Court Opinion

ID: 2959874
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-09-17 17:36:00.719637+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:01:13.676500
License: Public Domain

06-0815-ag
     Estate of Thompson v. Comm’r of Internal Revenue
 1
 2                          UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
 3
 4                               FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
 5
 6                                  August Term, 2006
 7
 8
 9           (Argued: April 23, 2007              Decided: August 23, 2007)
10
11              Docket No(s). 06-0815-ag (Lead); 06-1132-ag (XAP)
12
13       - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -x
14
15       ESTATE OF JOSEPHINE T. THOMPSON,
16       DECEASED, CARL T. HOLST-KNUDSEN, & THE
17       BANK OF NEW YORK, EXECUTORS,
18
19                         Petitioners-Appellants-
20                         Cross-Appellees,
21
22                  -v.-
23
24       COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE,
25
26                         Respondent-Appellee-Cross-
27                         Appellant.
28
29       - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -x
30

31             Before:          JACOBS, Chief Judge, LEVAL and POOLER,
32                              Circuit Judges.
33
34             Appeal from the judgment of the United States Tax Court

35       (Swift, J.), valuing an estate’s interest in a closely held

36       company and declining to impose an underpayment penalty

37       against petitioners.

                                              1
1        We vacate the judgment and remand to correct an error

2    in calculation and for further proceedings concerning the

3    underpayment penalty.

 4
 5                                 JOSHUA M. RUBINS (Robert H.
 6                                 Goldie and Kirk H. O’Ferrall, on
 7                                 the brief), Satterlee Stephens
 8                                 Burke & Burke LLP, New York, New
 9                                 York, for Appellants.
10
11                                 RICHARD FARBER (Steven W. Parks,
12                                 on the brief), for Eileen J.
13                                 O’Connor, Assistant Attorney
14                                 General, Tax Division,
15                                 Department of Justice,
16                                 Washington, D.C., for Appellee.
17
18
19   DENNIS JACOBS, Chief Judge:
20
21       For estate tax purposes, the United States Tax Court

22   (Swift, J.) valued one-fifth of a closely held company at

23   $13.5 million--an amount far above the $1.75 million

24   valuation proffered by the estate of Josephine T. Thompson

25   (“Estate”) and far below the $32 million valuation proffered

26   by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue (“Commissioner”)--

27   and declined to impose an underpayment penalty against the

28   Estate, principally on the grounds that the Commissioner’s

29   estimate was so high in the other direction and that the

30   valuation issues were fairly debatable.    The Court found

31   that the Estate employed a method that exaggerated the risks

                                    2
1    associated with technological change, while the

2    Commissioner’s methodology was generally deficient.     The

3    Estate appeals chiefly on the ground that, pursuant to §

4    7491 of the Internal Revenue Code (“IRC”), the burden of

5    proof on the issue of valuation shifted to the Commissioner

6    when (as the parties have stipulated) the Estate introduced

7    credible evidence on the issue, and that the Tax Court was

8    therefore compelled to adopt the Estate’s valuation once it

9    rejected the Commissioner’s.    The IRS appeals chiefly on the

10   ground that the Estate’s underpayment was such that it was

11   error for the Tax Court to refuse to impose an underpayment

12   penalty.

13       We vacate the judgment because there is a conceded

14   error in the Tax Court’s calculation and because the Court’s

15   findings are insufficient to support the application of the

16   reasonable cause exception to the otherwise mandatory

17   underpayment penalty.   We remand for further proceedings

18   consistent with this opinion.

19

20                                   I

21       When Josephine T. Thompson died on May 2, 1998, her

22   estate included approximately 20% of the common shares of

                                     3
1    Thomas Publishing Co., Inc. (the “Company”), a century-old

2    private, closely held corporation which produces business-

3    to-business industrial and manufacturing directories and

4    publications.   Descendants of the Company’s founder own

5    almost 90% of the shares; no shares have ever been publicly

6    traded; and no stock sales had occurred in the ten years

7    prior to Thompson’s death.

8        The Company’s business was solely paper-based until the

9    1990s, when it began to adapt to the digital marketplace.

