Quatloos! > Tax
Scams > Tax
Protestors > EXHIBIT:
Constitutional/Pure Trusts > Dahlstrom
v. IRS
United States Tax Court
KARL L. DAHLSTROM AND CLARA J. DAHLSTROM,
Petitioners
v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE,
Respondent
Filed June 11, 1991
Karl L. Dahlstrom, pro se.
David W. Johnson and Sheri Wilcox, for the respondent.
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
SCOTT, JUDGE: This case was assigned to Special Trial Judge John J. Pajak pursuant
to the provisions of section 7443A(b) and Rule 180 et seq. (All section numbers
refer to the Internal Revenue Code for the taxable years in issue. All Rule
numbers refer to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.) The Court
agrees with and adopts his opinion, which is set forth below.
OPINION OF THE SPECIAL TRIAL JUDGE
PAJAK, SPECIAL TRIAL JUDGE: Respondent determined deficiencies in petitioners'
Federal income taxes, and additions to tax only as to petitioner Karl L. Dahlstrom,
as follows:
Additions to Tax
Year Deficiency under Section 6653(b)
____ __________ _____________________
1977 $155,733.00 $ 77,866.50
1978 341,689.00 170,844.50
1979 788,152.00 394,076.00
This Court must decide: (1) Whether the statute of limitations bars respondent
from assessing and collecting taxes for the years 1977 and 1978; (2) whether
petitioners used sham trust organizations to understate their taxable income
or, alternatively, whether petitioners are taxable under the grantor trust
provisions of sections 671 through 677; (3) whether petitioners are entitled
to deductions for losses from the sale of trust certificates in 1977; and (4)
whether petitioner Karl L. Dahlstrom is liable for additions to tax for fraud.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Petitioners resided in College Station, Texas, when their petition was filed.
Petitioners filed joint income tax returns for the years in issue.
The use of the terms "trust," "organization," "create," "royalty
payment," "consulting service," "contract," "sale," "purchase," "gift," "tax
package," and other similar terms and derivations is not intended to accord
any legal significance to such terms. These terms are used solely for convenience
in describing petitioners' purported transactions.
BACKGROUND
Petitioners refused to comply with respondent's informal discovery requests.
The facts and exhibits set forth in respondent's request for admissions, served
on petitioners on June 8, 1984, and filed with the Court on June 11, 1984,
were deemed admitted on July 9, 1984, pursuant to Rule 90(c). By the Court's
order of November 19, 1985, petitioners' motion to withdraw admissions, filed
September 12, 1984, was denied except that it was granted as to the conclusory
admission that "There are due from petitioners the deficiencies in income
tax and additions to tax as determined by respondent." Dahlstrom v. Commissioner,
85 T.C. 812 (1985) (Dahlstrom I).
By the Court's order of May 24, 1988, the facts and evidence in respondent's
proposed stipulation of facts of March 21, 1988, were deemed to be established
because petitioners' response to this Court's Rule 91(f) order to show cause
was evasive and not fairly directed to the proposed stipulation of facts.
At the hearing, because petitioners did not object to the truth of facts set
forth in respondent's proposed First Supplemental Stipulation of Facts, filed
December 12, 1988, we orally ordered that these facts and evidence contained
therein were deemed established. Rule 91(f).
Pursuant to section 6861, on September 23, 1987, respondent made jeopardy
assessments of deficiencies in income tax due from petitioners, additions to
tax due from petitioner Karl L. Dahlstrom, and interest in the following amounts:
Additions to
Taxable Tax Under
Year Deficiency Section 6653(b) Interest Total
_______ __________ _______________ ________ _____
1977 $124,339 $ 62,170 $197,513 $ 384,022
1978 237,848 118,924 353,694 710,466
1979 470,659 235,330 642,373 1,348,362
SHAM TRUSTS
During 1977 through 1979, petitioner Karl L. Dahlstrom (petitioner) promoted
and sold a tax shelter program (program) he had devised. Petitioner has a master's
degree in education and physics, but no formal training or education in law
or taxation. Sales of the program took the form of sales of memberships in
an association called the American Law Association (ALA) which petitioner had
formed. See the description in United States v. Dahlstrom, 713 F.2d 1423, 1425
(9th Cir. 1983). The constitution of ALA provided in part that "The Association
is formed under common law and forms no legal entity distinct from that of
its members."
Petitioner was the president of ALA during 1977 through 1979. For a fee of
$6,000 to $12,000, members joined ALA and attended seminars given by petitioner.
Petitioner conducted numerous seminars during the years in issue and instructed
participants on the use of the program to set up their own tax avoidance trust
schemes.
At the seminars, petitioner distributed a package of tax shelter program materials
(package) to the participants. The package of materials included preprinted
forms, organizational minutes and certificates for establishing trusts, numerous
excerpts from cases, legal commentary and newspaper articles, and other materials
on the development, structure, and use of trusts. The materials also included
information referred to as the "Taxpayers Legal Defense."
During the years in issue, petitioner used trust organizations/trusts like
those promoted in his seminars to conduct petitioners' personal and investment
activities. Fees paid by ALA members to attend the seminars and to receive
the package of materials were deposited into bank accounts under the name of
Trust Publications over which only petitioners had signatory authority. The
Trust Publications bank accounts were at the Citizens State Bank (Citizens),
Bryan, Texas; the First Bank of Snook (Snook), Snook, Texas; and the University
National Bank. (Univ.), Bryan, Texas. No employer identification number or
Social Security number was given for any of these accounts.
During the years 1977, 1978, and 1979, these fees totaled $244,372.10, $483,757.62,
and $938,221.39, respectively, for a 3-year total of $1,666,351.11. These amounts
do not include transfers or any nontaxable or excludable income. Petitioners
did not include on their joint returns for 1977, 1978, and 1979 any of these
amounts except $22,005.45, $14,938 and $22,300 in trustee's fees for each respective
year.
On the 1977, 1978, and 1979 returns, petitioner reported his occupation as "Consultant," "Educational
Consultant," and "Consultant," respectively, and his spouse's
occupation was reported as "Housewife" on all three returns. The
1977, 1978, and 1979 returns were filed on or about April 17, 1978, April 16,
1979, and April 15, 1980, respectively.
For the year 1977, petitioners reported the following sources and amounts
of gross income:
Schedule C: Rockwood Water District $ 8,630
Schedule D: 30 units -- Clear Gold Org. 10
Form 4797: 60 units -- Clear Gold Org. 20
Schedule E: Royalty Income 100
Other Income: Trustee Fee, Debt Forgiven 33,875
______
Total $42,635
For the year 1978, petitioners reported the following sources and amounts
of gross income:
Interest $ 5
Trustee Fee (Trust Publications) 14,938
______
Total $14,943
For the year 1979, petitioners reported the following source and amount of
gross income:
Trustee Fee (Trust Publications) $22,300
A large part of the monies from seminar fees deposited into the Trust Publications
accounts was then funneled through a series of bank accounts in the names of
other trusts, controlled directly or indirectly by petitioners, before being
disbursed by petitioners for petitioners' benefit.
