Fourth Investment Lp v. United States , 720 F.3d 1058 ( 2013 )


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  •                  FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    FOURTH INVESTMENT LP, a                  No. 11-56997
    California limited partnership,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,      D.C. No.
    3:08-cv-00110-
    v.                       BTM-BLM
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA ,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    LEEDS, LP, a California limited          No. 11-57009
    partnership,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,       D.C. No.
    3:08-cv-00100-
    v.                       BTM-BLM
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA ,
    Defendant-Appellee.          OPINION
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of California
    Barry T. Moskowitz, District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted
    April 12, 2013—Pasadena, California
    Filed June 13, 2013
    2        FOURTH INVESTMENT LP V . UNITED STATES
    Before: Milan D. Smith, Jr. and Mary H. Murguia,
    Circuit Judges, and Jack Zouhary, District Judge.*
    Opinion by Judge Milan D. Smith, Jr.
    SUMMARY**
    Tax
    The panel affirmed the district court’s decision denying
    appellants’ quiet title claims to remove federal tax liens
    encumbering their real properties and upholding the validity
    of tax liens filed by the Internal Revenue Service.
    The tax liens arose from assessments against taxpayers
    Susanne and Don Ballantyne, based on the IRS’s claim that
    appellants held the properties as nominees of taxpayers as the
    result of a series of complex transactions involving shell
    entities created and controlled by taxpayers. The panel held
    that California law unambiguously recognizes the existence
    of nominee ownership. Moreover, although state courts have
    not precisely specified the factors relevant to the analysis, the
    panel predicted that the California Supreme Court would
    evaluate nominee status in light of the criteria set forth in
    relevant federal cases. The panel explained that courts should
    look initially to state law to determine what rights the
    *
    The Honorable Jack Zouhary, District Judge for the U.S. District Court
    for the Northern District of Ohio, sitting by designation.
    **
    This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
    been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
    FOURTH INVESTMENT LP V . UNITED STATES               3
    taxpayer has in the property the Government seeks to reach
    and, after determining that the taxpayer has a property
    interest under state law, the courts should look to federal law
    to determine whether the taxpayer’s rights qualify as property
    or a property right within the compass of the federal tax lien
    legislation. The panel then considered a six-factor test under
    federal law to determine nominee ownership and held that, in
    this case, the district court properly determined that
    appellants were taxpayers’ nominees.
    COUNSEL
    Wendy C. Lascher (argued), Ferguson Case Orr Paterson
    LLP, Ventura, California, for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
    Thomas J. Clark (argued), Supervising Attorney, and Bethany
    B. Hauser, United States Department of Justice, Tax Division,
    Washington, D.C., for Defendant-Appellee.
    OPINION
    M. SMITH, Circuit Judge:
    Plaintiffs-Appellants Leeds, LP (Leeds) and Fourth
    Investment, LP (Fourth Investment) (sometimes collectively,
    Appellants) brought quiet title actions challenging tax liens
    filed by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) against certain
    commercial and residential properties located in San Diego,
    California, to which Appellants hold legal title. The tax liens
    arose from assessments against taxpayers Susanne and Don
    Ballantyne, based on the IRS’s claim that Appellants held the
    relevant properties as nominees of the Ballantynes on the
    4       FOURTH INVESTMENT LP V . UNITED STATES
    assessment dates. After a thirteen-day bench trial, the district
    court denied Appellants’ quiet title claims and upheld the
    validity of the tax liens.
    Appellants appeal, contending that California does not
    recognize nominee ownership. We reject this argument
    because California cases have unambiguously recognized the
    existence of nominee ownership. Although California courts
    have not precisely specified the factors relevant to performing
    a nominee analysis, we predict that the California Supreme
    Court would evaluate nominee status in light of the criteria
    set forth in relevant federal cases. Applying those criteria,
    the district court properly concluded that Appellants held
    legal title to the San Diego properties as nominees of the
    Ballantynes. We also reject Appellants’ assertion that the
    district court’s judgment should be vacated for failure to join
    the numerous shell entities utilized by the Ballantynes as part
    of their complex tax evasion scheme. We affirm the decision
    of the district court.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    1. The Ballantynes’ federal tax liabilities
    Susanne (Susanne) and Don (Don) Ballantyne owe the
    IRS substantial federal income taxes for tax years 1985, 1986,
    1990, and 1997. In July 1994, the Ballantynes sought relief
    before the United States Tax Court, challenging income tax
    deficiencies claimed by the IRS for tax years 1985 and 1986,
    in the amounts of $388,937 and $931,970, respectively
    (totaling $1,320,907, collectively). The tax court conducted
    a trial in May 1995, and in October 1996, confirmed the
    deficiencies claimed by the IRS. The decision of the tax
    court was later affirmed on appeal by our court, see
    FOURTH INVESTMENT LP V . UNITED STATES                5
    Ballantyne v. Comm’r, 
    211 F.3d 1272
     (9th Cir. 1999), and in
    June 1997, the IRS imposed an assessment of $1,320,907.