10   The Company offered its directories on CD-ROM in 1993, and

11   made its directories available free on the Internet in 1995.

12   By 1998, the Company’s website was recognized as the sixth-

13   ranked business-to-business website in the United States.

14   From 1995 to 1998, print subscriptions fell while CD-ROM and

15   Internet subscriptions increased dramatically.   See Estate

16   of Thompson v. Comm’r, T.C.M. (RIA) 2004-174, 2004 WL

17   1658404, at *2-*4 (July 26, 2004).

18       In the six years preceding Thompson’s death (1993-

19   1998), the Company’s net sales revenue grew 53% but expenses

20   kept pace; thus during that period operating income stayed

21   constant around $25 million.   In the years following

22   Thompson’s death, net sales revenue averaged $273 million

                                    4
1    for three years (1999-2001), then dropped to $235 million

2    (2002), while operating expenses grew 9% over three years

3    (falling in the fourth year), so that operating income

4    dropped, turned to losses, and the Company ended 2002 barely

5    breaking even.

6

7                                  II

8        For estate tax purposes, the Estate calculated the

9    value of Thompson’s share of the Company at $1.75 million

10   using the capitalization of income method, under which a

11   company’s value is calculated by [i] projecting the

12   company’s annual income, [ii] determining a company-specific

13   capitalization rate, [iii] dividing the projected income by

14   the capitalization rate, and [iv] adding the value of non-

15   operating assets.

16       The Estate projected the Company’s annual income to be

17   $7.9 million (the average from 1993-1997 minus $10 million

18   in projected technology expenditures), then used a

19   capitalization rate of 30.5% based on: [1] a 6% risk-free

20   base rate of return; [2] a 7.8% equity risk premium; [3] a

21   4.7% small-stock risk; and [4] a 12% Internet and management

22   risk.   No non-operating assets were added.   This yielded a

                                   5
1    valuation of $25.8 million for the Company, of which the

2    Estate’s share was $5.3 million, which was then further

3    reduced (by 40%) to account for the Estate’s minority

4    ownership interest and (by a further 45%) to account for

5    lack of marketability, to arrive at the final valuation of

6    $1.75 million.      The Estate argues that this valuation

7    reflects grim prospects in 1998 and the Internet’s

8    “substantial threat to TPC’s viability as a business.”

9         The Commissioner valued the Estate’s interest at $32

10   million, using two independent methods:      the comparable

11   public company method, which yielded a Company value of $260

12   million; and the discounted cashflow method, which was

13   performed twice (using different estimated future values)

14   and which yielded Company values of $212.6 million and

15   $158.8 million. 1     The Commissioner settled on $225 million,

16   of which the Estate’s share was $46.3 million.      That value

17   was then discounted by 30% to account for lack of

18   marketability, thus arriving at the final value of $32

19   million.   The Commissioner contends that his valuation more

          1
1           Because the Tax Court ultimately rejected the
2    Commissioner’s valuation, and the Commissioner does not
3    appeal that rejection, we only briefly summarize the
4    Commissioner’s methodology.

                                      6
1    accurately reflects the state of affairs in 1998, when there

2    was no reason to think that the Internet would have the

3    deleterious effect on TPC’s business that occurred from 2000

4    to 2002.

5

6                                 II

7        The Tax Court rejected both of the parties’ valuations

8    as “deficient and unpersuasive,” Estate of Thompson, 2004 WL

9    1658404, at *17, on the following grounds: The

10   Commissioner’s valuation was rejected because the comparable

11   companies chosen were insufficiently similar to the Company,

12   id. at *20, and the discounted cashflow analysis contained

13   “significant errors” and “suspect” recalculations, id. at

14   *21; the Estate’s valuation was rejected because it

15   improperly included a 12% Internet and management risk

16   factor in the capitalization rate, erroneously omitted

17   certain non-operating assets, and inflated the discounts for

18   minority interest and lack of marketability, id. at *19-*20.

19       The Tax Court further criticized the Estate for its

20   decision to “hire[] a lawyer and an accountant from Alaska,

21   both with relatively little valuation experience, to value

22   the estate’s 20-percent interest in TPC” given that “the

                                  7
1    estate, the executors of the estate, and the underlying

2    company, the stock of which is being valued, were all

3    headquartered and based in the New York City metropolitan

4    area.”     Id. at *17.