Petitioner filed Forms 1041 (U.S. Fiduciary Income Tax Return) in the name
Trust Publications for the taxable years in issue. The deemed admissions established
that these Forms 1041 were filed on a fiscal year basis, and this was reflected
in Dahlstrom I. The blanks in the Forms 1041 in the record were not filled
in to show a fiscal year basis of reporting and were signed by petitioner on
April 17, 1978, April 10, 1979, and April 15, 1979, for the years 1977, 1978,
and 1979, respectively. At trial, petitioner testified that these returns were
filed on a calendar year basis rather than a fiscal year basis, and respondent
agreed. In view of this clarification, we revise our statement in Dahlstrom
I that petitioner accurately and fully disclosed all fees from the sale of
ALA memberships on the Trust Publications Forms 1041 because petitioner did
not accurately and fully disclose all such fees on these Forms 1041, based
on a comparison, on an annual basis, of the amounts reported to the amounts
deposited as follows:
Gross Receipts Gross Receipts per
Year Form 1041 Bank Deposits
____ ______________ __________________
1977 $ 291,594.00 $ 244,372.10
1978 384,910.00 483,757.62
1979 /1/ 954,821.00 938,221.39
_____________ _____________
Total $1,631,325.00 /2/ $1,666,351.11
============= =============
On the Forms 1041, Trust Publications reported taxes due of "0," "0," and
$21,866 for the years 1977, 1978, and 1979, respectively.
Petitioner Clara J. Dahlstrom (Clara) executed a document entitled "Declaration
of Trust of this Constitutional Trust" which purported to create "Trust
Publications" (the name First Federal Trust had first been printed but
then deleted) in Texas on April 2, 1973. Trust Publications was a common law
trust organization of the type promoted in petitioner's seminars, to which
petitioners purportedly transferred ownership of tax shelter program materials
consisting of books, records, indentures pertaining to pure trust organizations,
and other property.
Clara appointed petitioner trustee of Trust Publications. Petitioner then
appointed Clara as a trustee of Trust Publications. Their powers as trustees
of this trust were broadly defined as follows:
Trustees' Powers shall be construed as general powers of citizens of the United
States of America, to do anything any citizen may do in any state or country,
subject to the restrictions herein noted. They shall continue in business,
conserve the property, commercialize the resources, extend any established
line of business in industry or investment, as herein specially noted, at their
discretion for the benefit of this Trust. * * *
Resolutions of the Board of Trustees authorizing a special thing to be done
shall be evidence that such act is within its power.
The trust was for a duration determined solely by the trustees pursuant to
the following terms:
This Trust shall continue for a period of twenty-five years from date, unless
the Trustees shall unanimously determine upon an earlier date.* * *
At the expiration of this Agreement, the then Trustees, if they so desire
and believe that said Trust should not be closed, may renew this Agreement
for a like or shorter period.
Petitioner owned all of the 100 trust certificates of Trust Publications.
According to petitioner, a certificate owner is the only person with a contingent
right to trust income, and the trustees decide whether this contingent right
is to be exercised.
Petitioners, as trustees and owners of Trust Publications, retained complete
authority and control over all assets, including bank accounts, held in the
name of Trust Publications. No one other than petitioners had signatory authority
over the bank accounts.
Trust Publications was the first tier in a multi-layered arrangement of trust
organizations of the type promoted in petitioner's tax shelter program. All
other trust organizations used by petitioners in their scheme contained similar
or identical language concerning the trust structure and trustees' powers.
/3/ The trusts formed in the Turks and Caicos Islands (Grand Turk) or in Belize
referred to their laws instead of to those of the United States. Each trust
had 100 trust certificate units. The trust certificates contained language
similar or identical to the following:
This certificate conveys no interest of any kind in the Trust assets, management
or control thereof. The Contingent Rights hereby conveyed consist solely of
income as distributed by the action and sole discretion of the Trustees. At
the death of the holder hereof, this certificate is null and void.
On November 26, 1976, petitioner executed preprinted documents, which he had
printed, to set up four nominally foreign trust organizations in the Turks
and Caicos Islands. Petitioner named these trusts Reales' Trust Company (Reales),
Grand Trust Company (Grand), International Clearing House (ICH), /4/ and Val
International (Val). The preprinted documents were identical in form for all
four trust organizations.
Petitioner paid Aubrey Smith (Smith), a tour guide and taxi owner in the Islands,
$20 to sign his name as "creator" for each of the four trusts set
up on November 26, 1976. Smith, as creator, is listed as the individual who
appointed the first trustee of each of these trusts.
The documents which purported to create Reales named petitioner as first trustee.
The documents recite that petitioner on November 26, 1976, transferred $200
for $1 and 100 trust certificate units. The documents list Smith as "creator" and
petitioner as transferor.
On the same day as Reales was created, petitioner purportedly transferred
the 100 units of Reales to Smith, who at best was a nominee for petitioner.
Smith did not transfer anything to the trusts and merely signed his name several
times for $20 per trust at the request of petitioner, and had no further interest
in the trusts. His participation in executing the trust documents appears to
be without any real significance, except perhaps to comply with technical requirements
of the laws of the Turks and Caicos Islands. Accordingly, actions ostensibly
taken by Smith as "creator" of these trusts will be treated as if
they were the actions of petitioner.
The documents which purported to create Grand name petitioner as trustee.
The documents recite that petitioner transferred $100 for $1 and 100 trust
certificate units. The documents list Smith as "creator" and petitioner
as "transferor." On October 24, 1977, petitioner made a gift of the
Grand certificates to Val.
Petitioner formed Reales and Grand for the purpose of exercising control as
trustees over other trusts in his scheme. On October 22, 1977, and on December
7, 1977, petitioner, as trustee, appointed Clara as second trustee of Reales
and Grand, respectively. On the same dates, petitioner and Clara appointed
petitioner as executive trustee of Reales and Grand, respectively. There is
no specific authorization for the appointment of an executive trustee in either
the Reales or the Grand trust instruments. The instruments provide for the
appointment of a third trustee.
On November 29, 1976, petitioner, in his capacity as trustee of Reales, executed
the documents which purported to create Val. The documents list Reales as first
trustee and Smith as creator. The documents state that Reales transferred $100
for $1 and 100 trust certificates, and Reales is denoted as transferor of Val.
