Martin G. Plotkin v. Commissioner of IRS , 498 F. App'x 954 ( 2012 )


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  •              Case: 12-10620     Date Filed: 11/27/2012   Page: 1 of 17
    [DO NOT PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    ________________________
    No. 12-10620
    Non-Argument Calendar
    ________________________
    Agency No. 17775-08
    MARTIN G. PLOTKIN,
    Petitioner-Appellant,
    versus
    COMMISSIONER OF IRS,
    Respondent-Appellee.
    ________________________
    Petition for Review of a Decision of the
    U.S. Tax Court
    ________________________
    (November 27, 2012)
    Before CARNES, BARKETT and HULL, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:
    Martin Plotkin appeals pro se from an order of the United States Tax Court
    denying his petition for a redetermination of his tax deficiencies for the years 1991
    Case: 12-10620    Date Filed: 11/27/2012   Page: 2 of 17
    through 1995. After review, we affirm.
    I. BACKGROUND
    A.     Plotkin’s Background and Business Interests
    Plotkin is a highly educated, sophisticated businessman. In 1963, he
    graduated from the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School with a degree in
    economics. In 1972, he earned a law degree from St. Louis University, and
    worked as an attorney on corporate cases for approximately two-and-a-half years.
    In 1980, Plotkin purchased a controlling interest in Medigroup Enterprises,
    Inc. (“Medigroup Enterprises”), an entity incorporated by Harvey Friedman, the
    father of Plotkin’s ex-wife. Medigroup Enterprises owned and operated several
    nursing homes through a complex group of partnerships, corporations, and related
    entities.
    B.     Rolla Health Care Associates (“RHCA”)
    One entity related to Medigroup Enterprises was Rolla Health Care
    Associates, L.P. (“RHCA”), a Missouri limited partnership formed in 1978 that
    built and operated a nursing home in Rolla, Missouri. At the time of its 1978
    formation, RHCA had two partners:
    (1) A general partner, Rolla Health Care, Inc. (“Rolla Health Care”), which
    owned a 1-percent interest in RHCA; and
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    (2) A limited partner, Medigroup, Inc. (“Medigroup Inc.”)1, which owned a
    99-percent interest.
    Plotkin incorporated the general partner, Rolla Health Care, in 1978, and by
    1987 was its president, secretary, and only board member. By 1989, Vernon Ray
    Lavender, a friend and coworker of Plotkin’s, had become Rolla Health Care’s
    sole officer and its only board member.
    As for the limited partner Medigroup Inc., in 1987 Plotkin was Medigroup
    Inc.’s president, secretary, and only board member.
    Plotkin also owned the stock of KSFS Investment Co. (“KSFS”), a holding
    corporation. At a time not clear from the record, KSFS acquired ownership of
    Medigroup Inc. Plotkin then sold his KSFS stock—which he estimated was worth
    between $100,000 and $150,000—to Lavender for $500 in 1987. By 1989 (just
    like with Rolla Health Care), Lavender was Medigroup Inc.’s sole officer and its
    only board member.
    In 1982, Medigroup Inc. sold its 99-percent limited partnership interest in
    RHCA to Lee Kling, a St. Louis businessman. Four years later, in 1986, Kling
    sold the same 99-percent limited partnership interest in RHCA to Health Facilities
    Investment Co., Ltd. (“Health Facilities”), a limited partnership formed by Plotkin.
    1
    Medigroup Inc. was related to, but separate from, Medigroup Enterprises.
    3
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    In 1990, Plotkin changed the name of Health Facilities to Autumn Years
    Investments, L.P (“Autumn Years”).
    At about the same time as the Autumn Years name change, Rolla Health
    Care’s 1-percent general partnership interest in RHCA was reallocated among
    Rolla Health Care, Medigroup Inc., and Lavender. The general partnership
    interests of Medigroup Inc. and Lavender were then converted to limited
    partnership interests. This reshuffling left Rolla Health Care with a general
    partnership interest in RHCA, and Medigroup Inc., Lavender, and Autumn Years
    with limited partnership interests in RHCA. Specifically, Autumn Years held a
    99-percent limited partnership interest in RHCA.