5        The Court then undertook its own valuation, employing

6    the capitalization of income method.        The Court adopted the

7    Estate’s projected annual income of $7.8 million, but used a

8    capitalization rate of 18.5% (having eliminated the 12%

9    Internet and management risk factor which had bumped the

10   Estate’s number to 30.5%).      Dividing $7.8 million by 18.5%

11   yielded a subtotal of $42.5 million.        To that, the Court

12   added $68 million in short-term investments, which the Court

13   considered non-operating assets (but which the Estate had

14   considered operating assets, and therefore omitted from its

15   valuation).     Thus the Court arrived at a total value of $111

16   million for the Company.      The Estate’s $22.7 million share

17   (20%) was then reduced by 15% to account for the Estate’s

18   minority interest and 30% for lack of marketability

19   (compared to the Estate’s 45% and 40%, respectively), which

20   yielded the Court’s valuation of the Estate’s share of the

21   Company:     $13.5 million.   Id. at *22.

22

                                      8
1                                   III

2        The valuation of a company is a factual issue.      See

3    Silverman v. Comm’r, 538 F.2d 927, 931 (2d Cir. 1976).

4    Under IRC § 7491, “[i]f . . . a taxpayer introduces credible

5    evidence with respect to any factual issue relevant to

6    ascertaining the liability of the taxpayer . . . , the

7    Secretary shall have the burden of proof with respect to

8    such issue.”   26 U.S.C. § 7491(a)(1).    The parties

9    stipulated that the Estate submitted “credible evidence” in

10   support of its valuation.     See Estate of Thompson, 2004 WL

11   1658404, at *24 n.6.    Accordingly, the burden of proof

12   shifted to the Commissioner on the issue of valuation.        The

13   Estate argues that the Commissioner necessarily failed to

14   satisfy his burden.    It contends that, under § 7491, the Tax

15   Court’s rejection of the valuation proffered by the

16   Commissioner required the Court to adopt the Estate’s

17   competing valuation.    We disagree.

18       Before the enactment of § 7491, “a deficiency

19   determined by the Commissioner [was] presumptively correct

20   and the taxpayer [bore] the burden of disproving it.”

21   Silverman, 538 F.2d at 930.     Section 7491 reallocated the

22   burden.   However, this reallocation does not require the Tax

                                     9
1    Court to adopt the taxpayer’s valuation, however erroneous,

2    whenever the Court rejects the Commissioner’s proposed

3    value; the burden of disproving the taxpayer’s valuation can

4    be satisfied by evidence in the record that impeaches,

5    undermines, or indicates error in the taxpayer’s valuation.

6        Here, the Commissioner not only presented evidence in

7    support of his own valuation; he also cited record evidence

8    to rebut the Estate’s valuation, arguing that the Estate’s

9    profit projections were overly pessimistic, that it failed

10   to properly account for non-operating assets, and that its

11   assumptions about the Internet were inconsistent with the

12   Company’s investments in Internet-related projects.

13   Notwithstanding the enactment of § 7491, it remains the case

14   that (as we said in 1976) the “Tax Court is not bound by the

15   formulas or opinions proffered by expert witnesses.   It may

16   reach a determination of value based upon its own analysis

17   of all the evidence in the record.” 2   Id. at 933.

18

          2
1           Because the Tax Court adopted some of the
2    Commissioner’s arguments in opposition to the Estate’s
3    valuation, we have no occasion to decide whether § 7491
4    would require a court to adopt a taxpayer’s valuation if the
5    court rejected all arguments advanced by the Commissioner in
6    opposition to that valuation, or if the Commissioner made no
7    such arguments.

                                   10
1                                    IV

2        In the alternative, the Estate argues that, in arriving

3    at its independent valuation, the Tax Court erred by [i]

4    counting $68 million in short-term investments as non-

5    operating assets, which were therefore added to the figure

6    for the Company’s capitalized income; and [ii] omitting a

7    technology-related risk factor in its capitalization rate.