On November 29, 1976, petitioner, in his capacity as a trustee of Trust Publications
and as a trustee of Reales, which was the trustee of Val, executed the documents
which purported to create ICH. The documents name Val as the first trustee
and Smith as the creator. The documents recite that on November 29, 1976, Trust
Publications transferred $100 and "Copies of Documents, written opinions
of others and other materials and papers concerning foreign trust organizations,
taxation and treaties" for $1 and 100 trust certificate units. On that
day, petitioner, as trustee for Reales, which was trustee for Val, certified
that Trust Publications owned 100 units of ICH. On the same day, petitioner,
acting in the same capacity, certified that Val was the owner of 100 units
of ICH. On December 22, 1976, petitioner, acting as a trustee for Trust Publications,
transferred 100 trust certificate units of ICH to Val. The Declaration of Trust
of ICH and the other trusts limits the number of trust certificate units to
100 units.
Petitioner used another nominally foreign trust organization, Information
Services International (ISI), which was purportedly formed in Belize on October
18, 1977. As with the other foreign trust organizations, petitioner used a
straw person to sign the preprinted forms as "creator." Lacelle Tillet,
the named creator of ISI, was a tour guide and taxi owner in Belize. Like Aubrey
Smith, Tillet did not transfer anything to the trusts and merely signed his
name several times. His participation in executing the trust documents appears
to be without any real significance, except perhaps to comply with technical
requirements of the laws of Belize. Accordingly, actions ostensibly taken by
Tillet as "creator" of these trusts will be treated as if they were
the actions of petitioner. Tillet appointed Reales the trustee of ISI on October
18, 1977, and petitioner, as trustee for Reales, acknowledged this on November
1, 1977. The named transferor/exchanger was Glenn A. Huff, who sold ALA materials
in Alaska. Huff purportedly transferred $100 and "Books, records, files
and other forms of information, technical knowledge, and methods concerning
domestic and foreign taxation, treaties, organizations and operation modes" for
$1 and 100 trust certificate units. Huff was named the original trust certificate
owner of ISI, but made a "gift" of the ISI trust certificates to
Val within a month after the trust was formed. Huff was acting on behalf of
petitioner.
Initially, petitioner was the trustee and then both petitioners became the
trustees of Reales and Grand. Reales was the named trustee of ISI and Val,
and Val was the named trustee of ICH. Although he purported to transfer trust
certificates to Smith, petitioner owned Reales. Reales held the trust certificates
of Val, and Val held the trust certificates of Grand, ICH, and ISI. Petitioner,
as trustee of Reales, had the sole signatory authority over the bank accounts
of ICH and ISI. Petitioner, as trustee of Reales, as trustee of Grand, and
as trustee of both Reales and Grand, had sole signatory authority over some
of the bank accounts of Val. Petitioner and Clara, and petitioner and Clara
as trustees of Reales, had the sole signatory authority over the remaining
bank accounts of Val. Petitioners owned and exercised control over all assets
and accounts in the names of Reales, Grand, ICH, ISI, and Val.
Trust Publications was the first tier in petitioners' distribution scheme.
ICH and ISI comprised the second tier in petitioners' distribution scheme.
Val occupied the third tier in petitioners' distribution scheme. The first
three tiers were essentially sequential conduits for income earned by petitioner.
As is discussed below, petitioner created additional trusts using straw persons,
such as employees or associates, who named petitioner or one of his other trusts
as trustee.
A broad outline of petitioner's scheme for the distribution of funds and assets
other than directly from Trust Publications is as follows:
[figure omitted]
On September 2, 1977, ICH purportedly sold "Tax Shelter Package A [which]
contains copies of documents, copies of other materials and papers that [ICH]
has at its disposal" to Trust Publications and ALA for $100,000. This
purported contract provides in part that:
4. Package A is to be used solely by Trust Publications and American Law Assoc.
and will not be shown, explained, loaned, revealed, sold or in any way presented
or disclosed to any other individual, organization or any other entity by Trust
Publications or Am. Law Ass. nor will it be given to any entity by Trust Publications
or American Law Association unless compensation is equal to that stated above
or greater and [Blanks in the form were filled in with Trust Publications and/or
American Law Association.]
On December 7, 1977, ISI purportedly sold "Tax Shelter Package B-9 [which]
contains copies of documents, copies of written opinions of others and copies
of other materials and papers that [ISI] has at its disposal" to Trust
Publications and ALA for $150,000 per year for an unlimited period. This purported
contract provides in part that:
4. Package B-9 is to be used solely by Trust Publications and American Law
Association and will not be shown, explained, loaned, revealed, sold or in
any way presented or disclosed to any other individual, organization or any
other entity by Trust Publications & Am. Law Assoc. nor will it be given
to any entity by Trust Publications and American Law Association unless compensation
is equal to that stated above or greater and [Blanks in the form were filled
in with Trust Publications and/or American Law Association.]
On August 30, 1978, ISI purportedly sold "knowledge, skill and know-how
concerning 'Trust Organizations' to" Trust Publications and ALA for $360,000
per year for an unlimited period. On the same date, ISI purportedly agreed
to provide professional consulting services to Trust Publications and ALA for
a fee of $900,000, payable $300,000 on or before December 31, 1979, and $600,000
on or before December 31, 1989. ISI was to appoint the consultants who would
perform the services. On December 22, 1979, ISI purportedly agreed to provide
Trust Publications and American Law Association "legal defense and research
services" for $800,000, payable $200,000 on or before December 31, 1979,
and $600,000 on or before December 31, 1980. ISI was to appoint the persons
who would perform the services. There were no disbursements from ISI to any
persons for any such services during 1978 or 1979.
Petitioners took deductions on the Forms 1041 for Trust Publications for royalty
payments to ICH and ISI of $235,100, $338,000, and $580,000 for 1977, 1978,
and 1979, respectively, totalling $1,153,100. The 1977 royalty deduction was
$90,000 more than the amounts transferred to ICH and ISI.
Petitioner transferred $1,063,100 from Trust Publications accounts to accounts
of ICH and ISI, the second-tier trusts, as follows:
Year ICH ISI Total
____ ___ ___ _____
1977 $100,000 $ 45,100 $145,100
1978 0 338,000 338,000
1979 0 580,000 580,000
________ _______ _______
Total $100,000 $963,100 $1,063,100
On November 10, 1977, petitioner transferred $90,000 from ICH to Val Account
#1. On December 22, 1977, petitioner transferred $90,000 from Val Account #1
to ISI. There were no deposits to the ICH account other than those from Trust
Publications. There were no deposits to the ISI account other than from Trust
Publications and Val #1.
Petitioner transferred $1,153,000 from ICH and ISI accounts to eight bank
accounts in the name of Val as follows:
Account 1977 1978 1979 Total
_______ ____ ____ ____ _____
#1 $ 90,000 $ 90,000
#2 10,000 $135,000 145,000
#3 130,000 130,000
#4 60,000 60,000
#5 148,000 148,000
#6 $ 80,000 80,000
#7 300,000 300,000
#8 200,000 200,000
_________
Total $1,153,000
=========
Petitioner transferred a net of $1,063,000 from ICH and ISI to Val, the third-tier
trust, during the taxable years in issue, after taking into account the $90,000
transfer from ICH to Val Account #1 and then to ISI in November and December
1977. (Account #5 and Account #7 bear the same bank account numbers in 1978
and 1979, respectively.) There were no transfers from either the ICH or the
ISI accounts other than to the Val accounts during the years in issue. There
were no transfers to the Val accounts from other than ICH or ISI accounts during
the years in issue. No employer identification or Social Security numbers were
given for the ICH, ISI, and Val accounts.