    C.    Autumn Years
    Plotkin had no partnership interest in Autumn Years. Autumn Years’s
    partners included: (1) Plotkin’s three children, who each owned a 25-percent
    interest; (2) Eva Sue Faenger, Plotkin’s girlfriend between 1985 and 1990, who
    owned a 20-percent interest; (3) Lynn Plotkin, Plotkin’s former wife, who owned a
    4-percent interest; (4) KSFS, which owned a 0.8-percent interest; and
    (5) Medigroup Care Centers, Inc. (another company related to Medigroup
    Enterprises), and Management and Development Associates, Inc. (of which
    Plotkin was the sole shareholder), which each owned .1-percent interests. As of
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    January 2001, neither Lynn Plotkin nor Plotkin’s three children were aware that
    they were members of the partnership. Plotkin never drafted financial statements,
    filed partnership tax returns, or observed other partnership formalities with respect
    to Autumn Years.
    Plotkin nevertheless treated the funds deposited into Autumn Years’s
    accounts as his own. On numerous occasions, Plotkin wrote himself checks on
    Autumn Years’s accounts to pay personal expenses. Plotkin also wrote checks to
    cover living expenses for his daughter while she was away at college and to pay
    Lynn Plotkin’s mortgage. During the years at issue, Plotkin did not maintain bank
    accounts or other financial accounts in his own name
    D.    1990-1994 Payments Made to Autumn Years and Quixoti
    In 1990, Plotkin helped his girlfriend, Faenger, incorporate Professional
    TLC, Inc. (“Professional TLC”) by drafting and filing its articles of incorporation.
    Because Faenger had experience operating a nursing home, she and Plotkin
    decided that Professional TLC would lease the Rolla nursing home from RHCA.
    Plotkin determined the amount of rent Professional TLC would pay to RHCA
    ($45,000 a month, with yearly increases of $425), and Plotkin was the only person
    Faenger dealt with before she signed the lease.
    During the course of the lease, Professional TLC paid its rent, but not
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    always to RHCA. Both Plotkin and Lavender personally instructed Faenger where
    to direct Professional TLC’s rent payments, and over the years, some of the rent
    payments were funneled or paid directly to certain business entities. As a result,
    between 1991 and 1994, Professional TLC made some rent payments directly to
    Autumn Years. Plotkin endorsed other checks written to RHCA over to Autumn
    Years. Some of Professional TLC’s rent payments were made to KSFS and then
    redirected to Autumn Years by wire or by check.
    In addition to receiving funds from Professional TLC and KSFS, Autumn
    Years also received funds from La Mancha Properties, Inc. (“La Mancha”), a
    corporation that was incorporated by Lavender and had financial ties to RHCA.
    La Mancha received payments from both RHCA and KSFS. Some of Professional
    TLC’s rent payments also ended up with Quixoti Corp. (“Quixoti”), a corporation
    owned by Plotkin.
    E.    1995 Sale of the Rolla Nursing Home
    In 1995, RHCA sold the Rolla nursing home for $4.2 million. Prior to the
    sale, Plotkin’s then-girlfriend, Barbara Nemec, expressed an interest in trying to
    find a buyer for the home. Nemec was a registered dietician with no real estate
    experience, but her brother previously owned a brokerage business. Nemec
    formed LTC Brokers & Consultants, Inc. (“LTC”), and hired her brother to help
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    sell the Rolla nursing home.
    RHCA and LTC executed several documents authorizing LTC to act as
    RHCA’s agent for purposes of selling the Rolla nursing home. The documents
    authorized LTC to receive a base commission of ten percent, plus additional
    allowances totaling four percent. According to Lavender, Plotkin wanted LTC to
    receive an increased commission because Plotkin intended to receive his share of
    the sale’s proceeds from LTC’s commission.
    The Rolla nursing home eventually sold, and LTC received $588,000 in
    commission in July 1995. LTC then purchased a property in Umatilla, Florida,
    and, within months, title to that property was transferred to Nemec. She and
    Plotkin eventually moved into a home on the property, where they lived together
    through the time of the Tax Court proceedings.
    F.    Plotkin’s Loan from American Bank
    During the course of Plotkin’s relationship with Faenger (i.e., between 1985
    and 1990), they bought land in Rolla, Missouri. Plotkin made a $44,000 down
    payment on the land, although it was titled in Faenger’s name. Plotkin and
    Faenger borrowed $425,000 from the American Bank of Rolla (“American Bank”)
    to build a house on the land. Plotkin made the payments on this loan.
    Following the sale of the Rolla nursing home in 1995, RHCA made a
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    $245,000 payment to American Bank. Plotkin used proceeds from the sale of the
    Rolla nursing home to pay off the remaining liability on the $425,000 loan that he
    and Faenger had taken out to build the house in Rolla.
    G.    Plotkin’s Criminal Convictions
    In 1999, following a bench trial, the district court convicted Plotkin of three
    counts of willfully making and subscribing false income tax returns under Internal
    Revenue Code (“I.R.C.”) § 7206(1). The district court found that, during 1991,
    1992, and 1993, Plotkin received and failed to report substantial income from the
    Rolla nursing home. The court observed that Plotkin had treated funds from the
    nursing home as his personal income, but had not reported it as such.