    The Ballantynes’ tax issues were not limited to those tried
    in the tax court. In January 1995, the IRS imposed an
    assessment of $25,164 for alleged income tax deficiencies for
    tax year 1990. In October 1998, the IRS imposed an
    assessment of $11,515 based on alleged deficiencies for tax
    year 1987. As a result of the referenced assessments, plus
    applicable interest and penalties, the IRS recorded liens in the
    amount of $5,212,494.62 on two properties in San Diego,
    California: a home located at 3207 McCall Street (the McCall
    property), and a commercial building located at 1280 Fourth
    Avenue (the Fourth property). On the dates of the second and
    third assessments, fee title to the McCall property was vested
    in Leeds, and fee title to the Fourth property was vested in
    Fourth Investment. The referenced tax lien identified Leeds
    and Fourth Investment as nominees of the Ballantynes.
    2. Transfer of the McCall and Fourth properties to
    Leeds and Fourth Investment
    With the specter of their tax trial looming in 1995,
    Susanne caused the Ballantyne Trust to transfer legal title to
    the McCall and Fourth properties to Leeds and Fourth
    Investment, and later to her and Don’s children’s trusts,
    through a series of complex transactions involving shell
    entities created and controlled by the Ballantynes.
    A. The McCall Property
    The McCall property is a single family residence, built by
    Susanne’s parents. At some point in time, fee title to the
    McCall property was vested in a trust created by Susanne’s
    6       FOURTH INVESTMENT LP V . UNITED STATES
    mother, styled the Susan T. Cramer Trust (the Cramer Trust).
    In 1979, after the death of Susanne’s mother, and after
    Susanne’s brother, Ed, had received the distributions from the
    Cramer Trust to which he was entitled, Susanne became the
    Cramer Trust’s sole beneficiary and trustee. In 1987,
    Susanne created the Susanne C. Ballantyne Trust (the
    Ballantyne Trust), a revocable intervivos trust, into which she
    placed substantially all of her assets, including the corpus of
    the Cramer Trust (which included the McCall property).
    In June 1995, shortly after the Ballantynes’ tax court trial,
    the Cramer Trust conveyed the McCall property to Leeds, a
    newly created limited partnership, in exchange for a 99%
    limited partnership interest in Leeds. (The title transfer
    documents in this transaction were not recorded until July
    1997, more than two years after the transfer.) The Cramer
    Trust immediately transferred its 99% interest in Leeds to the
    Ballantyne Trust, with Susanne executing all relevant
    documents on behalf of both trusts. The remaining 1%
    interest in Leeds was owned by a newly created entity, styled
    the Rhodes Investment Corporation, which was wholly
    owned by the Ballantyne Trust. After these transactions
    concluded, Susanne became the indirect owner of both the
    buyer and the seller of the McCall property. Specifically,
    after the transfers, the Ballantyne Trust owned a 99% limited
    partnership interest in Leeds; and Rhodes, which was owned
    by the Ballantyne Trust, owned a 1% general partnership
    interest in Leeds. No evidence was introduced at trial
    indicating that Leeds was created for any purpose other than
    to hold nominal title to the McCall property.
    After the transfer to Leeds, the Ballantynes continued to
    maintain possession of the McCall property, purportedly as
    tenants of Leeds. A lease agreement was signed by Susanne
    FOURTH INVESTMENT LP V . UNITED STATES               7
    on behalf of Leeds, and by Don on behalf of the Ballantynes.
    The Ballantynes did not begin paying rent to Leeds until
    nearly a year after the lease was signed. When rent was paid,
    it was almost never paid on time, and was rarely paid in full.
    In fact, it appears that the “rent” Leeds received was not rent
    at all, but rather payments made by the Ballantynes to cover
    various property expenses as they arose. Despite the
    Ballantynes’ failure to pay rent on a timely basis or in the
    correct amount, Leeds never demanded full payment or
    charged the $100 late fee required in the lease agreement.
    B. The Fourth property
    The Fourth property is a commercial property in which
    Susanne originally owned a 12.5% undivided interest, and
    from which she derived rental income under a triple net lease.