To continue this circuitous route by which petitioners converted personal
income into purported foreign trust royalty payments, gratuitous transfers,
and finally cash used by domestic trusts to pay petitioners' personal living
expenses or purchase assets, petitioners created a fourth distributional tier
in their scheme. Petitioners, as trustees of Grand, also exercised complete
control over this level, which consisted of three domestic trusts formed in
Texas. These were Yellow Rose Properties (Yellow Rose), formed in November
1977, Lark Enterprises (Lark), formed in November 1977, and Southern Utilities
Company (Southern), formed in August 1979. Petitioners used straw persons as
creators to name Grand, of which petitioners were trustees, the trustee of
each of these three trusts. Yellow Rose, Lark, and Southern had accounts at
the University National Bank, College Station, Texas. No employer identification
number or Social Security number was given for these accounts.
Petitioner, purportedly as trustee, transferred $1,063,000 from the Val accounts
as follows: $285,000 to the Yellow Rose account in 1978 and 1979; $278,000
to the Lark account in 1978 and 1979; $162,456 to purchase a 155.35-acre tract
of land in the name of Southern in 1979; $137,544 to the Southern account in
1980; and $200,000 for a certificate of deposit for Val account #8 in 1980.
(After a series of certificates of deposit and deposits, this $200,000 was
deposited in the North Fork account described below.) Clara, as Notary Public,
notarized some of these transfers. None of these transfers were achieved through
independent arm's-length dealings, nor did they have any independent economic
significance. These were gratuitous transfers of funds by petitioner from Val
to the other trust organizations.
Petitioners, through Yellow Rose, Lark, and Southern, operated businesses,
maintained bank accounts and deposits, held title to and disposed of property
for their own direct benefit. Petitioners, with funds from these trust organizations'
bank accounts, paid personal living expenses they incurred. Petitioners held
all the trust certificates for these trusts, either directly or as certificate
holders of trusts which held certificates of these trusts directly or indirectly.
Yellow Rose, Lark, and Southern also acted as conduits to transfer assets
and funds to yet another group of trust organizations, which included North
Fork Land Company (North Fork), Sunbelt Water Systems (Sunbelt), Rockwood Water
District (Rockwood), Clear Gold Organization (Clear Gold), and Real Properties.
/5/ Petitioners exercised complete control over all these trust organizations.
Petitioners, through these trust organizations, operated businesses, maintained
bank accounts and deposits, held title to and disposed of tangible property
for their own direct benefit. Petitioner often would withdraw funds from a
trust account to purchase a certificate of deposit, which in turn was used
to purchase an asset. We consider such transactions as payments from trust
accounts. Petitioners, using funds from these trust organizations' bank accounts,
paid personal expenses they incurred. Petitioners held all the trust certificates
for these trusts, either directly or as holders of trusts which held these
trusts' certificates, directly or indirectly.
Because of petitioners' refusal to cooperate during the audit, respondent's
auditing agent had to try to locate petitioners' trust bank accounts through
third-party contacts and leads from tax returns and other information. Contacts
were made with banks, and based on the information that could be obtained,
vendors were contacted. For example, by tracing petitioner's 1980 Audi license
plate number, the agent learned that the Audi had been purchased in the name
of North Fork, a trust previously unknown to the agent. A requisition of the
tax returns of North Fork was made, and a boat was listed on the depreciation
schedule. The agent then obtained from the Texas Department of Wildlife the
title histories of boats purchased by petitioners' trusts. Petitioner instructed
at least one bank manager not to comply with respondent's summons. On another
occasion, the agent sought information concerning the materials purchased for
the construction of 1026 Rose Circle, College Station, Texas, from the office
manager of Varisco Lumber Company. Petitioner showed up and asked to speak
to her outside the office, which he did. After the office manager returned,
she turned over the requested records to the agent and advised the agent that
petitioner had asked her not to provide the records to the agent.
The agent found numerous checks were illegible as to the name of the payee
on the front of the check and as to the endorsement on the back of the check.
This was because many of the checks for the amounts of the various transfers
were written with a 'copy-not' type of pen, which is designed to produce illegible
or invisible copies and microfilms of the checks. Because this hindered much
of respondent's analysis of the records of checks for payees, dates and amounts,
respondent could not trace all of petitioners' transfers. Some of the checks
were made payable to one payee but deposited in a different account, which
made it difficult to trace the flow of funds. Respondent's agent examined other
evidence, such as check registers, land records, and sales invoices to track
the activities of petitioners' trusts.
Petitioners used all of the above mentioned trusts to conduct their personal
affairs and invest the income they generated and funneled through Trust Publications.
This is shown by their dealings in property, purchases of boats and automobiles,
and financing of their various homes.
HOMES
Petitioners owned property at 2001 Rockwood Drive, Bryan, Texas, where they
resided from 1974 to 1977. On November 1, 1977, petitioners, from a grantor
trust otherwise not relevant to this opinion, transferred 2001 Rockwood Drive
and all furnishings, furniture, fixtures, and personal belongings at that address,
bonds, cash, and a parcel of land at 1026 Rose Circle to Yellow Rose upon its
formation. Petitioners continued to reside at the Rockwood address and use
the personal belongings at that residence.
On April 12, 1978, Yellow Rose purchased 1009 Rose Circle, College Station,
Texas, for $66,000 with a $1,000 downpayment. The amount of $65,000 was transferred
from a Val account to a Yellow Rose account to pay the balance of the purchase
price on that date. Petitioners resided at 1009 Rose Circle until the completion
of a new house at 1026 Rose Circle. On August 5, 1981, Yellow Rose sold 1009
Rose Circle for $90,000, which was deposited into a Yellow Rose account.
Yellow Rose sold the real property at 2001 Rockwood Drive on July 13, 1978,
to Mr. and Mrs. Fred McBride. The McBrides paid only interest of $411.67 per
month to Yellow Rose. Five payments were made in 1979. Yellow Rose repurchased
the property on November 26, 1980. On April 2, 1982, petitioner's parents in
the name of another trust purchased 2001 Rockwood Drive from Yellow Rose for
$50,833.36. This amount was deposited into the Yellow Rose account. On February
4, 1983, petitioners individually transferred the property back to Yellow Rose.
Petitioner's parents continued to reside at 2001 Rockwood Drive.
In February 1978, a building permit was obtained on behalf of petitioner to
construct his new residence at 1026 Rose Circle. Construction expenses were
billed both to petitioner individually and to Yellow Rose. Petitioner transferred
funds from Val to Yellow Rose, and paid these expenses with funds from the
Yellow Rose account. These expenses totalled $91,682.57. Petitioner also paid
$456.50 from the Real Properties account for such expenses.
