issue of whether to “recast” or “recharacterize” a
transaction under the applicable State UFTA. See supra notes 139 and 141.
- 198 -
[*198] ciples in order to determine whether FFI made a distribution or transfer
under the Indiana UFTA of its property to each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut,
and Ms. Fankhauser in the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA, we find on the
record before us that that requirement is satisfied with respect to each of them.
Before considering whether each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and
Ms. Fankhauser knew, or should have known (so-called constructive knowledge),
that FFI’s Federal income tax liability for its taxable year 2001 would not be paid,
we note that constructive knowledge includes so-called inquiry knowledge. See
Diebold Found., Inc. v. Commissioner, 736 F.3d 172, 187-190 (2d Cir. 2013)
(involving New York UFCA), vacating and remanding Salus Mundi Found. v.
Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2012-61; Starnes v. Commissioner, 680 F.3d at 434
(involving the North Carolina UFTA). A transferee has inquiry knowledge where
the transferee was “aware of circumstances that should have led * * * [the trans-
feree] to inquire further into the circumstances of the transaction, but * * * failed
to make such inquiry.” HBE Leasing Corp., 48 F.3d at 636 (involving the New
York UFCA); see Diebold Found., Inc. v. Commissioner, 736 F.3d at 187. As the
Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit stated in Diebold Found., Inc. v. Commis-
sioner, 736 F.3d at 190:
- 199 -
[*199] [W]hen entering into a particular transaction for the express purpose of
limiting--or altogether avoiding--tax liability, parties are all the more
likely to have this duty to inquire. In such cases, the surround-ing
circumstances always include a deliberate effort to avoid liability, and
it would be the very rare case indeed where a purchasing party would
assume such liability without an appropriate discount in the sale
price. In such scenarios, being aware that this is the case, parties
have a duty “to inquire further into the circumstances of the trans-
action.” [Citation omitted.]
There is some ambiguity with respect to the precise test for constructive
knowledge in that certain courts define that term as the knowledge that ordinary
diligence would have elicited, while other courts require a more active avoidance
of the truth. See id. at 187. Because we find that each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr.
Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser had constructive knowledge under either of those
tests, we need not, and do not, resolve which test to apply in these cases.
In order to determine whether each of the FFI stockholders had constructive
knowledge, including inquiry knowledge, that FFI’s Federal income tax liability
for its taxable year 2001 would not be paid, we must examine all of the facts and
circumstances. See id. at 187-188. We start with the failure on the part of the FFI
stockholders, as well as Mr. Thrapp, to learn anything about the tax strategy of
MidCoast in addition to what they understood the results of that tax strategy
would be for FFI; namely, FFI’s total anticipated 2001 tax liability of
$1,026,100.69 would not be paid but would be deferred. Neither the FFI stock-
- 200 -
[*200] holders nor Mr. Thrapp saw any need to, and did not, press MidCoast’s
representatives regarding the details of its tax strategy, its acquisition strategy, and
its asset recovery business, all of which they understood were inextricably inter-
twined. Nor did the FFI stockholders or Mr. Thrapp see any need to, or in fact,
inquire through their respective contacts whether there were persons who were not
employed by MidCoast or by Ice Miller and who might be familiar with Mid-
Coast’s tax strategy, acquisition methodology, and its asset recovery business.
The only reason offered at trial why none of the FFI stockholders, or Mr.
Thrapp, made any inquiries regarding MidCoast’s tax strategy was that they
understood that that strategy was proprietary and that consequently MidCoast
would not share any details about it with them. Petitioners proffered that explan-
ation even though Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser knew,
directly or through Mr. Thrapp, that MidCoast’s pricing in its acquisition meth-
odology was inextricably intertwined with its tax strategy. Mr. Fankhauser, Mr.
Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser, as well as Mr. Thrapp, knew that the transactions
that MidCoast had proposed in the letter of intent and to which they agreed in the
SPRA would result in their receiving a greater amount of assets--a so-called
premium--than they would receive if FFI were to liquidate and the respective
Federal and State income tax liabilities that FFI incurred as a result of the FFI
- 201 -
[*201] 2001 asset sales were paid in full. The FFI stockholders, as well as Mr.
Thrapp, also knew that the only reason that the FFI stockholders would be able to
receive such a premium was that FFI’s total anticipated 2001 tax liability of
$1,026,100.69 would not be paid. In other words, Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut,
and Ms. Fankhauser, as well as Mr. Thrapp, knew that if and only if that total
anticipated 2001 tax liability was not paid would the FFI stockholders receive the
so-called premium.
On the record before us, we find that the failure on the part of the FFI stock-
holders, as well as Mr. Thrapp, to learn anything about the tax strategy of Mid-
Coast, especially since they understood that the results of that tax strategy purport-
ed to be that FFI’s total anticipated 2001 tax liability of $1,026,100.69 would not
be paid but would be deferred, was willful and unreasonable.144 On that record,
we further find that that failure was an attempt on their part to avoid making any
inquiries that would raise red flags.
We turn next to the failure on the part of the FFI stockholders, as well as
Mr. Thrapp, to make inquiries about the unusual pricing methodology that Mid-
144
That MidCoast considered its tax strategy to be proprietary and thus
would not be disclosed to them was a red flag, not a reason to make no inquiries
regarding that strategy.
- 202 -
[*202] Coast intended to use, which they understood MidCoast had used in the
past in establishing the purchase price for its acquisition of the stock of C corpora-
tions. The FFI stockholders, as well as Mr. Thrapp, understood that pursuant to
MidCoast’s pricing methodology the purchase price that it was willing to pay was
calculated by using a percentage of the total of the acquired C corporation’s
Federal income tax liability and State income tax liability, which varied from
acquisition to acquisition but was within a range that MidCoast had established.
In these cases, Mr. Fankhauser and Mr. Weintraut were experienced businessmen
who owned and operated FFI, and Mr. Thrapp was an experienced corporate and
business lawyer. In fact, Mr. Weintraut negotiated directly with MidCoast’s
representatives the percentage of the total of FFI’s Federal and State income tax
liabilities for its taxable year 2001 that MidCoast would pay to purchase the stock
of the FFI stockholders. In doing so, Mr. Weintraut attempted to have MidCoast
agree to pay a percentage that was at the high end of the range of percentages to
which he understood MidCoast had agreed in the past as part of its acquisition
methodology. After some negotiation, the purchase price to which the FFI
stockholders and MidCoast agreed was $530,766.15.145 Each of Mr. Fankhauser,
145
The purchase price of $530,766.15 that Mr. Weintraut negotiated with
MidCoast’s representatives was equal to the total (i.e., $1,033,555.49) of FFI’s
(continued...)
- 203 -
[*203] Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser, as well as Mr. Thrapp, should have
known, and would have known, as discussed below, if the FFI stockholders had
retained a tax professional, that a buyer interested in purchasing the stock of a C
corporation that had substantial total Federal and State income tax liabilities
would usually discount the amount that it would be willing to pay to buy the stock
of such a corporation in order to take account of those liabilities, not pay the
premium that they knew they would receive if they were to enter into the trans-
actions that MidCoast proposed.
On the record before us, we find that the failure on the part of the FFI
stockholders, as well as Mr. Thrapp, to make inquiries about the unusual pricing
methodology that MidCoast intended to use was willful and unreasonable. On that
record, we further find that that failure was an attempt on their part to avoid mak-
ing any inquiries that would raise red flags.
We consider now the failure on the part of the FFI stockholders to make
inquiries regarding the tax consequences to them and FFI from the transactions
that MidCoast had proposed by retaining a tax professional to advise them and FFI
145
(...continued)
cash of $875,855.49 and the right to a refund of the FFI State 2001 income tax
payments of $157,700, which FFI would be considered to have as of the closing of
the SPR redemption transaction under the SPRA, reduced by 49 percent (i.e., by
$502,789.34) of FFI’s total anticipated 2001 tax liability of $1,026,100.69.
- 204 -
[*204] with respect to those transactions. They failed to do so even though FFI
had retained tax professionals over the years to provide it with tax advice with
respect to certain matters. Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser
offer as an explanation for that failure that at no time after MidCoast proposed the
transactions in the letter of intent and before the closing of the transactions under
the SPRA did Mr. Thrapp or Mr. Hupfer with Ice Miller or Mr. Burns or Mr.
Vernick with the Katz accounting firm inform FFI and the FFI stockholders about
possible tax problems associated with those transactions. Nor did Mr. Thrapp, Mr.
Hupfer, Mr. Burns, or Mr. Vernick recommend to FFI and the FFI stockholders
that they retain any tax professional to provide advice with respect to the trans-
actions that MidCoast had proposed and the transaction to which they agreed in
the SPRA. Petitioners’ explanation as to why they did not retain a tax professional
rings hollow. The record does not establish that any of the professionals who were
advising and working with the FFI stockholders and FFI regarding the MidCoast
proposed transactions was a tax professional. Consequently, we believe that,
unlike a tax professional, none of them would have been aware of, and sensitive
to, any potential tax problems that MidCoast’s proposed transactions and the
transactions to which the FFI stockholders and FFI agreed in the SPRA posed to
those stockholders and that corporation. Moreover, we believe that if the FFI
- 205 -
[*205] stockholders had attempted to retain a tax professional, they probably
would have been able to retain one who was familiar with MidCoast and the
transactions with C corporations in which it had engaged in the past and which it
continued to promote in its promotional materials. We also believe, as discussed
above, that if the FFI stockholders had retained a tax professional, that
professional would have advised them that a buyer interested in purchasing the
stock of a C corporation that had substantial total Federal and State income tax
liabilities would usually discount the amount that it would be willing to pay to buy
the stock of such a corporation in order to take account of those liabilities, not pay
a premium.
On the record before us, we find that the failure on the part of the FFI stock-
holders to make inquiries regarding the tax consequences to them and FFI from
the transactions that MidCoast had proposed by retaining a tax professional to
advise them and FFI with respect to those transactions was willful and unreason-
able. On that record, we further find that that failure was an attempt on their part
to avoid receiving any tax advice that would raise red flags.
We address next the failure on the part of the FFI stockholders, as well as
Mr. Thrapp, to make inquiries regarding how MidCoast’s planned operation of its
asset recovery business in FFI would result in FFI’s not paying but deferring FFI’s
- 206 -
[*206] total anticipated 2001 tax liability of $1,026,100.69. Each of Mr. Fank-
hasuer, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhasuer knew, as did Mr. Thrapp, that as of the
closing of the respective transactions on December 20, 2001, FFI had no opera-
tions, no employees engaged in operations, no income, and no operational assets.