    The district court expressly found that Plotkin’s testimony at trial was not
    credible. It rejected Plotkin’s argument that the funds used to pay his personal
    expenses were partnership distributions to Autumn Years’s limited partners. The
    district court explained that Autumn Years “was a sham,” noting that it was not
    treated as a “true partnership.” Specifically, the district court found that no
    partnership formalities were observed, and the purported distributions were not
    made in accordance with the partnership agreement or the law of partnerships.
    In sum, the district court found that Plotkin willfully and falsely reported his
    income for the years 1991, 1992, and 1993. Plotkin was sentenced to five years of
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    probation.
    H.       Tax Court Proceedings and Opinion
    In April 2008, the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) issued a notice of
    deficiency to Plotkin for the years 1991 through 1995. In the notice, the IRS
    determined, inter alia, that Plotkin had received and failed to report (on Schedule
    C) self-employment income of $302,319 in 1991, $172,081 in 1992, $138,490 in
    1993, $135,611 in 1994, and $805,246 in 1995.2 Based on this unreported
    income, the IRS further determined Plotkin had income tax deficiencies of
    $108,652, $61,885, $52,397, $45,490, and $320,852 for the years 1991 through
    1995, respectively.
    Plotkin filed a petition for redetermination of his tax deficiencies in the Tax
    Court. Plotkin also filed a motion to dismiss the IRS’s underlying notice of
    deficiency for lack of jurisdiction, arguing that the notice was untimely and
    invalid. The Tax Court denied Plotkin’s motion, and the petition proceeded to
    trial.
    After a trial, the Tax Court entered a memorandum opinion and judgment in
    2
    A taxpayer who owned or operated a business completes Schedule C, Profit or Loss from
    Business, of IRS Form 1040 as part of his income tax filing to show the income and deductible
    expenses of the taxpayer’s business for the tax year. See Rodriguez v. Comm’r, 
    T.C.M. (RIA) 2012-286
    , at *5.
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    favor of the IRS. As relevant here, the Tax Court concluded that the IRS had
    properly included payments made to the accounts of Autumn Years and Quixoti in
    Plotkin’s Schedule C income for the years 1991 through 1994. The Tax Court
    found that those payments were income to Plotkin because they were paid “as a
    result of his work in carrying on the business of RHCA and related entities.”
    Specifically, the Tax Court found that Plotkin had a significant amount of control
    over RHCA and that he was integral to its operation; in addition to actively
    carrying on the major business of RHCA, Plotkin had instructed Lavender, then
    the sole officer of Rolla Health Care, on how to use funds from the sale of the
    Rolla nursing home.
    The Tax Court observed that Plotkin had used funds from RHCA’s sale of
    the Rolla nursing home to pay off his personal obligation to American Bank. In
    this regard, the Tax Court concluded that the IRS had properly included in
    Plotkin’s Schedule C income for the 1995 year $217,246 that was paid by RHCA
    to American Bank following the sale of the Rolla nursing home. The Tax Court
    noted that Plotkin had not offered any evidence demonstrating how that money
    had otherwise been used, nor had he offered any evidence indicating that he
    personally paid off his American Bank loan with other funds.
    The Tax Court rejected Plotkin’s argument that the funds paid to Autumn
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    Years and Quixoti should not be included in his income because these funds were
    partnership distributions. The Tax Court explained that Plotkin was neither a
    partner in Autumn Years nor RHCA. Moreover, as noted above, the Tax Court
    found that the payments were made as a result of Plotkin’s “work in carrying on
    the business of RHCA and related entities,” and that they were not distributions.
    The Tax Court entered a decision in the IRS’s favor. Plotkin now appeals.