Petitioners used funds from the Trust Publications and Yellow Rose accounts
which totalled $37,851.74 to finish, furnish, decorate, landscape, and maintain
their new home.
On February 9, 1978, petitioner, individually as owner, entered into a contract
for the construction of a swimming pool at 1026 Rose Circle. Petitioner had
this pool constructed and maintained at the new residence and paid for these
expenses with $15,077.78 from the Yellow Rose account.
In August 1979, petitioners paid insurance on the home with Yellow Rose funds,
and in September 1979, petitioners paid moving expenses with Trust Publications
funds. Petitioner transferred title of 1026 Rose Circle from Yellow Rose to
Real Properties in October 1980. Petitioners began construction of servants'
quarters on the property in February 1981. Clara paid $8,099.08 for building
materials used to construct the servants' quarters with funds from the Real
Properties account. Petitioners have resided at 1026 Rose Circle since the
residence was completed.
In 1982, petitioners used $14,560 from Real Properties and Yellow Rose accounts
to purchase a sunscreen for this residence at 1026 Rose Circle.
In 1982, petitioners purchased and developed bay property with water access
in the Holiday Harbors Subdivision, Matagorda County, where petitioners visited.
Petitioners used $41,618.13 from the Yellow Rose and Lark accounts for the
acquisition of and construction of a house, bulkhead, and boat ramp on the
property. They paid at least $645 in related expenses. The telephone listing
for the property was in petitioner's personal name.
BOATS, CARS, AND TRAILERS
During the years in issue and through part of 1984, petitioners purchased
and used five recreational vehicles (e.g., a 1977 Winnebago motor home) with
funds from the Trust Publications and Lark accounts. Petitioners paid insurance
on the vehicles from the same accounts. Petitioners purchased and used six
other vehicles during that period, using funds from the Trust Publications,
Lark, North Fork, and Sunbelt accounts controlled by petitioners. Petitioners
paid insurance and some of the fees on the vehicles with funds from the Lark
or North Fork accounts. Petitioners paid $98,040.89 from trust organization
accounts that they controlled to third parties for these purchases and expenses.
Trust Publications sold a motor home to Lark in 1980 for $5,977.32 more than
the $17,560.58 Trust Publications paid in 1978. Petitioners used the various
trust organizations to hold title to all of these vehicles. During the taxable
years in issue, petitioners did not hold title to any vehicle in their individual
names.
Petitioner has enjoyed fishing all his life. During the years in issue and
through part of 1984, petitioners purchased numerous boats, boat motors, and
trailers. Petitioners paid expenses relating to these assets with funds from
the trust accounts. Petitioners paid $88,535.83 from the Lark, Yellow Rose,
and North Fork accounts to third parties for these purchases and expenses.
(Lark sold two boat motors to Yellow Rose for $6,700.) Petitioners exercised
complete authority and control over all of these assets. Petitioners employed
the trusts to hold title to all of these assets. Petitioners did not hold title
to these assets in their individual names.
BUSINESS AND OTHER PROPERTIES
On July 26, 1977, petitioners, through Trust Publications, purchased a parcel
of land near College Station, Texas, for $15,000. In October 1977, a builder
was hired to construct a building on that land for an ALA campus for $15,500.
The construction was paid for with funds from Trust Publications bank accounts.
Between November 1977 and May 1978, petitioner signed checks totaling $11,317.43,
drawn on a Trust Publications account and used to pay for services in constructing
the ALA campus, which consisted of several buildings.
Lark was created for the purpose of completing the ALA campus. Trust Publications
conveyed the parcel of land on which the ALA campus was located to Lark on
November 1, 1977. The funds in the Lark account were used to complete the campus.
On June 17, 1981, a check in the amount of $20,910.10, drawn from the Lark
account, was used to purchase a cashier's check in the same amount payable
to American Steel Building Company, Inc. Funds of at least $113,113.15 from
the Lark account were used to pay for materials and furnishings used in completing
the ALA campus. These payments were made with funds transferred from Val to
Lark.
During the taxable years and through 1984, petitioners paid at least $393,732.61
for commercial property investments and related expenses. In 1979 and 1980,
petitioner used Southern to acquire title to numerous water systems with $69,269.46
of the funds transferred from a Val account. Many of these water systems were
held in the names of Southern or Sunbelt Utilities, Inc. On April 12, 1982,
in a contract between Donald Sass and Southern, Sunbelt, and Sunbelt Utilities,
Inc., petitioner sold 17 water systems for $98,000 and directed that payment
be made only to Sunbelt.
In December 1979, petitioners purchased a 155.35-acre tract for Southern with
$162,456 with three cashier's checks purchased with a check drawn on a Val
account. This land was transferred to North Fork on October 23, 1980. Petitioners,
through Clear Gold, owned 75 percent of a partnership called Energy Farms.
Energy Farms held title to property that was transferred to North Fork. Petitioners
purchased many other parcels of land for North Fork during the taxable years
and through 1984. Petitioners used funds from the North Fork account (including
the $200,000 from the Val certificate of deposit) for these purchases and other
related expenses.
Petitioners personally acquired title to a few parcels of land, but then transferred
the properties to themselves as trustees of Rockwood. These properties were
ultimately transferred to Clear Gold.
PAYMENTS /6/
During 1977 and 1979, petitioner wrote checks from Trust Publications accounts,
payable to cash, of at least $14,059.38 and $32,252.50, respectively. From
1978 through January 1985, petitioner or Clara wrote checks from Trust Publications,
Southern, Yellow Rose, and Lark accounts, payable to petitioner, of at least
$43,963.76. Between 1977 and 1980, petitioner wrote checks from Trust Publications,
Southern, and Lark accounts payable to petitioner's father for $4,791.17. In
1978, petitioner paid a traffic ticket with funds from a Trust Publications
account, and in 1979, petitioners paid their passport fees with funds from
a Trust Publications account.
1977 LOSS DEDUCTIONS
On November 1, 1977, 10 trust certificates of Clear Gold were issued to petitioner
and 90 trust certificates of Clear Gold were issued to Rockwood. On the same
day, petitioners, on behalf of Rockwood, purportedly sold the 90 trust certificates
of Clear Gold to Val for $30. On the same day, petitioner "gifted" 10
trust certificates of Clear Gold to Val. On the same day, 100 trust certificates
of Clear Gold were issued in Val's name by petitioner, as trustee for Grand,
which was the trustee of Clear Gold.
On their 1977 Federal income tax return, petitioners reported that they acquired
30 units and 60 units of trust certificates of Clear Gold on November 1, 1977,
for $4,000 and $5,000, respectively, and on the same day, sold them for $10
and $20, respectively. Petitioners deducted a short term loss of $3,990 (limited
to $2,000) and an ordinary loss of $4,950 arising from these transactions on
their 1977 return. Respondent disallowed these loss deductions.