Each of them also knew, as did Mr. Thrapp, that on December 20, 2001, after the
SPR transactions closed simultaneously at 11:59 p.m., FFI had (1) assets totaling
$502,789.34, which consisted of cash of $345,089.34 and the right to a refund of
$157,700 of State 2001 income tax payments, and (2) anticipated Federal income
tax liabilities and anticipated State income tax liabilities totaling $1,026,100.69, or
a negative net asset value of $523,311.35.146
In addition, each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser
understood, as did Mr. Thrapp, that MidCoast through FFIA was purporting to
purchase their FFI stock so that MidCoast would be able to use FFI’s cash in order
to buy charged-off debt securities that MidCoast intended to use in its so-called
146
The FFI stockholders also knew, as did Mr. Thrapp, that after the SPR
transactions under the SPRA closed, they would have, through their respective
ownership interests in FFW, the right to a refund of the Federal income tax pay-
ments of $628,592 that FFI had made during 2001 as payments toward FFI’s
anticipated 2001 Federal income tax liability of $794,949.13. In addition, after the
SPR transactions under the SPRA closed, FFI would have the right to a refund of
the State 2001 income tax payments of $157,700 that FFI had made during 2001
as payments toward FFI’s anticipated 2001 State income tax liability of
$231,151.56. See supra notes 34 and 100.
- 207 -
[*207] asset recovery business. However, each of the FFI stockholders also knew,
as did Mr. Thrapp, that MidCoast through FFIA agreed in the SPRA to pay them
$530,766.15 in cash for their FFI stock and that as of the closing of the SPR trans-
actions FFI (FFIA’s designee) was to receive only $502,789.34 (i.e., cash of
$345,089.34 and the right to a refund of the FFI State 2001 income tax payments
of $157,700). In other words, each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms.
Fankhauser knew, as did Mr. Thrapp, that MidCoast through FFIA agreed in the
SPRA to pay $530,766.15 in cash in return for only $502,789.34, which MidCoast
purportedly would use in the asset recovery business that it was to operate in FFI.
The financial terms of the SPR transactions, on their face, made no business sense
for MidCoast’s alleged operation of its assets recovery business in FFI and cried
out for an explanation.
Inquiries by the FFI stockholders, or by Mr. Thrapp, about MidCoast’s
plans for the operation of its asset recovery business in FFI would have disclosed
that MidCoast intended for FFI to engage in a transaction within approximately
one week after the closing on December 20, 2001, of the SPR transactions. In that
transaction, FFI was to sell at a very substantial claimed loss certain T-bills that
were to be contributed to it by a company, FFI Financial, that FFIA and Willows
Holdings had formed on the day after that closing. That T-bill transaction, on its
- 208 -
[*208] face, appeared to be inconsistent with MidCoast’s purported intention to
operate its asset recovery business in FFI by having FFI acquire charged-off debt
securities for use in such a business.147 In other words, that transaction raised
another red flag. But because neither the FFI stockholders nor Mr. Thrapp ever
asked about MidCoast’s plans for the operation of its asset recovery business in
FFI, they did not know about the T-bill transaction. If they had known about that
transaction, the FFI stockholders, or Mr. Thrapp, could have then asked what the
planned acquisition and the planned sale of T-bills at the end of 2001 had to do
with acquiring charged-off debt securities for use in the asset recovery business in
147
Included in the representations which were made for purposes of the
Manatt opinion letter and on which Manatt relied for purposes of the opinions
expressed in that letter, including that “the carryover tax basis for Subsidiary [FFI]
was $2,962,960 for the Treasury Bills Parent [FII Financial] contributed to
Subsidiary” were the following representations:
Both Parent and Subsidiary entered into the Contribution principally
with a view toward making an economic profit apart from tax con-
sequences. The Contribution will strengthen the balance sheet of
Subsidiary in preparation for Subsidiary entering into a new line of
business. Subsidiary also will use pre-Contribution assets in its new
business. The new business is that Subsidiary will purchase port-
folios of credit card receivables and collect those receivables.
***
The above-quoted representations are inconsistent with FFI’s acquisition from FFI
Financial of certain T-bills as well as its sale of those T-bills within days after
acquiring them at a very substantial claimed loss.
- 209 -
[*209] which they understood MidCoast intended FFI to engage. The answer to
that question would have been nothing, thereby raising an additional red flag.
The FFI stockholders, as well as Mr. Thrapp, also could have asked about
how the expected significant loss from the sale of the T-bills was calculated. They
would have learned that the value of the T-bills was $8,000 and that the very sub-
stantial loss that FFI was to claim in its tax return for its taxable year 2001 was
premised on the representation, inter alia, by Mr. Bernstein and other interested
persons that the basis of the T-bills was $2,962,960. In addition, the FFI stock-
holders and Mr. Thrapp would have learned, if they had asked, that FFI intended
to use the very significant claimed loss from the sale of the T-bills to re-duce the
significant gains that FFI had realized from the FFI 2001 asset sales. If the FFI
stockholders had retained a tax professional before committing in the SPRA to the
transactions that MidCoast proposed in the letter of intent, we believe that any
such tax professional would have raised serious concerns regarding the propriety
of that significant claimed T-bill loss and would have wanted to make further
inquiries about how and why Mr. Bernstein and others were able to represent that
the T-bills had a basis of $2,962,960. If the FFI stockholders, or Mr. Thrapp, had
inquired about how FFI’s basis in the T-bills was determined, the answer could
have raised more danger signals.
- 210 -
[*210] On the record before us, we find that the failure on the part of the FFI
stock-holders, as well as Mr. Thrapp, to make inquiries regarding how MidCoast’s
planned operation of its asset recovery business in FFI would result in FFI’s not
paying but deferring FFI’s total anticipated 2001 tax liability of $1,026,100.69
was willful and unreasonable. On that record, we further find that that failure was
an attempt on their part to avoid making any inquiries that would raise red flags.
We turn now to the failure on the part of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut,
and Ms. Fankhauser, as well as Mr. Thrapp, to make inquiries or conduct due
diligence regarding FFIA, MidCoast’s designee as the purported purchaser of the
FFI stock from the FFI stockholders. Each was them knew, or should have known
through due diligence,148 that FFIA was created by Mr. Bernstein on December 18,
148
The FFI stockholders did not personally undertake any due diligence on
behalf of FFI or themselves with respect to the transactions that MidCoast had
proposed in the letter of intent. Instead, the FFI stockholders relied on Mr. Thrapp
to conduct due diligence with respect to those transactions. Mr. Thrapp spent
some time performing a limited amount of due diligence on behalf of FFI and the
FFI stockholders that consisted for the most part of reviewing certain promotional
materials that MidCoast had prepared. Mr. Thrapp did not perform due diligence
with respect to FFIA that MidCoast designated to serve as the purchaser of the
stock of the FFI stockholders. Mr. Thrapp claimed to have believed that the
limited amount of due diligence that he performed was adequate taking into
account the information and the circumstances with respect to the transactions that
MidCoast had proposed in the letter of intent and the signatories to that letter
about which he had knowledge or an understanding. Mr. Thrapp further claimed
to have believed that the knowledge and the understanding that he had with
(continued...)
- 211 -
[*211] 2001, a few days before the parties were to execute the SPRA and effect
the transactions to which they had agreed therein. FFIA had no assets when it
agreed to the SPRA on December 20, 2001, apparently not even the $1,000 of
capital that Mr. Bernstein was supposed to have contributed to it. Nonetheless,
petitioners and Mr. Thrapp want us to believe that they were willing to rely on the
covenants, the representations, and the warranties of FFIA because of the indem-
nification obligations of FFIA in the event of any breaches of any of those cove-
nants, representations, and/or warranties. We refuse to do so. Because of its
financial condition, we believe, and so should have the FFI stockholders and Mr.
Thrapp, that FFIA would not have been able to satisfy any financial obligations
resulting from those covenants, representations, and/or warranties.
On the record before us, we find that the failure on the part of the FFI stock-
holders, as well as Mr. Thrapp, to make inquiries or conduct due diligence regard-
148
(...continued)
respect to the transactions that MidCoast had proposed in the letter of intent and
the signatories to that letter enabled him to determine and to assess the risks that
he concluded those transactions posed to his clients, FFI and the FFI stockholders.
Mr. Thrapp claimed to have held those beliefs even though (1) he did not know
any of the details of MidCoast’s acquisition methodology, its asset recovery
business, or its tax strategy, (2) he was not a tax professional and thus was not
qualified to know of, or be sensitive to, any tax risks associated with those
transactions, and (3) he knew that the funds that were to be provided by Ms.
Shapiro to MidCoast in order to effect the acquisition of the FFI stock were to be
returned to her as of the closing of that transaction.
- 212 -
[*212] ing FFIA, MidCoast’s designee as the purported purchaser of the FFI stock
from the FFI stockholders, was willful and unreasonable. On that record, we
further find that that failure was an attempt on their part to avoid making any
inquiries that would raise red flags.
We turn finally to the failure on the part of the FFI stockholders, as well as
Mr. Thrapp, to make any inquiries regarding the so-called loan by Ms. Shapiro of
$550,000 to FFIA (MidCoast’s designee), which, according to the terms of the
SPRA, FFIA was to use to purchase the FFI stock. Each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr.
Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser, each of whom had signed the SPRA, the SPRA
escrow agreement to which the Shapiro escrow agreement was attached, and the
cash reconciliation agreement which also was attached to the SPRA escrow agree-
ment, as well as Mr. Thrapp, knew that that purported loan of Ms. Shapiro was not
evidenced by a promissory note or other written document and did not bear inter-
est. Each of the FFI stockholders, as well as Mr. Thrapp, also knew that that
purported loan by Ms. Shapiro was to be deemed repaid as of the closing of the
transactions under the SPRA, which was deemed to occur simultaneously pursuant
to that agreement.149 Morever, each of them knew, as did Mr. Thrapp, that
149
Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser also knew that
because the SPR transactions closed simultaneously at 11:59 p.m. on December
(continued...)
- 213 -
[*213] pursuant to the SPRA and the related agreements FFI was to deposit
$875,855.49 into the Leagre escrow account on December 20, 2001, and that FFI
as FFI’s designee was to receive only $345,089.34 from that escrow account as of
the closing of the transactions under the SPRA at 11:59 p.m. on December 20,
2001.150 Each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser also knew,
as did Mr. Thrapp, that the difference between the amount that FFI was to deposit
into the Leagre escrow account (i.e., $875,855.49) and the amount that FFI as
FFIA’s designee was to receive from that escrow account (i.e., $345,089.34) was
equal to $530,766.15. Each of the FFI stockholders knew, as did Mr. Thrapp, that
that difference was equal to the amount of the purchase price that they were to
receive for their FFI stock under the SPRA from, according to the terms of that
agreement, FFIA.
149
(...continued)
20, 2001, the wire transfer from the Leagre escrow account to Ms. Shapiro’s bank
account of $550,000 and the wire transfers from that same Leagre escrow account
to their respective bank accounts of their proportionate portions of the purchase
price for their FFI stock were not to occur until the day after the closing of those
transactions.
150
As was true of the respective wire transfers to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr.
Weintraut, Ms. Fankhauser, and Ms. Shapiro, FFI received a wire transfer on the
day after the closing.