    II. DISCUSSION
    Plotkin argues that the Tax Court erred in upholding the IRS’s tax
    deficiency determinations because the district court in his criminal case found that
    Autumn Years was a sham, and therefore, the 99-percent limited partnership
    interest Autumn Years had in RHCA should be imputed to him. Accordingly, the
    monies Plotkin received from RHCA’s payments to the accounts of Autumn Years
    and Quixoti were not Schedule C income to him, but rather, were distributions
    made by RHCA to him as a limited partner. Plotkin argues that such partnership
    distributions are taxable only to the extent they exceeded his basis in his interest in
    RHCA, and therefore, the IRS erred in treating the distributions as unreported
    Schedule C personal income.3
    3
    We review the Tax Court’s legal conclusions de novo and its factual findings for clear
    error. Campbell v. Comm’r, 
    658 F.3d 1255
    , 1258 (11th Cir. 2011). “[W]hether a taxpayer
    received income is an ultimate fact and as such is to be treated as a legal rather than a factual
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    A.     Ample Evidence Concerning Income Attributable to Plotkin
    The IRS’s determination of a deficiency in tax is presumed correct, and the
    taxpayer bears the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that the
    IRS’s determination is incorrect. Blohm v. Comm’r., 
    994 F.2d 1542
    , 1548-49
    (11th Cir. 1993). However, in cases involving the receipt of income unreported by
    the taxpayer, “the deficiency determination must be supported by some evidentiary
    foundation linking the taxpayer to the alleged income-producing activity” before
    the IRS’s determination is presumed correct. 
    Id. at 1549
     (quotation marks
    omitted). The IRS’s required evidentiary showing in these cases is minimal. 
    Id.
    Once the Tax Court has found that this minimal evidentiary threshold has been
    met, the burden shifts to the taxpayer to prove that it is arbitrary or erroneous. 
    Id.
    Here, the evidence amply supported the Tax Court’s findings, including
    that: (1) Plotkin was actively involved in carrying on the business of RHCA; and
    (2) Plotkin treated the funds paid into Autumn Years’s and Quixoti’s accounts as
    his own, using them, as well as part of the proceeds from RHCA’s sale of the
    Rolla nursing home, to pay personal expenses and indebtedness. Based on these
    facts, the IRS carried its “minimal” evidentiary burden to show that these funds
    were income properly attributable to Plotkin. 
    Id. at 1548-49
    . Accordingly, the
    determination.” Blohm v. Comm’r, 
    994 F.2d 1542
    , 1548 (11th Cir. 1993).
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    question presented to us is whether the funds, which Plotkin received from RHCA
    through the conduit of Autumn Years, were (1) partnership distributions to Plotkin
    as a partner, and thus, taxable only to the extent that they exceeded any basis
    Plotkin had in RHCA; or (2) compensation for his work, taxable as unreported
    Schedule C income.
    B.    Income Was Not Distribution to Plotkin as a Partner
    A partner’s distributive share of income, gain, loss, deduction, or credit is
    determined by the partnership agreement. I.R.C. § 704(a). Generally, a
    distribution of money or property to a partner by a partnership does not cause that
    partner to recognize a taxable income or gain. Id. § 731(a). Rather, the partner
    recognizes a taxable gain only to the extent that the amount he receives exceeds
    his adjusted basis in the partnership property. Id. § 731(a)(1).
    “[W]hile a taxpayer is free to organize his affairs as he chooses,
    nevertheless, once having done so, he must accept the tax consequences of his
    choice . . . and may not enjoy the benefit of some other route he might have chosen
    to follow but did not.” Bradley v. United States, 
    730 F.2d 718
    , 720 (11th Cir.
    1984) (quoting Comm’r v. Nat’l Alfalfa Dehydrating and Milling Corp., 
    417 U.S. 134
    , 147, 
    94 S. Ct. 2129
    , 2136 (1974)) (omission in original). In addition, “as a
    general rule, the [IRS] may bind a taxpayer to the form in which the taxpayer has
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    cast a transaction.” 
    Id.
     As the Supreme Court has noted, the IRS “may look at
    actualities and upon determination that the form employed for doing business or
    carrying out the challenged tax event is unreal or a sham may sustain or disregard
    the effect of the fiction as best serves the purposes of the tax statute. To hold
    otherwise would permit the schemes of taxpayers to supersede legislation in the
    determination of the time and manner of taxation.” Higgins v. Smith, 
    308 U.S. 473
    , 477-78, 
    60 S. Ct. 355
    , 358 (1940). Although either the IRS or the taxpayer
    may argue that the form a transaction takes does not always determine its effects, a
    taxpayer who has taken a concrete course of action may not avoid taxation simply
    by asserting that he did not in fact take that action or intend to take that action.
    Shepherd v. Comm’r, 
    283 F.3d 1258
    , 1261 & n.5 (11th Cir. 2002).