UNREPORTED INCOME DETERMINATIONS
In the notice of deficiency dated April 15, 1983, respondent determined that
petitioners had unreported income in the amount of $308,087, $693,577 and $1,584,691
for 1977, 1978 and 1979, respectively. On brief, respondent concedes the excess
of the amounts determined in the notice of deficiency, over the taxable deposits
into accounts styled in the names of trust organizations controlled by petitioners
and income derived therefrom. Respondent's present position is that petitioners'
unreported income is $223,154.65, $479,678.41, and $928,529.77 for 1977, 1978,
and 1979, respectively, computed as follows:
Year: 1977
Account Name and Bank Type of Income Amount of Deposits
_____________________ ______________ __________________
Trust Publications seminar fees and sales of
Citizens #00095701 packages $ 92,127.20
Trust Publications seminar fees and sales
Snook #10-0030-6-01 of packages 152,244.90
Trust Publications interest per Form 1041 788.00
#60-0207-2-01 __________
Total taxable deposits $245,160.10
Less trustee fees per return (22,005.45)
___________
Total unreported income $223,154.65
===========
Year: 1978
Account Name and Bank Type of Income Amount of Deposits
_____________________ ______________ __________________
Trust Publications seminar fees and sales of
Citizens #00095701 packages $ 24,106.50
Trust Publications seminar fees and sales of
Snook #10-0030-6-01 packages 112,496.52
Trust Publications seminar fees and sales of
Univ. #403-563-0 packages 347,154.60
Yellow Rose interest from house sale
Univ. #403-906-1 and deposits from
unexplained sources 10,187.79
Lark Enterprises rent/fireworks display 200.00
Univ. #402-388-3
Trust Publications interest per Form 1041 471.00
#60-0207-2-01 _______
Total taxable deposits $494,616.41
Less trustee fees per return (14,938.00)
___________
Total unreported income $479,678.41
===========
Year: 1979
Account Name and Bank Type of Income Amount of Deposits
_____________________ ______________ __________________
Trust Publications seminar fees and sales of
Snook #10-0030-6-01 packages $ 1,000.00
Trust Publications seminar fees and sales of
Univ. #403-563-0 packages 937,221.39
Trust Publications interest per Form 1041 922.00
#60-0207-2-01
Yellow Rose interest from house sale
Univ. #403-906-1 and deposits from
unexplained sources 7,340.04
Lark Enterprises rent/fireworks display 400.00
Univ. #402-388-3
Southern Utilities cash and deposits from
Univ. #403-324-7 unexplained sources 3,946.34
__________
Total taxable deposits $950,829.77
Less trustee fees per return (22,300.00)
___________
Total unreported income $928,529.77
===========
OPINION
SHAM TRUSTS
Petitioners bear the burden of proving that respondent's determinations as
to income tax deficiencies are incorrect. Welch v. Helvering, 290 U.S. 111
(1933); Rule 142(a).
Petitioners contend that the trusts they established were not shams but had
economic validity. They argue that the proper test to be applied in determining
the validity of a business organization is whether it either had a business
purpose or carried on a business activity or a business for profit. Petitioners
argue that their trusts engaged in business activity and should be recognized
for Federal income tax purposes.
Respondent contends that the trusts are shams for Federal tax purposes because
petitioners maintained unrestricted control of the trusts through their roles
as trustees, directly or indirectly, of the trusts. Respondent further contends
that the trusts are shams for Federal tax purposes because petitioners remained
in total control of and used for their own purposes the assets held in the
names of the trusts. This personal utilization of the assets of the trusts
includes paying petitioners' personal living expenses and other personal expenses
with those assets. Respondent further contends that the seminar fees and related
income were earned by petitioner, and the various trust arrangements were merely
an attempt at an anticipatory assignment by petitioner of his income.
Alternatively, respondent contends that the trusts are subject to the grantor
trust provisions of sections 671 through 677. In response, petitioners argue
that the trusts were not true trusts but were valid business organizations
often referred to as Massachusetts business or common law trusts.
Section 61(a) provides that gross income includes all income from whatever
source derived, including compensation for services, fees, commissions, or
gains derived from dealings in property. Fundamental to this principle is that
income is taxable to the person who earns it. Lucas v. Earl, 281 U.S. 111 (1930).
A taxpayer has a right to minimize his taxes or avoid them totally by any means
which the law permits. Gregory v. Helvering, 293 U.S. 465, 469 (1935). However,
where entities are created which have no real economic effect and which affect
no cognizable economic relationships, the substance of a transaction involving
those entities will control over its form. Zmuda v. Commissioner, 731 F.2d
1417, 1421 (9th Cir. 1984), affg. 79 T.C. 714 (1982); Markosian v. Commissioner,
73 T.C. 1235, 1241 (1980). It is, therefore, unnecessary to decide whether
petitioners' trusts had separate existence under State law or whether they
are in form, a trust, a common law business trust, or some other form of jural
entity. Zmuda v. Commissioner, 79 T.C. 714, 720 (1982), affd. 731 F.2d 1417
(9th Cir. 1984).
We again must face the question of whether "Dahlstrom trusts" (sometimes
referred to as "ALA trusts") should be recognized for Federal income
tax purposes in a case involving the creator of the Dah1strom trust concept.
On brief, the only Dah1strom trust case cited by petitioner and negatively
criticized by petitioner as applying the wrong test is this Court's opinion
in Tatum v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo 1988-579. The Fifth Circuit (the Court
of Appeals to which an appeal in this case would lie) affirmed Tatum without
published opinion, 886 F.2d 1313 (1989). As in Tatum, we will apply the principles
set forth in the Dah1strom trust cases. Although their case involves a multitude
of Dah1strom trusts, petitioners have not distinguished their case from those
in which this Court and others have found Dah1strom trusts with virtually identical
terms and similar formation not recognizable for Federal income tax purposes.
Sandvall v. Commissioner, 898 F.2d 455 (5th Cir. 1990), affg. two Memorandum
Opinions of this Court; /7/ Akland v. Commissioner, 767 F.2d 618 (9th Cir.
1985), affg. a Memorandum opinion of this Court; Zmuda v. Commissioner, 731
F.2d 1417 (9th Cir. 1984), affg. 79 T.C. 714 (1982); Professional Services
v. Commissioner, 79 T.C. 888 (1982). /8/ As in those cases, we again refuse
to recognize petitioners' type of trust arrangement scheme for Federal income
tax purposes.
Petitioners were instrumental in the creation of all the trusts involved in
their multitiered arrangement. Petitioners, as trustees, retained complete
control and authority over all assets held in the name of all trust organizations
in their scheme. No other person had any substantial function in the creation
or operation of any trust organization.