8    “The Tax Court’s valuation is a factual finding conclusive

9    upon review if not clearly erroneous.”        Id. at 931.   “[O]ur

10   powers of review are very . . . limited upon all issues of

11   fact, and that limitation is particularly narrow when the

12   issue is one of value.”    Sisto Fin. Corp. v. Comm’r, 149

13   F.2d 268, 269 (2d Cir. 1945); see also        Silverman, 538 F.2d

14   at 931.   There is evidence to support both of the challenged

15   features of the Tax Court’s valuation.

16       We therefore affirm the Tax Court’s valuation--in all

17   respects but one: the parties agree that the Tax Court made

18   an error in calculation.    As set out in the prior paragraph,

19   the Court treated $68 million in short-term investments as

20   non-operating assets, and therefore added $68 million to the

21   Company’s capitalized income.        But when the Court calculated

22   the Company’s projected income, it included the income

                                     11
1    produced by the $68 million in its projection, thus

2    factoring in the $68 million twice.       The Commissioner

3    estimates that this error resulted in a $1.2 million

4    overstatement in the value of the Estate’s shares; the

5    Estate (which agrees that the error was made) does not

6    attempt to quantify its effect.       We therefore remand for the

7    Tax Court to correct this double-counting error.       We affirm

8    the Tax Court’s valuation in all other respects.

9

10                                    V

11       The Tax Court determined that the Estate’s share of the

12   Company was worth $13.5 million; the Estate valued its share

13   at $1.75 million--less than 15% of the value determined as

14   correct by the Court. 3    Under the version of IRC § 6662 then

15   in effect, if the claimed value of the Estate is not more

16   than 25% of the amount determined to be correct, the

17   taxpayer must pay an accuracy-related penalty equal to 40%

18   of its underpayment.      See 26 U.S.C. § 6662(a), g(1), (h)(1),

          3
            We recognize that the Tax Court’s final valuation of
     the Estate may be somewhat different when the double-
     counting error is fixed. Nonetheless, it appears that the
     reduction in valuation will not be sufficient to bring the
     Estate’s valuation above 25% of the court’s ultimate
     determination.

                                      12
1    (h)(2)(C) (2006), amended by Pension Protection Act of 2006

2    § 1219, Pub. L. No. 109-280, 120 Stat. 780, 1083 (2006).

3    With one exception, this penalty is mandatory.   See id. §

4    6662(a) (“there shall be added to the tax an amount equal to

5    [40] percent of the . . . underpayment” (emphasis added)).

6    An exception is allowed if “it is shown that there was a

7    reasonable cause for such [underpayment] and that the

8    taxpayer acted in good faith with respect to such

9    [underpayment].”   Id. § 6664(c)(1).

10       The Tax Court invoked this reasonable-cause exception

11   and declined to impose an accuracy-related penalty.     Its

12   decision was based on the following considerations: [i] the

13   valuation “was particularly difficult and unique”; [ii] the

14   valuation “involved a number of difficult judgment calls”;

15   [iii] the valuation was “difficult and imprecise” because of

16   “the difficult question as to how the Internet and the risks

17   and opportunities associated therewith should be regarded as

18   affecting TPC”; and [iv] while “the experts for the estate

19   were aggressive in their relatively low valuation of TPC,”

20   the Court’s own valuation was “closer to the estate’s

21   valuation than to [the Commissioner’s] valuation.”    Estate

22   of Thompson, 2004 WL 1658404, at *23.

                                   13
1        “We review the tax court’s factual determinations of

2    whether a taxpayer qualifies for the reasonable cause

3    exception for clear error.”     Sather v. Comm’r, 251 F.3d

4    1168, 1177 (8th Cir. 2001); accord Van Scoten v. Comm’r, 439

5    F.3d 1243, 1260 (10th Cir. 2006).      However, while it is a

6    question of fact whether “the elements that constitute

7    ‘reasonable cause’ are present in a given situation,” it is

8    a question of law “what elements must be present to

9    constitute ‘reasonable cause.’”      United States v. Boyle, 469

10   U.S. 241, 249 n.8 (1985).     Accordingly, we review the

11   factual determinations for clear error, but we review de

12   novo whether those determinations were sufficient to satisfy

13   the elements of reasonable cause.