- 214 -
[*214] Moreover, each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fank-
hauser knew, as did Mr. Thrapp, or should have known, as Mr. Thrapp should
have known, that Ms. Shapiro’s so-called loan of $550,000 to FFIA was not
needed or used in order to effect the purchase of the FFI stock under the SPRA
and that that so-called loan was mere window dressing designed to make it appear
that FFIA, not FFI, was providing the funds to be paid to them for the transfer of
their FFI stock to FFIA. In other words, each of the FFI stockholders knew, as did
Mr. Thrapp, or should have known, as Mr. Thrapp should have known, that Ms.
Shapiro’s so-called loan of $550,000 to FFIA was devoid of any economic sub-
stance--a sham that was designed and intended to make it appear as though FFIA,
not FFI, was providing the funds to be paid to the FFI stockholders for the transfer
of their FFI stock to FFIA. Moreover, each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and
Ms. Fankhauser knew, as did Mr. Thrapp, or should have known, as Mr. Thrapp
should have known, that the source of the funds that they were to receive for the
transfer of their FFI stock to FFIA was FFI, not FFIA. That is to say, each of the
FFI stockholders, as well as Mr. Thrapp, knew, or should have known, that FFI,
not FFIA, was to, and did, pay each of those stockholders each such stockholder’s
proportionate portion of the so-called purchase price (i.e., $530,766.15) that each
was to, and did, receive under the SPRA.
- 215 -
[*215] On the record before us, we find that the failure on the part of the FFI
stockholders, as well as Mr. Thrapp, to make inquiries regarding the so-called loan
by Ms. Shapiro of $550,000 to FFIA (MidCoast’s designee), which, according to
the terms of the SPRA, FFIA was to use to purchase the FFI stock was willful and
unreasonable. On that record, we further find that that failure was an attempt on
their part to avoid making any inquiries that would raise red flags.
Based upon of our examination of all the facts and circumstances that we
have found in these cases, we find that each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut,
and Ms. Fankhauser, as well as Mr. Thrapp, willfully and unreasonably avoided
making inquiries that they should have made with respect to the transactions
which MidCoast proposed and the transactions to which they agreed in the SPRA.
We believe that the FFI stockholders instead succumbed to the allure of receiving
a so-called premium from those transactions that MidCoast held out enticingly to
them, even though they knew that that premium would be paid only if FFI’s total
anticipated 2001 tax liability of $1,026,100.69 was not paid.
On the basis of all of the relevant facts and circumstances, we find that each
of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser had inquiry, and thus con-
structive, knowledge that MidCoast intended to implement a scheme that would
leave FFI without sufficient assets to satisfy FFI’s total anticipated 2001 tax
- 216 -
[*216] liability of $1,026,100.69. On the basis of those facts and circumstances,
we further find that each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser
knew, or should have known (i.e., had constructive knowledge), that FFI’s Federal
income tax liability for its taxable year 2001 would not be paid. To find otherwise
would, we believe, “bless the willful blindness [of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut,
and Ms. Fankhauser, as well as their attorney, Mr. Thrapp] the constructive knowl-
edge test was designed to root out.” Diebold Found., Inc. v. Commissioner, 736
F.3d at 189-190.
We address now whether under the Indiana UFTA in substance FFI made a
distribution or transfer of its property to each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut,
and Ms. Fankhauser in the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA. In making that
determination, we rely on Indiana substance over form principles and, in the alter-
native, on the Indiana sham transaction doctrine. We consider each of Indiana
substance over form principles and the Indiana sham transaction doctrine, al-
though closely related and overlapping in material respects, to be an independent
or alternative basis under which we shall reach our ultimate findings as to that
issue under the Indiana UFTA.
We restate initially that we concluded above, and the parties agree, that the
definition of the term “transfer” in the Indiana UFTA, like the definition of that
- 217 -
[*217] term in the Wisconsin UFTA, is very broad.151 Moreover, we concluded
above, and the parties agree, that Indiana courts, like Wisconsin courts, use
Indiana substance over form principles in a variety of contexts, most notably
including tax cases.152 Under Indiana substance over form principles, as under
Wisconsin substance over form principles, it is the substance, not the form, of a
transaction which is controlling.153
With respect to the Indiana sham transaction doctrine, Indiana courts allow
a transaction to be disregarded as a sham in a variety of contexts, including tax
cases. See, e.g., Belterra Resort Ind., LLC, 935 N.E.2d at 179 (citing Gregory v.
Helvering, 293 U.S. at 469-470); Long v. State, 666 N.E.2d 1258, 1261 (Ct. App.
Ind. 1996); Bedree v. Bedree, 528 N.E.2d 1128, 1131 (Ct. App. Ind. 1988);
Wallace v. Rogier, 395 N.E.2d 297, 300-301 (Ct. App. Ind. 1979).
Based upon our examination of the entire record before us, we find that, in
determining whether under the Indiana UFTA FFI made a transfer of its property
to each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser in the SPR sale
transaction under the SPRA, under each of Indiana substance over form principles
151
See supra note 121.
152
See supra note 123.
153
See supra notes 121 and 123.
- 218 -
[*218] and the Indiana sham transaction doctrine (1) Ms. Shapiro’s purported loan
here, like Ms. Shapiro’s purported loan in Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at
456, was a sham that was devoid of any economic substance; (2) the SPR sale
transaction under the SPRA, like the purported stock sale involved in Feldman v.
Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 455-457, had no nontax business purpose; (3) Ms.
Shapiro’s purported loan here, like Ms. Shapiro’s purported loan in Feldman v.
Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 456, had no nontax business purpose; (4) the SPR sale
transaction under the SPRA, like the purported stock sale involved in Feldman v.
Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 455-457, had no economic substance; (5) Ms.
Shapiro’s purported loan here, like Ms. Shapiro’s purported loan in Feldman v.
Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 456, should be disregarded; (6) the SPR sale trans-
action under the SPRA, like the purported stock sale involved in Feldman v.
Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 455-457, should be disregarded; and (7) FFI, not
FFIA, made in the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA a distribution or transfer
of its funds to each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser, like
the C corporation, not MidCoast, made to each of its stockholders in Feldman v.
Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 459, of each such stockholder’s proportionate portion
- 219 -
[*219] of the purchase price (i.e., $530,766.15) that each such stockholder was to
receive for their stock under the SPRA.154
Based upon our examination of the entire record before us, we find that
under each of Indiana substance over form principles and the Indiana sham trans-
action doctrine in substance FFI made a distribution or transfer of its property
under the Indiana UFTA to each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fank-
hauser in the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA.155 On that record, we further
find that each of them is a first transferee of property of FFI in that transaction
under Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-18(b)(1).156
154
Respondent characterizes the distributions or transfers made to the FFI
stockholders in the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA as in substance liquid-
ating distributions or transfers from FFI. We do not have to characterize those
distributions or transfers as “liquidating” or any other type of distributions or
transfers in order to conclude, as we do, that under the Indiana UFTA in substance
FFI made a distribution or transfer of its property to each of the FFI stockholders
in the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA.
155
We concluded previously that FFI made a distribution or transfer of its
property to each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser in the
SPR redemption transaction under the SPRA and that each of them is a transferee
of property of FFI with respect to that transaction for purposes of the Indiana
UFTA.
156
See infra note 159.
- 220 -
[*220] Fraudulent Transfers Under the Indiana UFTA
It is respondent’s position that FFI’s transfers of its property to each of Mr.
Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser in the SPR transactions under the
SPRA were fraudulent under each of the constructive fraud provisions of the
Indiana UFTA. Consequently, respondent maintains, each of them is liable under
the Indiana UFTA for respondent’s claim for FFI’s total liability for its taxable
year 2001, which claim consisted of a deficiency in tax of $609,037.43157 and an
accuracy-related penalty under section 6662 totaling $85,482, as well as interest
thereon as provided by law (FFI’s interest liability).158 (We shall refer to the
liability of each petitioner for FFI’s total liability for its taxable year 2001, in-
cluding FFI’s interest liability, that respondent argues each of them has under the
Indiana UFTA as transferee liability.) Respondent further maintains that, in addi-
157
Respondent alleged in the respective answers in these cases, and petition-
ers do not dispute, that the amount of FFI’s deficiency in tax for its taxable year
2001 that remains unpaid is $578,338.43.
158
Respondent did not calculate or show in the respective notices of liability
that respondent issued to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser the
amount of interest as provided by law on FFI’s 2001 tax liability. The record
otherwise establishes that as of July 7, 2009, respondent had assessed a total of
$368,990.84 of interest with respect to that liability. See discussion infra.
Respondent acknowledges on brief that each petitioner’s liability as a
transferee is limited to the net value of the assets that FFI transferred to each of
them in the SPR transactions under the SPRA. See discussion infra.
- 221 -
[*221] tion to the transferee liability of each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut,
and Ms. Fankhauser, each of them is liable for interest (transferee interest), as
provided by law.
As we understand respondent’s position, respondent maintains that respon-
dent’s claim against each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser
for FFI’s total liability for its taxable year 2001 should be analyzed as a single
claim under the constructive fraud provisions of the Indiana UFTA. In other
words, we understand respondent to be arguing that we should not analyze sepa-
rately under those constructive fraud provisions the components of FFI’s total
unpaid 2001 liability, namely, FFI’s unpaid 2001 deficiency liability and FFI’s
unpaid 2001 penalty liability. Respondent appears to acknowledge that respon-
dent’s claim for transferee interest should be analyzed separately from respon-
dent’s claim for FFI’s total unpaid 2001 liability.
Petitioners appear to disagree with respondent and counter that not only
respondent’s claim for transferee interest but also respondent’s claim for FFI’s
unpaid 2001 deficiency liability and for FFI’s unpaid 2001 penalty liability should
be analyzed separately under the constructive fraud provisions of the Indiana
UFTA. Although we do not agree with petitioners that respondent’s claim for
FFI’s unpaid 2001 deficiency liability and for FFI’s unpaid 2001 penalty liability
- 222 -
[*222] should be analyzed separately, we shall nonetheless analyze each of those
separately and explain in our consideration of FFI’s unpaid 2001 penalty liability
why we disagree with petitioners.
Respondent’s Claim for FFI’s
Unpaid 2001 Deficiency Liability
Respondent relies on each of the constructive fraud provisions in Ind. Code
Ann. secs. 32-18-2-14(2) and 32-18-2-15 in support of respondent’s claim that
each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser is liable for that
FFI’s unpaid 2001 deficiency liability.159 We address only Ind. Code Ann. sec.
32-18- 2-15. That is because our analysis under that provision resolves that issue
in respondent’s favor as to that claim.
Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-15, which applies to a creditor’s claim that
arose before the transfer was made by the debtor, provides in pertinent part:
159
If a transfer is fraudulent under Ind. Code sec. 32-18-2-14(2) or 32-18-2-
15, the transfer is voidable under Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-17(a)(1). If a
transfer is voidable under Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-17(a)(1), under Ind. Code
Ann. sec. 32-18-2-18(b)(1) “the creditor may recover judgment for the value of the
asset transferred, as adjusted under subsection (c) [Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-
2-18(c)], or the amount necessary to satisfy the creditor’s claim, whichever is
less.” That judgment “may be entered against [inter alia] * * * the first transferee
of the asset” transferred. We found above that each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Wein-
traut, and Ms. Fankhauser is a first transferee of FFI under Ind. Code Ann. sec.