Petitioners and their family were the beneficiaries of all the trusts they
created and used in their scheme. No other person held any substantial beneficial
interest in any trust organization used in petitioners' scheme. There was no
economic change, nor any independent economic interest created in anyone other
than petitioners under the trusts. Therefore, petitioners' trusts are nullities
for Federal income tax purposes. Sandvall v. Commissioner, supra; Zmuda v.
Commissioner, supra; Professional Services v. Commissioner, supra.
Other factors reinforce our decision to disregard petitioners' trust scheme.
Aside from the income-producing assets and unexplained deposits, petitioner's
seminars and sale of the tax package provided the sole source of funds and
assets held and passed through Trust Publications, ICH, ISI, and Val in non-arm's-length
transactions. Petitioners employed Yellow Rose, Lark, Southern, and other trusts
to transfer assets in non-arm's-length transactions back and forth, creating
layers of documentation to impede any examination or investigation. Petitioner
used a "copy-not" type of pen for writing and endorsing checks to
make invisible on photocopies the payees and amounts of the checks. This device
was also used in Ripley v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1987-114. Petitioners used
the trusts to purchase and hold title to their homes, their furnishings, their
vacation home, their cars, and their boats. These assets were regularly used
by petitioners for their personal benefit, and petitioners used funds from
the trusts to pay personal expenses. Markosian v. Commissioner, supra at 1243.
It is clear that the trusts existed for no reasons other than for petitioners
to manage their personal affairs and business assets, and as contrivances to
avoid taxes while doing so. Petitioners owned and enjoyed the income, funneled
through the layers of trusts and paperwork they generated to disguise or hide
their income, and they are taxable on that income. Lucas v. Earl, supra. To
sum up with the words of the Fifth Circuit in Sandvall v. Commissioner, 898
F.2d at 459: "Legal smoke and mirrors, reams of paper, and strings of
words will suffice no longer to evade or delay the payment of their fair share
of federal income taxes. The time has come for them to join the rest of their
fellow citizens at the annual income roundup."
Petitioners neither claimed nor substantiated any deductions in connection
with their unreported income during the taxable years in issue. In 1979, petitioner
made a $21,866 payment of income taxes with the Form 1041 for Trust Publications.
Since this is one of his sham trusts, this payment should be considered as
made by petitioner and credited against petitioners' 1977 income tax liability.
/9/ Except for this adjustment, respondent's position on this issue is sustained.
In view of our conclusion, we do not need to address respondent's alternative
argument under the grantor trust provisions of sections 671 through 677.
LOSS DEDUCTIONS
Because we find petitioners' scheme of trusts a nullity for Federal income
tax purposes, we likewise find the claimed losses incurred by petitioners upon
the purported transfer of Clear Gold trust certificates to be invalid deductions.
Petitioners merely transferred those trust certificates between trusts which
they controlled. Petitioners orchestrated the transactions solely for the benefit
of tax losses. Even if we did not find petitioners' trusts to be without economic
substance, we would be hardpressed to find validity in transactions where a
taxpayer willingly purchases assets and immediately resells them to a controlled
entity for a fraction of their cost. This is clearly a sham transaction. Sandvall
v. Commissioner, 898 F.2d at 458. We uphold respondent's disallowance of these
loss deductions.
ADDITIONS TO TAX
Petitioners claim the same facts and evidence before this Court were before
the Ninth Circuit in United States v. Dah1strom, 713 F.2d 1423 (1983). That
is not correct. Contrary to petitioners' claim, the Ninth Circuit made no ruling
as to Trust Publications. The Ninth Circuit did not have before it evidence
of petitioners' personal income tax liability, their assignment of income to
Trust Publications, their individual use of foreign and domestic trusts, and
the ultimate use of trust assets for petitioners' personal benefit.
In Dahlstrom, the Ninth Circuit reversed the criminal conviction of Karl Dah1strom
(petitioner in this case) for, among other things, advocating the ALA tax shelter
program during 1976 through 1979. The Ninth Circuit in Akland v. Commissioner,
767 F.2d at 621-622, upheld this Court's finding that the taxpayers in that
case were liable for civil fraud additions to tax for 1976 through 1979 and
distinguished its Dah1strom opinion on a number of grounds. The Ninth Circuit
explained that criminal fraud must be proved "beyond a reasonable doubt" whereas
the test for civil fraud is "clear and convincing evidence" of fraud.
It also stated that its Dah1strom opinion involved an abstract program whereas
in Akland, as here, there were specific facts to consider. The Ninth Circuit
further explained that its Dah1strom opinion did not hold that the method of
transferring money into the overseas trusts cannot be evidence of fraud.
We agree with the Ninth Circuit in Akland that its opinion in Dah1strom is
distinguishable, and we further find that this applies even as to petitioner
because we are here concerned with civil fraud based on the specific facts
relating to the actions of petitioner.
The dissenting judge in the Ninth Circuit's Dah1strom opinion subsequently
referred to the ALA programs in another opinion by stating that "At the
heart of these tax avoidance schemes were three foreign trusts." United
States v. Brodie, 858 F.2d 492, 497 (9th Cir. 1988). As claimed by petitioner,
the word "legitimate" preceded the phrase "tax avoidance schemes" in
the Brodie opinion, filed September 21, 1988, but it is obvious that the Ninth
Circuit struck that word from its opinion, as amended November 16, 1988. United
States v. Brodie, supra, does not aid petitioner, and we must decide whether
petitioner is liable for the additions to tax under section 6653(b).
Section 6653(b) imposes a 50-percent addition to tax on an underpayment of
tax for a year in which any part of the underpayment is due to fraud. The burden
of proving fraud by clear and convincing evidence is on respondent. Sec. 7454(a);
Rule 142(b); Grosshandler v. Commissioner, 75 T.C. 1, 19 (1980). When fraud
is determined for more than one taxable year, respondent must show that an
underpayment exists and that some part of the underpayment was due to fraud
for each taxable year in issue for the corresponding addition for fraud for
each such year to be upheld. Otsuki v. Commissioner, 53 T.C. 96, 105 (1969).
Respondent must show that the taxpayer intended to evade taxes known to be
owing by conduct intended to conceal, mislead, or otherwise prevent the collection
of such taxes. Rowlee v. Commissioner, 80 T.C. 1111, 1123 (1983). The existence
of fraud is a question of fact to be determined from the entire record. Kotmair
v. Commissioner, 86 T.C. 1253, 1259 (1986); Marcus v. Commissioner, 70 T.C.
562, 577 (1978), affd. without published opinion 621 F.2d 439 (5th Cir. 1980).
Because fraud can seldom be established by direct proof of intention, circumstantial
evidence is permitted, and fraud may be properly inferred where a taxpayer's
entire course of conduct establishes the necessary intent. Kotmair v. Commissioner,
supra at 1260; Wilson v. Commissioner, 76 T.C. 623, 633 (1981). Petitioner's
activities in succeeding years cast a light on conduct in prior years. Estate
of Upshaw v. Commissioner, 416 F.2d 737 (7th Cir. 1969), affg. a Memorandum
Opinion of this Court; Smith v. Commissioner, 32 T.C. 985 (1959).