14       Under agency regulations, the existence of reasonable

15   cause is determined “on a case-by-case basis, taking into

16   account all pertinent facts and circumstances. . . .

17   Generally, the most important factor is the extent of the

18   taxpayer’s effort to assess the taxpayer’s proper tax

19   liability.”   26 C.F.R. § 1.6664-4(b)(1).     “Reliance on . . .

20   an appraiser does not necessarily demonstrate reasonable

21   cause and good faith,” but such reliance does satisfy the

22   reasonable cause exception if, “under all the circumstances,

                                     14
1    such reliance was reasonable and the taxpayer acted in good

2    faith.”   Id.   Thus reliance on an expert’s opinion “may not

3    be reasonable or in good faith if the taxpayer knew, or

4    reasonably should have known, that the advisor lacked

5    knowledge in the relevant aspects of Federal tax law.”      Id.

6    §1.6664-4(c)(1).

7        The Tax Court’s findings are insufficient to support a

8    determination of reasonable cause under § 6664.      The factors

9    set out in the regulations search the good faith of the

10   taxpayer--either in assessing its own liability or in

11   relying on an expert to do so.      But the Tax Court made no

12   finding as to whether the Estate’s reliance on its experts

13   was reasonable and in good faith, or whether the Estate knew

14   or should have known that they lacked the expertise

15   necessary to value the Company.

16       To prepare its valuation of a New York publishing

17   company, the Estate turned to George E. Goerig of Anchorage,

18   Alaska.   The Tax Court found that an Alaska lawyer was

19   retained so that the Commissioner’s audit of the Estate

20   would not be conducted by the Commissioner’s New York staff,

21   but by the Commissioner’s office in Alaska, “where Goerig

22   believed and apparently represented to the estate’s

                                    15
1    representative that he would be able to obtain for the

2    estate a more favorable valuation of the estate’s [Company]

3    stock.”    Estate of Thompson, 2004 WL 1658404, at *8.   “[T]he

4    estate had learned about Goerig from an attorney for

5    decedent’s family who had met Goerig on a fishing trip.”

6    Id.

7          Goerig was assisted by Paul Wichorek, an accountant in

8    the same remote location.    Id.   The Court found that these

9    experts “demonstrated no experience with . . . Internet- and

10   technology-related companies,” id. at *11, and were “too

11   inexperienced, accommodating, and biased in favor of the

12   estate,” id.    The Court summarized their qualifications as

13   follows:

14              Goerig is a lawyer with an audit and tax dispute
15              resolution practice, and a tax return preparer,
16              and he undertakes occasional valuations for small
17              businesses and private individuals. From his
18              resume, he appears to have attended limited
19              appraisal courses, other than a few courses while
20              working for [the Commissioner] many years ago.
21              Goerig also was appointed to act as administrator
22              for the estate to handle the anticipated audit by
23              respondent of the estate’s Federal estate tax
24              return, a role which we regard as somewhat in
25              tension with his role as a purported independent
26              valuation expert for the estate.
27
28              Wichorek provides accounting and tax preparation
29              services, does business consulting, and undertakes
30              occasional valuations for small businesses,
31              generally in the context of divorce and property

                                         16
 1               settlement disputes. He belongs to no
 2               professional organizations or associations
 3               relating to his appraisal or valuation work.
 4
 5               Although we admitted into evidence the estate’s
 6               valuation reports and treated them as credible, we
 7               regard those reports and the testimony of the
 8               estate’s experts to be only marginally credible.
 9               Goerig and Wichorek were barely qualified to value
10               a highly successful and well-established New York
11               City-based company with annual income in the
12               millions of dollars.
13
14   Id. at *17-*18.

15       A determination as to the Estate’s good faith is

16   required.    Accordingly, we vacate the Tax Court’s decision

17   not to impose an accuracy-related penalty, and we remand so

18   that the Court can determine whether the Estate’s reliance

19   on Goerig and Wichorek was reasonable and in good faith.

20

21                               *   *    *

22       For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the Tax

23   Court is vacated and remanded for further proceedings

24   consistent with this opinion.

                                     17