    The Tax Court did not clearly err in determining that Plotkin was not a
    partner of RHCA, and therefore, did not err in concluding that the amounts paid to
    Autumn Years and Quixoti were Schedule C income rather than partnership
    distributions. Plotkin treated the payments made to the accounts of Autumn Years
    and Quixoti as his own by using those funds to pay personal expenses. While
    Autumn Years might have been a “sham” partnership, given that the Autumn
    Years partners were unaware of their membership and no partnership formalities
    were observed, Plotkin cites no authority for his claim that he should be
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    considered the owner of Autumn Years’ 99-percent limited partnership interest in
    RHCA. Plotkin could have made himself a partner of RHCA, but instead assigned
    that partnership interest to Autumn Years, a partnership that he organized. He
    then assigned the partnership interests in Autumn Years to his children, Faenger,
    his ex-wife, KSFS, Medigroup Care Centers Inc., and Management and
    Development Associates, Inc. Accordingly, he must now accept the tax
    consequences of his affirmative choice of organization, which assigned him no
    partnership interest in RHCA or Autumn Years. See Shepherd, 
    283 F.3d at
    1261
    & n.5; Bradley, 
    730 F.2d at 720
    .
    Furthermore, even if Plotkin owned a 99-percent limited partnership interest
    in RHCA—because Autumn Years’s 99-percent limited partnership interest in
    RHCA was imputed to him by virtue of Autumn Years being a sham—he has not
    shown that the payments made by RHCA were distributions or other “partnership
    items,” such that the Tax Court erred in finding that the payments were taxable
    Schedule C income. Even if Plotkin were considered to be a limited partner in
    RHCA, the Tax Code does not automatically treat all of the funds he received
    from the partnership as distributions. Instead, the Code specifically indicates that,
    where a partner performs services for a partnership “other than in his capacity as a
    member of such partnership,” those services are treated as though they were
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    rendered by a non-partner. I.R.C. § 707(a). In addition, a partner’s distributive
    share is determined by the partnership agreement. Id. § 704(a). Therefore, in
    order to demonstrate that the IRS’s conclusion that the payments were
    compensation was arbitrary or erroneous, Plotkin must affirmatively show that the
    payments were distributions made pursuant to a partnership agreement. See
    Blohm, 
    994 F.2d at 1549
    .
    Plotkin does not allege that his work in carrying out RHCA’s business was
    performed pursuant to any RHCA partnership agreement or in his capacity as a
    limited partner in RHCA. Instead, as the Tax Court found, the payments made by
    RHCA to Plotkin were compensation (i.e., akin to a salary) for his work in
    carrying on the business of RHCA and related entities. Plotkin negotiated a lease
    agreement with Faenger and Professional TLC, instructed Lavender with regard to
    the lease payments made to RHCA from Professional TLC, and steered funds from
    RHCA to American Bank, thereby exercising a “significant amount” of control
    over RHCA. Moreover, Plotkin neither alleges nor proves that the payments made
    from RHCA to Autumn Years and Quixoti were made in accordance with RHCA’s
    partnership agreement. Therefore, he has not shown that the payments were
    partnership distributions, such that the IRS’s determination that they were
    compensation was arbitrary or erroneous. See I.R.C. § 704(a) (“A partner’s
    16
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    distributive share . . . [is] determined by the partnership agreement.”); Blohm, 
    994 F.2d at 1549
    .
    Accordingly, the Tax Court did not clearly err in upholding the IRS’s
    determination that the payments Plotkin received from RHCA were taxable as
    Schedule C income. See Lucas v. Earl, 
    281 U.S. 111
    , 114-15, 
    50 S. Ct. 241
    , 241
    (1930) (holding that income is taxable to the taxpayer who earns it, and the tax
    cannot “be escaped by anticipatory arrangements and contracts however skillfully
    devised to prevent the salary when paid from vesting even for a second in the man
    who earned it”).4
    In light of the foregoing, and upon our review of the record and
    consideration of the parties’ briefs, we affirm the order of the Tax Court as to
    Plotkin’s tax deficiencies for the years 1991 through 1995.
    AFFIRMED.
    4
    On appeal, Plotkin for the first time argues that the Tax Court lacked jurisdiction to rule
    on whether he, as an alleged partner in RHCA, individually owed tax deficiencies because
    partnership-level proceedings as to RHCA must be initiated and completed first before the IRS
    can proceed against an individual partner for tax liabilities that stem from partnership items.
    Plotkin relies on the Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982 (“TEFRA”), Pub. L. No.
    97-248, 
    96 Stat. 324
     (codified as amended in scattered sections of Title 26, U.S.C.), which
    contains certain procedures regarding administrative proceedings first against the partnership and
    then against individual partners regarding “partnership items” as defined in the Tax Code. We
    reject Plotkin’s TEFRA-based jurisdiction argument because, among other reasons, the Tax
    Court found that Plotkin was not a partner in either Autumn Years or RHCA, and therefore,
    TEFRA is not even applicable here to the income in the notice of deficiency for which Plotkin
    has personal liability.
    17