    In 1988, Susanne quitclaimed her undivided 12.5% interest in
    the Fourth property to the Ballantyne Trust. In June 1995,
    shortly after the Ballantynes’ tax court trial, the Ballantyne
    Trust conveyed the Fourth property to Fourth Investment, a
    newly created limited partnership, in exchange for a 99%
    limited partnership interest in Fourth Investment. (The grant
    deed was not recorded until October 1995, more than three
    months later.) The remaining 1% interest in Fourth
    Investment was owned by its general partner, Rhodes, which
    in turn was owned by the Ballantyne Trust.
    Susanne indirectly owned and controlled both the buyer
    and the seller in the Fourth property transfer. Specifically,
    Fourth Investment’s 99% limited partner was the Ballantyne
    Trust, and its 1% general partner was Rhodes (owned by the
    Ballantyne Trust). No evidence was introduced at trial
    showing that Fourth Investment ever served any function
    other than nominally holding title to the Fourth property.
    8       FOURTH INVESTMENT LP V . UNITED STATES
    Susanne retained control over the Fourth property’s
    income stream after the transfer of her interest to Fourth
    Investment because, pursuant to Susanne’s instructions, the
    rental income derived from the Fourth property continued to
    be paid to Susanne’s brother, Ed, to whom Susanne owed a
    debt. Tenant rent payments were not made to Fourth
    Investment until Susanne notified her tenant to do so months
    after the Ballantyne Trust conveyed the Fourth property to
    Fourth Investment. The record does not reflect whether the
    tenant of the Fourth property was ever advised that the
    property’s ownership (and, therefore, the tenant’s landlord)
    had changed.
    3. Encumbrances on the McCall and Fourth properties
    Four days before the commencement of their tax court
    trial, the Ballantynes entered into another dizzying series of
    transactions which made their assets (including the McCall
    and Fourth properties) appear to be encumbered and nearly
    worthless. Specifically, in May 1995, Susanne caused the
    Ballantyne Trust to file a UCC-1 Financing Statement
    purporting to show that the Ballantyne Trust and its non real
    estate assets were encumbered by a personal property lien as
    security for a $1.1 million debt that had allegedly been
    incurred in November 1991, more than three years earlier.
    The $1.1 million debt was owed to an entity named Eastman
    Investment, which in turn had procured loans totaling $1.1
    million from two banks. Eastman Investment was yet another
    family-created entity, owned 20% by the Ballantyne Trust
    and 80% by another company, Cramer Investments. Cramer
    Investments, in turn, was owned in equal parts by Susanne
    and her brother, Ed.
    FOURTH INVESTMENT LP V . UNITED STATES                        9
    In June 1995, shortly after the conclusion of their tax
    court trial, Susanne caused the Ballantyne Trust to record
    deeds of trust that purported to specifically encumber the
    McCall and Fourth properties as further security for the
    Eastman Investment debt. Although the McCall and Fourth
    properties appeared to have been encumbered in connection
    with the Eastman Investment transaction, the Ballantynes’
    own valuation of Leeds and Fourth Investment (which then
    held title to the McCall and Fourth properties) did not show
    that Leeds, Fourth Investment, or the real properties they
    owned, were encumbered by the liens of the referenced deeds
    of trust.
    Subsequently, in July 1995, the Ballantyne Trust granted
    Eastman Investment a first security interest in Rhodes (the
    general partner of Leeds and Fourth Investment), and TPH
    Investments, LP (TPH), another newly formed limited
    partnership, which was also owned and controlled by the
    Ballantyne Trust. Susanne executed this transaction on behalf
    of both Eastman Investment and the Ballantyne Trust, but the
    Ballantyne Trust received no consideration for its granting of
    these additional security interests.
    4. Transfer of the McCall and Fourth properties to the
    Children’s Trusts
    The Ballantynes next created a plethora of new entities
    for the purpose of transferring the McCall and Fourth
    properties to their children without realizing any taxable
    gain.1 The principal vehicle used to effectuate these transfers
    1
    T he Byzantine series of entities created by the Ballantynes, and the
    extraordinarily complex scheme in which they operated, brings to mind
    Sir W alter Scott’s observation: “Oh, what a tangled web we weave, W hen
    10       FOURTH INVESTMENT LP V . UNITED STATES
    was a limited partnership styled Hemet C, which acquired the
    Ballantyne Trust’s 99% limited partnership interest in Leeds
    and Fourth Investment in a series of transactions that
    occurred between January 1996 and February 1997. Hemet
    C was structured such that a group of trusts owned by the
    Ballantynes’ children (the Children’s Trusts) owned a 99%
    limited partnership interest, and a company styled Snow
    Valley Holdings, Inc., whose shares were owned by the
    Children’s Trusts, was its 1% general partner. The
    Ballantynes and their children served as Snow Valley’s
    officers and directors. The Ballantyne Trust exchanged its
    limited partnership interest in Leeds (valued by the
    Ballantynes at $323,070) for a $248,000 promissory note and
    an agreement by Hemet C to assume a $75,000 unsecured
    debt that Don owed to a relative. Susanne signed on behalf
    of the Ballantyne Trust, and Don signed on behalf of Hemet
    C. Don testified that the Ballantyne Trust had previously
    assumed his familial debt, but he conceded that the
    assumption of debt was undocumented and not supported by
    consideration.