32-18-2-18(b)(1).
- 223 -
[*223] A transfer made or an obligation incurred by a debtor is fraudulent
as to a creditor whose claim arose before the transfer was made or
the obligation was incurred if:
(1) the debtor made the transfer or incurred the obligation
without receiving a reasonably equivalent value in exchange for the
transfer or obligation; and
(2) the debtor:
(A) was insolvent at the time; or
(B) became insolvent as a result of the transfer or obligation.
In order to establish that the transfers that FFI made of its property to each
of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser in the SPR transactions
under the SPRA (FFI’s transfers) were fraudulent under Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-
18-2-15, respondent must show that (1) respondent had a claim for FFI’s unpaid
2001 deficiency liability before FFI made those transfers (preexisting claim re-
quirement); (2) FFI did not receive reasonably equivalent value in exchange for
FFI’s transfers (reasonably equivalent value requirement); and (3) FFI was in-
solvent at the time of, or was rendered insolvent as a result of, those transfers
(insolvency requirement).
With respect to the preexisting claim requirement, respondent maintains that
respondent’s claim for FFI’s unpaid 2001 deficiency liability “arose on the sale of
FFI’s assets, which was prior to FFI’s transfers to petitioners.” As a result,
- 224 -
[*224] respondent argues, respondent’s claim for FFI’s unpaid 2001 deficiency
liability arose before FFI’s transfers, as required by Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-
15.
Petitioners counter that “[b]ecause a tax is considered due and owing on the
required tax return filing date, Respondent’s alleged claim * * * [for FFI’s unpaid
2001 deficiency liability] did not arise until after the December 20, 2001 closing
date on [sic] the SPRA”. According to petitioners, before “the required tax return
filing date” for FFI’s 2001 Federal income tax return, its Federal income tax lia-
bility for its taxable year 2001 was “contingent”. As we understand petitioners’
argument, they acknowledge that respondent is correct that respondent’s claim for
FFI’s unpaid 2001 deficiency liability “arose on the sale of FFI’s assets, which
was prior to FFI’s transfers to petitioners”; however, they contend that that claim
was a contingent claim and thus does not qualify under Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-
2-15 as a claim of respondent that arose before those transfers.
We reject petitioners’ argument that respondent’s claim for FFI’s unpaid
2001 deficiency liability does not qualify under Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-15 as
a claim of respondent that arose before FFI’s transfers. That argument ignores the
following definition of the term “claim” for purposes of Indiana UFTA in Ind.
- 225 -
[*225] Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-3, which is virtually identical to Ind. Code Ann.
sec. 32-2-7-3 (West 2002) in effect in 2001:
As used in this chapter [Indiana UFTA], “claim” means a right to
payment, whether the right is:
(1) reduced to judgment or not;
(2) liquidated or unliquidated;
(3) fixed or contingent;
(4) matured or unmatured;
(5) disputed or undisputed;
(6) legal or not;
(7) equitable or not; or
(8) secured or unsecured.
On the record before us, we find that respondent’s claim for FFI’s unpaid
2001 deficiency liability is a contingent claim or an unmatured claim under Ind.
Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-3(3) or (4) that arose before FFI’s transfers to each of Mr.
Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser in the SPR transactions under the
SPRA. See, e.g., Feldman v. Commissioner, 779 F.3d at 460 (“asset sale--the
triggering event for the [Federal income] tax liability--occurred before the transfer
of * * * [debtor’s cash] to the [debtor’s] shareholders” for purposes of Wisconsin
- 226 -
[*226] UFTA); Stuart v. Commissioner, 144 T.C. 235, 258-259 (2015) (same
under Nebraska UFTA); Cullifer v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2014-208, at *50
(same under Texas UFTA), aff’d, F. App’x , 2016 WL 3057664, (11th Cir.
May 31, 2016). On the record before us, we further find that respondent has
satisfied the preexisting claim requirement in Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-15 with
respect to FFI’s unpaid 2001 deficiency liability.
With respect to the reasonably equivalent value requirement, petitioners do
not claim that FFI received reasonably equivalent value in exchange for FFI
transfers.
On the record before us, we find that FFI did not receive reasonably equiv-
alent value for FFI transfers. On that record, we further find that respondent has
satisfied the reasonably equivalent value requirement in Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-
18-2-15 with respect to FFI’s unpaid 2001 deficiency liability.
With respect to the insolvency requirement, respondent argues that FFI was
rendered insolvent by FFI’s transfers to each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut,
and Ms. Fankhauser in the SPR transactions under the SPRA. That is because,
according to respondent, after those transfers FFI “failed the balance sheet test for
solvency”. In support of that argument, respondent relies on Ind. Code Ann. sec.
- 227 -
[*227] 32-18-2-12(c), which provides that ‘[a] debtor is insolvent if the sum of the
debtor’s debts is greater than all of the debtor’s assets at a fair valuation.”
Petitioners counter that the SPR redemption transaction “was a condition
precedent to the sale [SPR sale transaction] of remaining stock. * * * Although
FFI transferred its interest in FFW to Petitioners in partial redemption of Peti-
tioners’ FFI stock, that transfer was not fraudulent because, after the redemption,
FFI was solvent.” The only support in the record for petitioners’ claim that the
SPR redemption transaction under the SPRA “was a condition precedent to the
sale” is the testimony of Mr. Thrapp, one of petitioners’ attorneys. The testimony
of Mr. Thrapp on which petitioners rely disregards and contradicts the terms of the
SPRA to which FFI, the FFI stockholders, and FFIA (MidCoast’s designee)
agreed. The SPRA provided in pertinent part:
Section 7.1. Simultaneous Occurrence of Events at Closing. All
of the events which are to occur at the Closing under this Agreement,
including, but not limited to, the delivery of all Share certificates and
the payment of the Purchase Price and all other related exchanges
shall be deemed to have occurred simultaneously.
- 228 -
[*228] On the record before us, we reject Mr. Thrapp’s testimony and petitioners’
argument that is premised on that testimony that the SPR redemption transaction
under the SPRA “was a condition precedent to the sale”.160
Petitioners further counter respondent’s contention that FFI was rendered
insolvent by FFI’s transfers to each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms.
Fankhauser in the SPR transactions under the SPRA by contending that “FFI
was * * * solvent immediately after closing on December 20, 2001 with
$1,095,194.08 of total assets and $1,038,026.15 of total liabilities”. It is not clear
how petitioners arrived at the conclusion that FFI had “immediately after closing
on December 20, 2001 * * * $1,095,194.08 of total assets and $1,038,026.15 of
total liabilities”. In any event, that contention is not supported by the record, and
160
Assuming arguendo that we had found that the SPR redemption trans-
action was a condition precedent to the SPR sale transaction, that finding would
not change our findings below that FFI became insolvent within the meaning of
Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-12(c) by FFI’s transfers to each of Mr. Fankhauser,
Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser in the SPR transactions under the SPRA and
that respondent has satisfied the insolvency requirement in Ind. Code Ann. sec.
32-18-2-15 with respect to FFI’s unpaid 2001 deficiency liability. The SPR
redemption transaction and the SPR sale transaction, which by the terms of the
SPRA were deemed to occur simultaneously, were inextricably related and inter-
dependent; neither transaction would have occurred unless the other occurred.
Each of those transactions under the SPRA must be considered together in deter-
mining whether FFI became insolvent within the meaning of Ind. Code Ann. sec.
32-18-2-12(c) by FFI’s transfers to each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and
Ms. Fankhauser in those transactions.
- 229 -
[*229] we reject it. We found on the record before us that on December 20, 2001,
after the SPR transactions closed simultaneously at 11:59 p.m.,161 FFI had (1)
assets totaling $502,789.34, which consisted of cash of $345,089.34 and the right
to a refund of $157,700 of State 2001 income tax payments, and (2) anticipated
Federal and State 2001 income tax liability totaling $1,026,100.69, or a negative
net asset value of $523,311.35.162
On the record before us, we find that FFI, the debtor, became insolvent
within the meaning of Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-12(c) as a result of FFI’s
transfers to each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser in the
SPR transactions under the SPRA. On that record, we further find that respon-
161
The closing of the SPR transactions under the SPRA was deemed to be
effective as of 11:59 p.m. on December 20, 2001. Moreover, the SPRA provided
that all of the events that were to occur at the closing under the SPRA, including
but not limited to, the delivery of the FFI stock certificates and the payment of the
purchase price and “all other related exchanges” were to be deemed to occur
simultaneously. Consequently, all of the distributions to FFIA (or its designee,
FFI), the FFI stockholders, and Ms. Shapiro that were required to implement the
SPRA and the related agreements (namely, the SPRA escrow agreement, the
Shapiro escrow agreement, and the cash reconciliation agreement) were deemed to
be made as of the closing of the SPRA. Because the closing was deemed to occur
as of 11:59 p.m. on December 20, 2001, those distributions were in fact made, in
most instances by wire transfers, on the day after the closing.
162
See supra note 28 regarding FFI’s bank account balance of $11,955.46,
FFI’s outstanding checks of $11,955.46, and the Prudential demutualization funds
receivable of $43,926.57 and note 50 regarding the State retail sales tax refunds of
$5,756.56.
- 230 -
[*230] dent has satisfied the insolvency requirement in Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-
2-15 with respect to FFI’s unpaid 2001 deficiency liability.
Based upon our examination of the entire record before us, we find that
FFI’s transfers to each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser in
the SPR transactions under the SPRA were fraudulent transfers under Ind. Code
Ann. sec. 32-18-2-15. On that record, we further find that each of them is liable
for FFI’s unpaid 2001 deficiency liability.163
Respondent’s Claim for FFI’s
Unpaid 2001 Penalty Liability
Before analyzing respondent’s claim for FFI’s unpaid 2001 penalty liability
under the Indiana UFTA, we will explain, as we indicated previously we would,
why we believe that respondent’s claim under the constructive fraud provisions of
the Indiana UFTA for FFI’s unpaid 2001 deficiency liability and for FFI’s unpaid
2001 penalty liability should be analyzed together, and not separately.
As discussed above, Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-3 defines the term “claim”
broadly to mean any “right to payment”, regardless of whether that right is “con-
tingent” or “unmatured”. We believe that respondent may have a claim for FFI’s
unpaid 2001 penalty liability under the Indiana UFTA regardless of whether that
163
See supra note 158.
- 231 -
[*231] penalty had been asserted at the time of FFI’s transfers to each of the FFI
stockholders in the SPR transactions under the SPRA. See Tricarichi v. Commis-
sioner, T.C. Memo. 2015-201, at *62. In addition, the Indiana UFTA does not
require that a creditor, here respondent, establish that the debt in question, here
FFI’s unpaid 2001 penalty liability, was contemplated at the time of the transfer,
here FFI’s transfers to each of the FFI stockholders. See id.
In any event, we now analyze whether each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Wein-
traut, and Ms. Fankhauser is liable under the constructive fraud provisions of the
Indiana UFTA for FFI’s unpaid 2001 penalty liability. In support of respondent’s
position that each of them is so liable, respondent relies on Estate of Glass v.