Upon review of the record, we conclude that petitioner's underpayments for
all the years in issue were due to fraud. Among the factors we considered in
arriving at this conclusion was petitioner's lack of economic foundation for
the existence of, and the many transfers between, the trusts he used as conduits
in his scheme. He used numerous trusts and numerous bank accounts to hide his
earnings from lectures and sales to the ALA members in order to avoid tax on
those amounts. He used cashier's checks and certificates of deposits to obscure
the source of funds. He would deposit checks made to one payee into another
account for the same reason. Petitioner used the many trusts to hold title
to his property. Petitioners' homes, summer home, cars and boats were all titled
in the name of one trust or another, and petitioners used these properties
for their personal use in the years in issue and in subsequent years.
The trusts established by petitioner were without economic substance and were
merely a scheme to evade tax. Petitioners failed to report income of $223,154.65,
$479,678.21, and $928,529.77 for the years 1977, 1978, and 1979, respectively.
A consistent pattern of failing to report substantial amounts of income over
a period of several years is persuasive evidence of fraud. Merritt v. Commissioner,
301 F.2d 484, 487 (5th Cir. 1962), affg. a Memorandum Opinion of this Court.
This Court has characterized petitioners' repeated responses to respondent's
discovery requests with frivolous objections and numerous spurious motions
as dilatory tactics. Dahlstrom I, 85 T.C. at 819. Petitioner's response to
the Court's Rule 91(f) order to show cause was evasive and not fairly directed
to the proposed stipulation of facts. Petitioner attempted to obfuscate respondent's
examination, which included the use of the "copy-not" type of pen.
Petitioner asked at least two persons not to furnish records to respondent's
agent. Petitioner did not provide some records until trial and only after the
Court directed him to do so. Such failure to cooperate with respondent's agents
is another indication of fraudulent intent by petitioner. Millikin v. Commissioner,
298 F.2d 830, 836 (4th Cir. 1962), affg. a Memorandum Opinion of this Court;
Baumgardner v. Commissioner, 251 F.2d 311, 323 (9th Cir. 1957), affg. a Memorandum
Opinion of this Court; Professional Services v. Commissioner, 79 T.C. at 933.
In 1977, petitioner made purported transfers of Clear Gold trust certificates
solely for the creation of tax losses.
The entire record, and petitioner's course of conduct as documented, clearly
and convincingly show that the underpayments resulted from petitioner's actions
which were intentional and were designed to evade taxes he knew to be owing.
Professional Services v. Commissioner, 79 T.C. at 931; Marshall v. Commissioner,
85 T.C. 267, 272 (1985). Petitioner is liable for the additions to tax under
section 6653(b) for the years in issue.
STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS
Petitioners claim that respondent is precluded from assessing and collecting
any deficiency for 1977 and 1978 because the period of limitations with respect
to assessments is 3 years from the date the return is filed. Sec. 6501(a).
Because the date of issuance of the notice of deficiency is April 15, 1983,
petitioners claim that the taxable years 1977 and 1978 are barred by the statute
of limitations.
There is no limit on the period of time in which the assessment and collection
of tax can be made for a particular taxable year when a fraudulent Federal
income tax return is filed for that year. Sec. 6501(c)(1); Estate of Temple
v. Commissioner, 67 T.C. 143, 159-160, 164 (1976). Where a joint return has
been filed, fraud by one spouse is sufficient to lift the statute of limitations
against both spouses. Ballard v. Commissioner, 740 F.2d 659, 663 (8th Cir.
1984), affg. in part and revg. in part a Memorandum Opinion of this Court;
Vannaman v. Commissioner, 54 T.C. 1011, 1018 (1970).
Because we have found that petitioner filed fraudulent Federal income tax
returns for the years 1977 and 1978, the statute of limitations does not bar
respondent's assessment and collection of petitioners' Federal income tax liability
for those years. Even if we had not found fraud on the part of petitioner,
the 6-year statute of limitations under section 6501(e)(1) would apply because
petitioners' unreported income of $223,154.65 and $429,678.41 for 1977 and
1978, respectively, exceeds 25 percent of the gross income of $42,635 and $14,943
reported on the 1977 and 1978 Federal income tax returns. Respondent issued
the notice of deficiency on April 15, 1983, which is less than 6 years from
on or about April 17, 1978, and on or about April 16, 1979, the dates petitioners
filed their returns for 1977 and 1978, respectively. Aside from fraud, respondent's
notice of deficiency with respect to 1977 and 1978 is not barred by the 6-year
statute of limitations under section 6501(e)(1).
Decision will be entered under Rule 155.
FOOTNOTES
/1/ The Form 1041 also shows returns and allowances of $50,450, but because
the record does not show whether or not such amounts were deposited, we have
used the higher gross receipts amount.
/2/ Why the total receipts for 1977 and 1979 as reported on the Forms 1041
were not reflected in the total deposits is not shown in the record.
/3/ Petitioners' Jeanette Louis Trust does not follow this format but similarly
grants petitioners unrestricted authority as trustees.
/4/ The name International Clearing House had been lined out and Pan-Am Automobile
Insurance Company had been typed on the Declaration of Trust. All other references
in the record are to International Clearing House, and petitioner admitted
that this was the correct title.
/5/ Although there is no declaration of trust in the record for Real Properties,
nothing in the record indicates it was different from the other trust organizations.
/6/ Petitioner Karl L. Dahlstrom makes no claims that these amounts were included
in reported trustees fees on his 1977, 1978, and 1979 returns. On the contrary,
he claims he "acted as agent or trustee."
/7/ On a consolidated appeal, Sandvall v. Commissioner, 898 F.2d 455 (5th
Cir. 1990), affirmed two cases, Sandvall v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1989-56
and Sandvall v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1989-189.
/8/ See also Able Company v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1990-500; Tatum v. Commissioner,
T.C. Memo. 1990-119; Tatum v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1988-579, affd. without
published opinion 886 F.2d 1313 (5th Cir. 1989); Drager v. Commissioner, T.C.
Memo. 1987-483; Ripley v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1987-114; Estate of Yeoham
v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1986-431, affd. without published opinion 826 F.2d
11 (5th Cir. 1987); Akland v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1983- 249, affd. 767
F.2d 618 (9th Cir. 1985).
/9/ Petitioner reported a "0" tax liability on the income tax returns
for Yellow Rose Properties for 1978, 1979, and 1980, for Southern Utilities
Company for 1979 and 1980, and for Lark Enterprises for 1980. The record contains
no income tax returns for Lark Enterprises for 1977, 1978, and 1979.
See Dalhstrom v. IRS, the 2nd Case
Return
to Quatloos! Pure Trust Page