*70 Petitioners' motion will be denied.
Over 2 years after entry of a decision sustaining a deficiency and awarding damages under
*1141 OPINION
Petitioners seek an order vacating our order and decision entered August 23, 1985, in accordance with our Memorandum Opinion filed August 22, 1985, as
In that prior Memorandum Opinion, we granted respondent's motion for summary judgment and sustained the deficiency determined by respondent with respect to petitioners' interest in a real estate limited partnership promoted by Cal-Am Corp. (Cal-Am) and its president, Joseph R. Laird, Jr. (Laird). The motion was based on facts deemed admitted by petitioners' failure to respond to a request for admissions served by respondent, which facts established that this case was indistinguishable from that decided against the taxpayers in
At the time of respondent's motion and our decision, petitioners were represented by John Patrick Kelly (Kelly), who had represented numerous investors in Cal-Am and other Laird promotions. In our Memorandum Opinion, we quoted at length statements made by Kelly about his communications with petitioners. After ruling that respondent's motion for summary judgment would be granted, we addressed respondent's contemporaneous motion for damages under
Moreover, based on Kelly's statements and petitioners' nonaction in this case, we find that this proceeding was instituted and maintained primarily for delay in the hopes of obtaining a settlement not based on the merits, but on the necessity of litigating the case. Petitioners' positions were groundless because, as admitted by petitioners, the same issues were decided in respondent's favor in
Although we there referred to Kelly's statements concerning petitioners' intentions as a reason for our award of *1143 damages, it is apparent that damages were also awarded because petitioners' position was groundless.
Petitioners now contend that Kelly's statements referred to in our Memorandum Opinion were false in that, contrary to his representations to the Court, Kelly had not communicated with petitioners, sent to petitioners respondent's request for admissions, or notified petitioners of the pendency of respondent's motions. Moreover, according to petitioners, Kelly had ignored their instruction to settle the case without trial. Petitioners contend that they would have been allowed a deduction for $ 12,000 invested in the limited partnership and that damages would not have been awarded if the Court had been truthfully advised by Kelly of petitioners' position.
Petitioners assert that they invested with Cal-Am in 1974 based on representations that for an investment of $ 10,000, they would be able to take a deduction from their taxes of 4 times that amount and that Cal-Am and Laird would defend attacks by the Internal Revenue Service*74 on their deductions. They ask the Court to take judicial notice of not less than 10 cases in which (i) Kelly represented taxpayers in Cal-Am- and Laird-sponsored tax shelters, (ii) the taxpayers lost, and (iii) the Court indicated that the facts were nearly identical to those in a previous decision of the Tax Court:
Respondent does not dispute the falsity of Kelly's statements. He contends that the case was decided on the merits and that the same result would be reached regardless of any misrepresentations by Kelly. Respondent points out that, based on petitioners' own statements, they hired Kelly to pursue a better settlement of this case after the original counsel (provided by Laird) advised them of the futility of pursuing this case. Respondent argues that petitioners had their day in Court and could not receive a better result even if our decision were set aside.
We agree with respondent. That petitioners were misled or defrauded by Kelly would not justify setting aside the decision.
Although petitioners did not intend to prosecute the case to trial, they hired Kelly for the purpose of pursuing the proceeding on groundless claims. We reject completely their present claim that, absent Kelly's misstatements, the Court would have allowed a deduction of their cash investment in the year that it was made. See, e.g.,
Finally, it is apparent from petitioners' filings that they waited approximately 2 years from the time they discovered that the decision had been entered against them until the time they brought the present motion through new counsel. They explain that during the interim, *78 they were attempting to negotiate a compromise with the Internal Revenue Service. Thus, these post-decision proceedings could be interpreted as merely a continuation of their attempts to delay or discount their tax liabilities. Cf.
It is apparent from the facts of this case that petitioners were involved in an abusive tax shelter. Essentially, petitioners have claimed 4-to-1 "leveraged" deductions * * *. This is tantamount to purchasing a $ 4 tax deduction with every dollar paid to a promoter who provides a facade of a legitimate enterprise in an attempt to satisfy the form of the transaction. This type of arrangement frustrates the congressional purpose inherent in the deductions that we here disallow to petitioners. In spite of numerous Court opinions squarely on point, petitioners have forced an already overburdened Court and tax system to unnecessarily consume precious resources. Petitioners, and others who participate in specious tax strategems, must accept the consequences of their actions.
*79 After quoting from the legislative history of
Petitioners' motion will be denied.