Commissioner, 55 T.C. 543, 575-576 (1970), aff’d per curiam, 453 F.2d 1375 (5th
Cir. 1972), and Lee Optical Associated Cos. Pension Plan & Tr. v. Commissioner,
T.C. Memo. 1989-152.
Petitioners counter that under Stanko v. Commissioner, 209 F.3d 1082,
1088 (8th Cir. 2000), rev’g T.C. Memo. 1996-530, none of them is liable for FFI’s
unpaid 2001 penalty liability.
We do not find any of the cases on which the parties rely in support of their
respective positions with respect to respondent’s claim for FFI’s unpaid 2001
penalty liability to be apposite or helpful in resolving whether under the Indiana
- 232 -
[*232] UFTA each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser is
liable for that penalty liability. In none of those cases did the court reach its
conclusions regarding whether the transferee was liable for additions to tax and/or
penalties on the basis of the applicable State UFTA. Indeed, in none of those
cases had the State adopted the UFTA as of the period at issue in each of those
cases. In fact, in Estate of Glass, one of those cases on which respondent relies,
the UFTA had not even been promulgated by the National Conference of Com-
missioners on Uniform State Laws at the time that case was decided, let alone as
of the period at issue in that case. Moreover, the conclusions in the cases on
which respondent relies are just that--conclusions with no reasoning which cite
other cases that state conclusions with no reasoning. Moreover, the conclusions in
the case on which petitioners rely were dependent on the Nebraska UFCA that
required the Commissioner to prove that the transfer was made with the intent to
defraud future creditors.” Stanko v. Commissioner, 209 F.3d at 1088.
We address now, without the benefit of any apposite or helpful cases cited
by the parties, the constructive fraud provision in Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-
14(2)(A) in order to determine whether each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut,
and Ms. Fankhauser is liable for FFI’s unpaid 2001 penalty liability. We address
- 233 -
[*233] only that provision because our analysis thereunder resolves that issue in
respondent’s favor as to that claim.
Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-14(2)(A), which applies to a creditor’s claim
that arose before or after the transfer was made by the debtor, provides:
A transfer made or an obligation incurred by a debtor is fraudulent as
to a creditor, whether the creditor’s claim arose before or after the
transfer was made or the obligation was incurred, if the debtor made
the transfer or incurred the obligation:
* * * * * * *
(2) without receiving a reasonably equivalent value in
exchange for the transfer or obligation, and the debtor:
(A) was engaged or was about to engage in a business or a
transaction for which the remaining assets of the debtor were
unreasonably small in relation to the business or transaction; * * *
In order to establish that FFI’s transfers to each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr.
Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser in the SPR transactions under the SPRA were
fraudulent under Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-14(2)(A), respondent must show
that (1) FFI did not receive reasonably equivalent value in exchange for those
transfers (reasonably equivalent value requirement)164 and (2) at the time of FFI’s
164
We use the same defined term “reasonably equivalent value requirement”
when referring to the requirement in Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-14(2) that we
used when referring to the requirement in Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-15. That is
because that requirement is identical in each of those provisions.
- 234 -
[*234] transfers FFI “was engaged or was about to engage in a business or a
transaction for which the remaining assets of the debtor were unreasonably small
in relation to the business or transaction” (unreasonably small asset requirement).
With respect to the reasonably equivalent value requirement in Ind. Code
Ann. sec. 32-18-2-14(2)(A), petitioners did not dispute, and we found in our con-
sideration of whether each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser
is liable for FFI’s unpaid 2001 deficiency liability, that FFI did not receive reason-
ably equivalent value for FFI transfers and that respondent satisfied the reasonably
equivalent value requirement in Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-15. We further find
that respondent has satisfied the reasonably equivalent value requirement in Ind.
Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-14(2)(A) with respect to FFI’s unpaid 2001 penalty
liability.
With respect to the unreasonably small assets requirement, we must ex-
amine the conditions that existed at the time FFI’s transfers were made as of the
closing of the SPR transactions under the SPRA at 11:59 p.m. on December 20,
2001, not on what happened thereafter. See Boyer, 587 F.3d at 794-795. In deter-
mining whether the unreasonably small asset requirement is satisfied in these
cases, we must evaluate on an objective basis whether at the time of those transfers
FFI had “such meager assets that bankruptcy * * * [was] a consequence both likely
- 235 -
[*235] and foreseeable”. Id. In other words, we must evaluate on an objective
basis whether at the time of FFI transfers it had the ability to generate enough cash
to pay its debts and remain financially stable.
We have found that FFI became insolvent within the meaning of Ind. Code
sec. 32-18-2-12(c) (i.e., FFI’s total debts exceeded its assets) as a result of FFI’s
transfers in the SPR transactions under the SPRA. In this connection, we have
found that immediately after the closing at 11:59 p.m. on December 20, 2001, of
the SPR transactions under the SPRA the only assets of FFI were cash of
$345,089.34 and the right to a refund of $157,700 of State 2001 income tax pay-
ments and its only liabilities were FFI’s total anticipated 2001 tax liability of
$1,026,100.69.165 Consequently, we found that after that closing FFI had a nega-
tive net asset value of $523,311.35.166 We also found that immediately after the
closing of the SPR transactions on December 20, 2001, FFI had no operations, no
employees engaged in operations, no income, and no operational assets.
165
See supra notes 34, 100, and 146.
166
See supra note 28 regarding FFI’s bank account balance of $11,955.46,
FFI’s outstanding checks of $11,955.46, and the Prudential demutualization funds
receivable of $43,926.57 and note 50 regarding the State retail sales tax refunds of
$5,756.56.
- 236 -
[*236] On the record before us, we further find that as of the closing of the
SPR transactions under the SPRA FFI did not have the ability to pay FFI’s total
anticipated 2001 tax liability, let alone have the ability to generate enough cash to
pay its debts and remain financially stable after FFI’s transfers to each of Mr.
Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser in those transactions. On that
record, we further find that it was reasonably foreseeable at the time of FFI’s
transfer to each of the FFI stockholders that FFI would have insufficient capital or
profits to engage in and sustain any business operations.167
On the record before us, we find that respondent has satisfied the unreason-
ably small assets requirement in Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-14(2)(A).
Based upon our examination of the entire record before us, we find that
FFI’s transfers to each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser in
the SPR transactions under the SPRA were fraudulent transfers under Ind. Code
167
Our finding that it was reasonably foreseeable at the time of FFI’s trans-
fers to each of the FFI stockholders that FFI would have insufficient capital or
profits to engage in and sustain any business operations is reinforced by our
finding that each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser had
inquiry, and thus constructive, knowledge that MidCoast intended through the
SPRA to implement a scheme to leave FFI without sufficient assets to satisfy
FFI’s total anticipated 2001 tax liability of $1,026,100.69 and thereby cause it not
to pay that liability.
- 237 -
[*237] Ann. sec. 32-18-2-14(2)(A). On that record, we further find that each of
them is liable for FFI’s unpaid 2001 penalty liability.168
Respondent’s Claim
for Transferee Interest
Petitioners do not dispute that if we were to find, which we have, that each
of them is liable for FFI’s total unpaid 2001 liability, including interest as required
by law on that liability, to the extent of the net value of the assets that FFI trans-
ferred to each of them, each also would be liable for so-called postnotice inter-
est.169 The dispute between the parties is over so-called prenotice interest, i.e.,
interest that begins to accrue on a date before the date on which a notice of
liability is issued to a transferee-taxpayer and that continues to accrue to the latter
date (prenotice interest period). See Lowy v. Commissioner, 35 T.C. 393, 394-395
(1960). The date on which prenotice interest begins to accrue depends on the
168
See supra note 158.
169
Postnotice interest begins to accrue on the date on which a notice of lia-
bility is issued and continues to accrue to the date on which the transferee liability
is fully paid (postnotice interest period). See Patterson v. Sims, 281 F.2d 577, 580
(5th Cir. 1960); Estate of Stein v. Commissioner, 37 T.C. 945, 959 (1962);
Shockley v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2016-8, at *7. Postnotice interest
accruing during the postnotice interest period is computed pursuant to sec. 6601.
See Estate of Stein v. Commissioner, 37 T.C. at 959; Shockley v. Commissioner,
at *7. Sec. 6621 establishes the rate of interest for postnotice interest for the
postnotice interest period. See Shockley v. Commissioner, at *7.
- 238 -
[*238] amount of assets that the transferor-taxpayers transferred to the transferee-
taxpayer. See id.
It is respondent’s position that respondent is entitled to prenotice interest
from each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser. In support of
that position, respondent argues:
For the prenotice period, interest depends on state law. Lowy v.
Commissioner, 35 T.C. 393, 395-96 (1960). But when the transferred
assets are greater than the liability, as for Mr. Fankhauser, then pre-
notice interest accrues under federal law. Estate of Stein v. Com-
missioner, 37 T.C. 945, 959-61 (1962). Weintraut and Mrs. Fank-
hauser are liable for prenotice interest because, under Indiana state
law, prejudgment interest is proper when the trier of fact does not
have to exercise judgment in order to assess the amount of damages.
Larson v. Karagan, 979 N.E.2d 655, 663 (Ind. App. 2012). The
amounts of the transfers were agreed under the SPRA to be
$1,586,638.95 to Fankhauser, $513,324.37 to Weintraut, and
$233,329.26 to Mrs. Fankhauser.[170] * * * The interest due under
170
It appears that respondent included in the respective amounts of FFI’s
transfers to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser that respondent
claims “were agreed under the SPRA” their respective shares (i.e., $3,133.62,
$1,013.82, and $460.83), after withholding for Federal and State income taxes , of
certain State retail sales tax refunds totaling $5,756.56 that FFI received from the
State of Indiana after the closing of the SPR transactions and that FFI sent to FFW
in January 2002 after estimating and deducting those taxes. We do not believe
that those respective amounts of certain State retail sales taxes “were agreed under
the SPRA”, as respondent claims. See supra note 50. Nor do we believe that
those respective amounts of certain State retail sales taxes should be included in
the respective amounts of FFI’s transfers to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and
Ms. Fankhauser under the SPRA. See supra note 28. We set forth below the net
value of the assets that we find FFI transferred to each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr.
(continued...)
- 239 -
[*239] Indiana law accrues from the due date prescribed for payment of
the tax.
It is petitioners’ position that respondent is not entitled to any prenotice
interest on any respective transferee liabilities that we find for Mr. Fankhauser,
Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser. In support of their position, petitioners rely
on Stanko v. Commissioner, 209 F.3d 1082. The Court of Appeals for the Eighth
Circuit indicated in that case that it found “nothing in Nebraska fraudulent con-
veyance law allowing such a recovery of interest.” The court pointed out that
“[u]nder the new Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act [adopted by Nebraska], the
creditor is limited to recovering ‘the value of the asset at the time of the [fraud-
ulent] transfer, subject to adjustment as the equities may require.’”171 Id. at 1088
(quoting Neb. Rev. Stat. Ann. sec. 36-709(c) (West 1999)). Although the Court of
Appeals concluded in Stanko that the Nebraska UFCA172 and caselaw thereunder
170
(...continued)
Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser. See infra note 179.
171
The UFTA that Nebraska adopted in 1989 did not apply retroactively to
conveyances made before its enactment. See Stanko v. Commissioner, 209 F.3d
1082, 1084 n.1 (8th Cir. 2000). The conveyance at issue in Stanko was made
before Nebraska’s enactment of the UFTA. See id.
172
On brief, petitioners mistakenly claim that the Court of Appeals for the
Eighth Circuit decided Stanko v. Commissioner, 209 F.3d 1082, under the
Nebraska UFTA. Stanko involved the Nebraska UFCA which was in effect for the
(continued...)
- 240 -
[*240] were silent on the issue, the court nonetheless held: “Because the delay in
recovering from the transferee that occurred before the Commissioner assessed
transferee liability is attributable to the Commissioner (absent proof of transferee
deceit), we conclude the equities do not require an award of interest for that
period.” Id.
Petitioners’ position disregards certain caselaw (discussed below) address-
ing prenotice interest where a taxpayer to whom another taxpayer transferred
assets is liable as a transferee for that transferor-taxpayer’s tax liability. None-
theless, we will address petitioners’ argument in support of their position with
respect to respondent’s claim for prenotice interest.
Petitioners argue that they “any delay in issuing such notice [of transferee
liability to each petitioner] was attributable entirely to Respondent’s delay in
prosecuting this matter.” As a result, petitioners maintain, under Ind. Code Ann.
sec. 32-18-2-18(c)173 “the equities do not require an award of [prenotice] interest”
172
(...continued)
period at issue therein. See id. at 1084, 1088.
173
Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-18(c) provides that if a creditor is entitled
under Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-18(b) to a judgment that is based upon the
value of the assets that the debtor transfers in a transfer that is fraudulent under the
Indiana UFTA, “the judgment must be for an amount equal to the value of the
asset at the time of the transfer, subject to adjustment as the equities may require.”
(continued...)
- 241 -
[*241] in the instant cases, just as “the equities * * * [did] not require an award of
[prenotice] interest” in Stanko v. Commissioner, 209 F.3d at 1088. Petitioners’
argument assumes that there was a “delay” in the issuance of the respective notices
of liability to them and that that delay was “attributable entirely to respondent”.
We consider whether those assumptions are valid in the face of the facts that we
have found.
We have found that around July 22, 2005, respondent began an examination
of FFI’s taxable year 2001. That examination disclosed that FFI had respective
loss carrybacks to that taxable year from its taxable years 2002 and 2003. Around
December 2, 2005, respondent began an examination of FFI’s taxable year 2002,
and around July 31, 2008, respondent began an examination of FFI’s taxable year
2003. Although the record does not establish why the examination of FFI’s tax-
able year 2003 began around July 31, 2008, the record does establish, and we have
found, that FFI was represented by counsel throughout the IRS’ examination of all
three taxable years 2001, 2002, and 2003 and the resolution of that examination.
The record also establishes, and we also have found, that during the period that
started in 2005 and ended in 2008 Mr. Bernstein, who was then president of
173
(...continued)
See supra note 159.
- 242 -
[*242] FFI, executed on behalf of FFI several Forms 872-I in which FFI consented
to the extension to various dates of the period of assessment of FFI’s Federal in-
come tax for its taxable year 2001. Mr. Bernstein executed the last of those forms
around the end of July 2008, which was at the same time respondent began an
examination of FFI’s taxable year 2003. That form extended until December 31,
2009. the time for assessment of FFI’s Federal income tax for its taxable year
2001.
We infer and find from our consideration of all of the facts that we have
found relating to the respective examinations that respondent conducted with
respect to FFI and petitioners that if respondent had unreasonably delayed the
examination of FFI’s taxable year 2003, FFI, either on its own and/or upon the
advice of its counsel, would have been unwilling to continue to consent as late as
around the end of July 2008 to the extension until December 31, 2009, of the
period of assessment of FFI’s Federal income tax for its taxable year 2001.
Around October 27, 2006, respondent assigned the same revenue agent who
was examining FFI’s taxable years 2001 and 2002 to begin a transferee liability
examination with respect to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser
as the stockholders of FFI before the closing of the SPRA on December 20, 2001.
Since the IRS’ examination of FFI’s taxable years 2001 and 2002 was still on-
- 243 -
[*243] going and respondent had not yet initiated an examination of FFI’s taxable
year 2003 from which FFI had carried a loss back to its taxable year 2001, that
transferee liability examination remained inactive until the IRS completed its ex-
amination of FFI’s taxable years 2001, 2002, and 2003 and had undertaken col-
lection efforts with respect to the respective tax liabilities for those years, which
the IRS had determined and to which FFI agreed.
On May 31, 2008, the IRS opened a collection file with respect to FFI’s
unpaid liability for its taxable year 2001 and assigned the matter to one of its
revenue officers.
On March 4, 2009, Mr. Bernstein executed on behalf of FFI the FFI closing
agreement in which FFI and respondent agreed to certain adjustments to FFI’s
Federal income tax for certain of its taxable years, including its taxable years
2001, 2002, and 2003. In addition, FFI consented in the FFI closing agreement to
an accuracy-related penalty under section 6662.
On January 15, 2009, Mr. Bernstein executed on behalf of FFI Form 4549 in
which FFI consented to the assessment for, inter alia, its taxable year 2001 of a
deficiency in tax of $622,265 and an accuracy-related penalty under section 6662
totaling $85,482. Respondent thereafter assessed FFI’s unpaid 2001 tax liability,
as well as interest thereon as provided by law.
- 244 -
[*244] On June 2, 2009, Mr. Bernstein completed on behalf of FFI Form
433-B, a statement that the IRS requests a taxpayer that operates a business to
complete, that shows the business’s income, expenses, assets, liabilities, and
certain other financial information.174
As part of the revenue officer’s attempt to collect FFI’s unpaid 2001
liability he performed certain searches for any assets belonging to FFI, but he did
not find any such assets.
On June 2, 2009, respondent filed a notice of Federal tax lien in Marion
County, Indiana, with respect to FFI’s 2001 unpaid 2001 tax liability and interest
thereon as provided by law.
On January 13, 2010, respondent sent eight levies to certain banks and other
companies that might have held accounts in FFI’s name or that might have owed
FFI money.175 Those eight levies pertained, inter alia, to any assets of FFI that Mr.
Bernstein had shown in FFI’s Form 433-B. Respondent recovered no funds as a
result of the eight levies.
174
See supra note 52.
175
See supra note 53.
- 245 -
[*245] On March 9, 2010, the revenue officer searched respondent’s data-
base for any income that had been reported as having been paid to FFI. The
revenue officer found no such income reported for any year after 2007.
On March 10, 2010, the revenue officer prepared, and on the next day his
manager signed, Form 53 with respect to what that form described as “Cur[rently]
Not Collectible Assessed Balance” totaling $1,144,684.03 that the IRS had made
for FFI’s taxable years 1997 (assessment of $77,549.64), 2001 (assessment of
$1,066,735.70), and 2007 (assessment of $398.69). Form 53 showed that certain
searches had been made and certain sources had been checked on March 9, 2010,
in order to determine whether FFI had any assets or income.
On April 2, 2010, the revenue officer prepared a collectibility determination
report. In that CDR, the revenue officer discussed the assessments totaling
$1,144,684.03 that the IRS had made against FFI for its taxable years 1997
(assessment of $77,549.64), 2001 (assessment of $1,066,735.70), and 2007
(assessment of $398.69). In the CDR, the revenue officer stated in pertinent part:
“The assessed tax liabilities of FFI * * * have been deemed to be currently not
collectible * * *. In addition to this finding, FFI was also deemed to be insolvent.”
The revenue officer indicated in the CDR that on October 26, 2009, certain search-
es relating to whether FFI owned motor vehicles, aircraft, watercraft, or real prop-
- 246 -
[*246] erty had been performed on the Accurint database, which had information
from public sources. Those searches disclosed that FFI owned none of those items
except the Elmwood Avenue property. However, a subsequent review by the reve-
nue officer of Accurint property assessment and property deeds records revealed
that that property had been sold on August 31, 2001. The CDR indicated that
certain additional searches had been made to determine whether FFI owned any
assets or had any income but those searches disclosed no such assets or income.
The revenue officer concluded the CDR with the following statement: “All
reasonable efforts and all required actions have been taken to determine that the
taxes cannot be collected from FFI”. The revenue officer did not search the State
of Indiana’s Web site for unclaimed property or funds belonging to FFI.
In 2010, when the IRS had completed its collection efforts with respect to
FFI’s unpaid 2001 tax liability and concluded that that liability was currently not
collectible, the IRS reactivated its transferee liability examination with respect to
Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser. It was at that time that Mr.
Fankhauser first learned about FFI’s unpaid 2001 tax liability and was informed
by the IRS that it was seeking to collect that unpaid liability from, inter alia, him
as a transferee of FFI.
- 247 -
[*247] On July 14, 2011, the IRS’ Appeals Office held a so-called fast track
Appeals Office conference with petitioners regarding the transferee liability ex-
amination that the IRS was conducting with respect to them.
On December 8, 2011, respondent timely issued respective notices of
liability to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser for FFI's unpaid
2001 tax liability of $694,519.43, which consisted of a deficiency in tax of
$609,037.43176 and an accuracy-related penalty under section 6662 totaling
$85,482.
On the record before us, we reject the assumptions in petitioners’ argument
in support of their position that none of them is liable for prenotice interest that
there was a “delay” in the issuance of the respective notices of liability to them
and that that delay was “attributable entirely to respondent”.177 On that record, we
176
See supra note 2.
177
Even if we were assume arguendo that respondent were entitled under
Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-18(b) to a judgment that is based upon the value of
the assets that FFI transferred to each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms.
Fankhauser in transfers that we have found to be fraudulent under the construc-
tive fraud provisions of the Indiana UFTA, an assumption the validity of which
with respect to Mr. Fankhauser we consider below, we would not be persuaded on
the record before us that “the equities” to which Ind. Code Ann. sec. 32-18-2-18(c)
refers require us to conclude that respondent is not entitled to prenotice interest
from any of them.
- 248 -
[*248] also reject petitioners’ reliance on Stanko v. Commissioner, 209 F.3d
1082.178 On the record before us, we reject petitioners’ arguments in support of
their position that respondent is not entitled to prenotice interest from any of them.
We address now respondent’s position that respondent is entitled to pre-
notice interest from each petitioner and that the determination of that interest de-
pends on whether FFI transferred assets to each of them that was greater or less
than FFI’s total unpaid 2001 liability. We are in general agreement with respon-
dent’s position. To understand why, we believe that it would be helpful to set forth
the rationale for concluding that a creditor is entitled to prenotice interest and the
explanation of the two different types of prenotice interest, as explained in Lowy
v. Commissioner, 35 T.C. 393, on which respondent relies in advancing respon-
dent’s position.
In Lowy, the parties had stipulated that the taxpayer was liable as a trans-
feree for the respective Federal tax liabilities and the respective Federal additions
to tax liabilities for two taxable years (collectively, Federal transferee liabilities)
of a corporation that had distributed certain assets to the transferee-taxpayer. The
178
Not only are the facts involved in Stanko v. Commissioner, 209 F.3d
1082, materially distinguishable from the facts involved in the instant cases,
Stanko involved the Nebraska UFCA which was in effect for the period at issue
therein; it did not involve the Nebraska UFTA. See id. at 1084, 1088; see also
supra notes 171 and 172.
- 249 -
[*249] transferee-taxpayer in Lowy argued that he was not liable for any interest
accruing before the date on which the Commissioner issued the notice of liability
to him. The Commissioner took the position that the transferee-taxpayer was liable
for interest that started to accrue on the respective dates on which the respective
Federal tax liabilities for the two taxable years in question were required to be
paid. See id. at 394.
We began our consideration of the issue presented in Lowy by pointing out
that “[t]here are at least two different concepts relating to interest collectible from
a transferee--one founded upon Federal statute and the other upon State law”. Id.
at 394. We explained the concept relating to interest that is founded on Federal
statute as follows:
The Federal statute itself spells out a liability for interest on a
deficiency and fixes it at 6 per cent per annum from the due date * * *
[by which the tax must be paid]. When a tax is not paid the United
States becomes entitled, by Federal statute, not only to the tax and
additions (“penalties,” e.g., for negligence or fraud * * *), but also for
interest at the rate of 6 per cent from the due date, and these additions
and interest are collectible together with the basic deficiency by the
United States. Such is the right which the Federal statute itself
creates in respect of the deficiency in tax, and such is the measure of
the taxpayer's liability to the Government. Had there been no transfer
of assets by the corporation, such would be the extent of its liability
to the United States. However, it did transfer its assets to petitioner
[transferee-taxpayer] in an amount far greater than its total potential
liability for taxes, “penalties,” and interest. The parties have stip-
ulated that petitioner “is a transferee” of the corporate assets “and is
- 250 -
[*250] liable, as such transferee” for specified taxes and “penalties” owing
by the corporation for the years 1942 and 1943. The net effect of this
stipulation is that the debtor (the corporation) transferred its assets in
such manner as to enable the creditor (the Government) to follow
those assets in the hands of the transferee in order to satisfy its claim
against the debtor. To be sure, the liability of the transferee as such
must arise under applicable State Law, cf. Commissioner v. Stern,
357 U.S. 39, but the quantum of the creditor's right--i.e., the amount
of tax due, the additions to tax for negligence or fraud, and the
amount of interest applicable thereto--must, of necessity, be deter-
mined in accordance with the Federal statute. Certainly, it is the In-
ternal Revenue Code and not New York law which fixes the amount
of deficiency in tax. And it is similarly the Internal Revenue Code,
rather than State law, which spells out the right of the Government to
the so-called penalties and interest. These amounts in the aggregate
constitute the claim of the United States against the taxpayer-
transferor and they similarly measure the claim against the transferred
assets.
Lowy v. Commissioner, 35 T.C. at 394-395.
We then turned in Lowy to a discussion of what we believed was “[t]he
confusion * * * where the amount of the transferred assets is less than the amount
of the creditor’s claim, and where, in order to make the creditor whole, it may be
necessary to find some liability against the transferee for interest in respect of the
transferred assets.” Id. at 395. With respect to that situation--the situation relating
to interest founded on State law--we explained as follows:
Such interest, by its very nature, can arise only under State law, and
must comply in every respect with applicable State law not only as to
rate, but also as to the starting point. Thus, if the transferred assets
herein had been equal to only $100,000, substantially less than the
- 251 -
[*251] amount of the basic deficiencies, they would plainly have been
insufficient to satisfy the Government’s claim. However, in such
circumstances, the transferee would have had the use of the trans-
ferred assets over a period of time, and it is quite possible that he
would be liable, under State law, for interest, not on the Govern-
ment’s claim against the transferor, but on the amount of the trans-
ferred assets, measured from a point of time that would not be earlier
than the date of transfer.
* * * * * * *
[T]he transferee proceedings herein are merely a substitute for a
remedy against the transferee which must exist in the first instance
under State law, but the underlying rights which the creditor is
seeking to enforce are rights that have their source in the Internal
Revenue Code. It is that law which spells out a liability for interest
on a tax deficiency and fixes it at 6 per cent per annum from the date
that the tax and returns are due. State law has no more to do with the
determination of the amount of this liability than it has with fixing the
liability for additions due to fraud or failure to file returns or with the
correct computation of the basic tax itself. These are liabilities that
are founded on Federal statute. It is therefore wholly inappropriate in
this case, where the transferred assets are more than ample to dis-
charge the full Federal liability of the transferor (including interest),
to look to State law for the creation of any right to interest. However,
as indicated above, where the transferred assets are insufficient, it is
true that the creditor may have a further right to collect interest from
the transferee, based upon the wrongful use of those assets by the
transferee prior to payment. The latter right is one that is founded
upon State law, and it is only in such circumstances that it becomes
appropriate to investigate State law to determine the rate of interest,
the date from which it runs, and the like. * * *
Id. at 395-397 (fn. ref. omitted).
- 252 -
[*252] In the notice of liability that respondent issued to Mr. Fankhauser,
respondent determined that, because the net value of the assets that FFI transferred
to him (i.e., $1,824,143.99) was greater than the amount of the total (i.e.,
$694,519.43) of FFI’s 2001 tax liability (i.e., $609,037.43) and FFI’s 2001 penalty
liability (i.e., $85,482), the amount of his transferee liability is the total amount of
those liabilities, as well as interest as provided by law. In the notice of liability
that respondent issued to Mr. Weintraut, respondent determined that, because the
net value of the assets that FFI transferred to him (i.e., $514,520.35) was less than
the amount of the total (i.e., $694,519.43) of FFI’s 2001 tax liability (i.e.,
$609,037.43) and FFI’s 2001 penalty liability (i.e., $85,482), the amount of his
transferee liability is limited to that net value, as well as interest as provided by
law. In the notice of liability that respondent issued to Ms. Fankhauser, re-
spondent determined that the amount of her transferee liability is the total (i.e.,
$694,519.43) of FFI’s 2001 tax liability (i.e., $609,037.43) and FFI’s 2001 penalty
liability (i.e., $85,482), as well as interest as provided by law. In that notice, re-
spondent did not limit Ms. Fankhauser’s transferee liability to the net value of the
assets that FFI transferred to her, which respondent determined in that notice was
- 253 -
[*253] $233,877.44, as well as interest as provided by law.179 As noted pre-
viously, respondent acknowledges on brief that each petitioner’s transferee
liability under the Indiana UFTA is limited to the net value of the assets that FFI
transferred to each of them in the SPR transactions under the SPRA, plus
transferee interest.
179
We note that the respective total net values of the assets that we find FFI
transferred to each of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser in the
SPR transactions under the SPRA are different both from the respective total
values of the transfers (1) that respondent determined in the respective notices of
liability that respondent issued to them and (2) that respondent claims on brief.
The parties stipulated, and we have found, that immediately before the closing of
the SPRA on December 20, 2001, FFI had certain assets, which included its
membership interest in FFW that had a value of $1,920,556.36 and certain nontax
liabilities held by FFW that totaled $122,638.20. See supra note 28. The parties
also stipulated, and we also have found, that as of the closing of the SPR
redemption transaction under the SPRA FFI transferred to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr.
Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser in percentage membership interests in FFW of 68
percent, 22 percent, and 10 percent, respectively. As a result, as of that closing
Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser held membership interests in
FFW, the respective net values of which (rounded to the nearest dollar) were
$1,222,584, $395,542, and $179,792. We also have found that as of the closing of
the SPR sale transaction under the SPRA FFI made respective transfers to Mr.
Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser of $360,920.98, $116,768.55, and
$53,076.62, which totaled $530,766.15, the amount of the purchase price set forth
in the SPRA for the FFI stock of Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fank-
hauser. In addition, as noted supra note 170, we do not believe that the respective
amounts of certain State retail sales taxes should be included in the respective
amounts of FFI’s transfers to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser
under the SPRA. The parties’ stipulations and our findings establish that the
respective total values of the assets that FFI transferred to Mr. Fankhauser, Mr.
Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser in the SPR transactions under the SPRA were
$1,583,504.98, $512,310.55, and $232,868.62.
- 254 -
[*254] On the record before us, we find that the net value of the assets that
FFI transferred to each of Mr. Weintraut and Ms. Fankhasuer in the SPR trans-
actions180 is less than FFI’s total liability for its taxable year 2001, including the
amount of interest as provided by law calculated from the date on which FFI’s tax
liability for that year was required to be paid to the date on which respondent
issued the respective notices of liability to them. Consequently, we conclude that
any prenotice interest for which each of them may be liable is interest that is based
upon the law of Indiana. See Lowy v. Commissioner, 35 T.C. at 394-397.
In contrast, we are unable to find definitively on the record before us
whether the net value of the assets that FFI transferred to Mr. Fankhauser in the
SPR transactions is less than or greater than FFI’s total liability for its taxable year
2001, including the amount of interest as provided by law calculated from the date
on which FFI’s tax liability for that year was required to be paid to the date on
which respondent issued the notices of liability in question. That is because, as
noted previously, respondent did not calculate or show in the notice of liability
that respondent issued to Mr. Fankhauser (or in the respective notices of liability
issued to Mr. Weintraut, and Ms. Fankhauser) the amount of interest as provided
by law on the total of FFI’s deficiency liability and penalty liability for its taxable
180
See supra note 179.
- 255 -
[*255] year 2001. Although the record otherwise establishes that as of July 7,
2009, respondent had assessed a total of $368,990.84 of interest on the total of
FFI’s deficiency liability and penalty liability for its taxable year 2001, respondent
issued the notice of liability to Mr. Fankhauser on December 8, 2011, approx-
imately 2½ years thereafter. Additional interest as provided by law continued to
accrue after July 7, 2009, on the total of those FFI liabilities to the date on which
respondent issued the notices. However, the record does not establish the amount
of that additional interest. Although we believe that it is likely that the net value
of the assets that FFI transferred to Mr. Fankhauser in the SPR transactions re-
mains greater than FFI’s total liability for its taxable year 2001, including the
amount of interest as provided by law calculated from the date on which FFI’s tax
liability for that year was required to be paid to the date on which respondent
issued the notices of liability to him, we are reluctant to make a definitive finding
in that regard on the record before us.181
181
The interest calculations with respect to FFI’s 2001 deficiency liability
and FFI’s 2001 penalty liability will involve the computation of interest at
different rates compounded for a period of over nine years. Those calculations
must take account of the fact that respondent collected from the State of Indiana
the Prudential demutualization funds of $43,926.57 to which FFI had been
entitled, which reduced the amount of FFI’s unpaid 2001 tax liability as of the date
on which respondent collected those funds. We thus are reluctant to make any
definitive determination at this time as to whether the prenotice interest for which
(continued...)
- 256 -
[*256] We direct the parties to undertake as part of the computations under
Rule 155 the calculation of the amount of interest as provided by law on the total
of FFI’s tax liability and penalty liability for its taxable year 2001 for the period
that commenced on the date on which the tax for FFI’s taxable year 2001was
required to be paid and that ended as of the day before the date on which re-
spondent issued the respective notices of liability to petitioners. We further direct
that as part of the Rule 155 computations the parties compare the total of FFI’s
liability for its taxable year 2001, including the amount of interest so calculated, to
the net value, determined consistent with our findings herein of the assets that FFI
transferred to Mr. Fankhauser.
In the event that the calculations and the comparison that we have directed
the parties undertake as part of the Rule 155 computations were to show that the
net value of the assets that FFI transferred to Mr. Fankhauser in the SPR trans-
actions is greater than FFI’s total liability for its taxable year 2001, including the
amount of interest calculated as directed above, we would conclude that respon-
dent is entitled to prenotice interest from him that is founded upon Federal law,
namely, the Internal Revenue Code. See Lowy v. Commissioner, 35 T.C. at
181
(...continued)
Mr. Fankhauser is liable is interest that is based upon Federal law or interest that is
based upon the law of Indiana.
- 257 -
[*257] 394-397. In that event, we would further conclude that the prenotice
interest period with respect to Mr. Fankhauser would commence on the date on
which FFI was required to pay the tax due for its taxable year 2001 and would run
up to the date on which the notice of liability was issued. See Estate of Stein v.
Commissioner, 37 T.C. at 961; Lowy v. Commissioner, supra; Shockley v. Com-
missioner, T.C. Memo. 2016-8, at *7. Moreover, any interest accruing during that
prenotice interest period would be determined under section 6601, see Estate of
Stein v. Commissioner, 37 T.C. at 961, and the rate of interest on any such interest
would be determined under section 6621, see Shockley v. Commissioner, at *7. In
other words, if the calculations and the comparison that we have directed the
parties to undertake as part of the Rule 155 computations were to show that the net
value of the assets that FFI transferred to Mr. Fankhauser in the SPR transactions
is greater than the total of FFI’s liability for its taxable year 2001, including the
amount of interest calculated as described above, he would be liable for the full
amount of that total liability of FFI, including that amount of interest, which
would be the prenotice interest for which he would be liable.
In the unlikely event that the calculations and the comparison that we have
directed the parties undertake as part of the Rule 155 computations were to show
that the net value of the assets that FFI transferred to Mr. Fankhauser in the SPR
- 258 -
[*258] transactions is less than FFI’s total liability for its taxable year 2001, in-
cluding the amount of interest calculated as described above on FFI’s tax liability
and penalty liability for its taxable year 2001, we would conclude, as we have with
respect to Mr. Weintraut and Ms. Fankhauser, that any prenotice interest for which
he may be liable is interest that is based upon the law of Indiana. See Lowy v.
Commissioner, 35 T.C. at 394-397.
The parties do not cite, and we have not found, any Indiana authority in-
volving a fraudulent transfer under the Indiana UFTA that addresses squarely
whether a creditor is entitled to prenotice interest and if so, how and from what
date that prenotice interest is to be calculated. Respondent invites our attention to
certain caselaw in Indiana, and we have found additional Indiana caselaw, that
considers so-called prejudgment interest which may be awarded before a judg-
ment. The award of prejudgment interest under Indiana law “is founded solely
upon the theory that there has been a deprivation of the use of money * * * and
that unless interest is added the injured party cannot be fully compensated for the
loss suffered. * * * Interest is not recoverable as interest but as additional damages
to accomplish full compensation.” Money Store Inv. Corp. v. Summers, 909
N.E.2d 450, 461 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009).
- 259 -
[*259] We conclude that the concept underlying the award of prejudgment
interest in Indiana law is applicable in considering whether to award prenotice in-
terest to a creditor who is entitled to a recovery in the case of a fraudulent transfer
under the Indiana UFTA. We further conclude that Indiana caselaw addressing
prejudgment interest is relevant to our consideration of any prenotice interest for
which each of Mr. Weintraut and Ms. Fankhauser (and Mr. Fankhauser depending
on the results of the Rule 155 computations as discussed above) may be liable.
The Indiana Court of Appeals has observed that “Indiana courts have long
held that a statute is not the exclusive authority for prejudgment interest” and that
“[m]any [Indiana] cases have awarded prejudgment interest in the absence of a
statute authorizing such an award where the damages were ‘ascertainable in accor-
dance with fixed rules of evidence and accepted standards of valuation’ at the time
the damages accrued.” Oil Supply Co., Inc. v. Hires Parts Serv., Inc., 670 N.E.2d
86, 93-94 (Ind. Ct. App. 1996) (quoting Bland Trucking, Inc. v. Kiger, 598 N.E.2d
1103, 1106 (Ind. Ct. App. 1992)), aff’d in part, rev’d in part on another issue, 726
N.E.2d 246 (Ind. 2000);182 see also Troutwine Estates Dev. Co., LLC v. Comsub
Design & Eng’g, Inc., 854 N.E.2d 890, 904 (Ind. Ct. App. 2006). According to
182
The Indiana Supreme Court expressly affirmed the Indiana Court of
Appeals’ holding on prejudgment interest. See Oil Supply Co., Inc. v. Hires Parts
Serv., Inc., 726 N.E.2d 246, 250 n.3 (Ind. 2000).
- 260 -
[*260] the Indiana Court of Appeals, “[o]nce the trier of fact determines that a
party is liable for damages, ‘prejudgment interest is proper only where a simple
mathematical computation is required.’” Oil Supply Co., Inc., 670 N.E.2d at 94
(quoting Bland Trucking, Inc., 598 N.E.2d at 1106). In other words, as respondent
points out, the Indiana Court of Appeals held that an award of prejudgment in-
terest is appropriate where the trier of fact does not have to exercise judgment in
order to determine the damages. See Larson v. Karagan, 979 N.E.2d 655, 663
(Ind. Ct. App. 2012).
On the record before us, we find that respondent was deprived of the use of
the money that FFI was required to remit to the IRS in payment of its tax liability
for its taxable year 2001 on the date on which that liability was required to be
paid. On that record, we further find that the rationale for awarding prejudgment
interest in Indiana law is present in these cases with respect to each of Mr. Wein-
traut and Ms. Fankhauser (and Mr. Fankhauser depending on the results of the
Rule 155 computations as discussed above).
We have found, see supra note 179, the respective net values of the assets
that FFI transferred to Mr. Weintraut and Ms. Fankhauser (and to Mr. Fankhauser)
in the SPR transactions. The transferee liability of each of Mr. Weintraut and Ms.
Fankhauser (and Mr. Fankhauser) is determinable. We conclude that we do not
- 261 -
[*261] have to exercise any judgment or discretion in order to determine the
amounts of prejudgment interest. We further conclude that the prejudgment or
prenotice interest period would be “measured from a point of time that would not
be earlier than the date of the [FFI] transfer[s]”to each of Mr. Weintraut and Ms.
Fankhauser (and Mr. Fankhauser depending on the results of the Rule 155 com-
putations as discussed above), Lowy v. Commissioner, 35 T.C. at 395, up to but
not including the date on which respondent issued the notice of liability to each of
them, see Patterson v. Sims, 281 F.2d 577, 580 (5th Cir. 1960). On the record
before us, we find that the prejudgment or prenotice interest period should begin
on the date on which FFI’s tax liability for its taxable year 2001 was required to be
paid.
We consider now the rate that should be used in calculating prejudgment or
prenotice interest in the case of each of Mr. Weintraut and Ms. Fankhauser (and
Mr. Fankhauser depending on the results of the Rule 155 computations as dis-
cussed above). Ind. Code Ann. sec. 34-51-4-9 (LexisNexis 2008) establishes the
prejudgment interest rate where an award for tortious conduct has been made “at
the simple rate of interest determined by the court.” However, under that statute,
“[t]he rate set by the court may not be less than six percent (6%) per year and not
[be] more than ten percent (10%) per year.”
- 262 -
[*262] Ind. Code Ann. sec. 24-4.6-1-103 (LexisNexis 2013) establishes the
prejudgment interest rate at 8 percent per year where an award has been made, as
follows:
(a) * * * on money due on any instrument in writing which
does not specify a rate of interest and which is not covered by IC
1971, 24-4.5 [Uniform Consumer Credit Code] or this article [Special
Provisions Concerning Certain Transactions];
(b) * * * [money due] on an account stated, account closed or
for money had and received for the use of another and retained
without his consent.
Each of these two Indiana Code provisions appears to be applicable in these
cases. On the one hand, fraudulently depriving a creditor of money to which the
creditor is entitled may be viewed as in the nature of tortious conduct. Conse-
quently, it would appear that Ind. Code Ann. sec. 34-51-4-9 should govern the
prejudgment interest rate here. On the other hand, fraudulently depriving a
creditor of money to which the creditor is entitled may be viewed as involving
“money due on any instrument in writing which does not specify a rate of in-
terest”, Ind. Code Ann. sec. 24-4.6-1-103, or money due “on an account stated
* * * [or an] account closed”, id. Consequently, it would appear that Ind. Code
Ann. sec. 24-4.6-1-103 should govern the prejudgment interest rate here.
- 263 -
[*263] We have found no other guidance under the law of Indiana regarding
the rate that should be used in calculating prejudgment interest. We direct the
parties to cooperate and stipulate as part of the Rule 155 computations what the
appropriate prejudgment or prenotice interest rate should be in the case of each of
Mr. Weintraut and Ms. Fankhauser (and Mr. Fankhauser depending on the results
of the Rule 155 computations as discussed above).
Conclusion
We have considered all of the parties’ respective contentions and arguments
that are not discussed herein, and we find them to be without merit, irrelevant,
and/or moot.183
183
We note here one argument of petitioners that we have not expressly
addressed but that we have considered. Petitioners argue that respondent failed to
engage in reasonable efforts to collect FFI’s unpaid 2001 tax liability and that
therefore respondent may not collect the amount of that liability, as well as interest
thereon as provided by law. Assuming arguendo that respondent was required to
engage in reasonable efforts to collect FFI’s unpaid 2001 tax liability in order for
each petitioner to be liable as a transferee, on the record before us, we reject
petitioners’ argument. On the record before us, we find that respondent pursued
reasonable collection efforts with respect to FFI’s unpaid 2001 tax liability. We
make this finding although we have also found that respondent was unaware of the
Prudential demutualization funds of $43,926.57 until July 2011, when respon-
dent’s revenue officer was told about those funds by Mr. Fankhauser.
- 264 -
[*264] To reflect the foregoing and respondent’s concession regarding the
amount of FFI’s tax liability (excluding the penalty liability) for its taxable year
2001 that remains unpaid,
An appropriate order will be issued
denying in part and granting in part
petitioners’ motion in limine, and
decisions will be entered under Rule 155.