    The Leeds promissory note was immediately assigned to
    TPH. Shortly thereafter, the Ballantyne Trust deducted
    $176,638.32 from the $248,000 principal on the Leeds note
    (a nearly 80 percent reduction) to credit Hemet C for accrued
    interest on various notes held by the Children’s Trusts. The
    notes, which were all in default, had purportedly been made
    several years earlier by companies owned by the Ballantynes
    that had subsequently gone out of business. Don testified that
    the defaulted notes had been guaranteed by the Ballantyne
    Trust when made, but there is no record of any guarantee, and
    first we practice to deceive!” Sir W alter Scott, Marmion, Canto vi, Stanza
    17 (1808).
    FOURTH INVESTMENT LP V . UNITED STATES            11
    at least four of the purported loans were made before the
    Ballantyne Trust even purchased the companies.
    The Ballantyne Trust exchanged its limited partnership
    interest in Fourth Investment (valued by the Ballantynes at
    $317,000) for a $251,000 promissory note and an agreement
    by Hemet C to assume $66,000 in unsecured promissory
    notes owed to various Ballantyne-owned companies and the
    Children’s Trusts. Nearly two-thirds of the $66,000 in
    assumed notes arose from circular transfers of funds between
    the Ballantyne Trust and the Children’s Trusts. Specifically,
    the Ballantyne Trust transferred $40,000 to the Children’s
    Trusts in December 1993, and borrowed $40,000 from the
    Children’s Trusts contemporaneously.
    Like the Leeds note, the Fourth Investment note was
    immediately assigned to TPH, and was thereafter reduced by
    $66,000 due to an alleged accounting error by Susanne. The
    note was subsequently reduced by another $21,675.76 to give
    Hemet C credit for accrued interest on the assumed debts,
    despite the fact that Hemet C had made no interest payments.
    The reduction of the promissory note was not supported by
    consideration.
    Hemet C apparently made some payments on the
    unsecured promissory notes, but, at most, only $500 was
    distributed on the Leeds note and $11,000 on the Fourth
    Investment note, before Hemet C re-acquired its own notes
    from TPH in the transaction described below.
    5. Foreclosure
    In October 1997, the Ballantynes figuratively, but
    intentionally, toppled the house of cards they had created by
    12       FOURTH INVESTMENT LP V . UNITED STATES
    causing a foreclosure on secured debt involving several
    entities within their control, for the purpose of transferring
    the McCall and Fourth properties to their children without
    consideration. To effectuate the foreclosure, the Ballantyne
    Trust ceased making payments on the $1.1 million Eastman
    Investment debt, and Eastman Investment (which was
    effectively controlled by Susanne2) made no effort to collect.
    The Ballantyne Trust then gave partnership interests in
    Investment Associates, LP, a limited partnership owned by
    the Children’s Trusts and controlled by Don, to a newly
    created entity, Fulton 162, also owned by the Children’s
    Trusts and controlled by Don. In exchange, Fulton 162
    agreed to make payments on the Eastman Investment note.
    But Fulton 162 made no payments. In a purported attempt to
    protect itself from an impending default, Eastman Investment
    then sold the Eastman Investment note to New Horizon
    Lighting, LC (yet another Ballantyne-created entity owned by
    other Ballantyne-created entities and controlled by the
    Children’s Trusts). In exchange for the note, Eastman
    Investment received an identical note, thereby rendering the
    transfer wholly without substance.
    New Horizon subsequently foreclosed on its security
    interests to satisfy the Eastman Investment note. As a result,
    Hemet C (controlled by the Children’s Trusts) acquired the
    Ballantyne Trust’s interests in TPH, including the limited
    2
    Although Susanne’s brother Ed owned a 50% interest in a company
    that in turn owned an 80% interest in Eastman Investment, Susanne
    appears to have had effective control over Eastman Investment at all
    times. Specifically, she executed virtually every document involved in the
    Eastman Investment loan, and there is no indication that Ed ever sought
    to protect his interest in Eastman Investment despite the complete failure
    of Ballantyne-owned entities to make any payments on the Eastman
    Investment note.
    FOURTH INVESTMENT LP V . UNITED STATES               13
    partnership interests in Leeds and Fourth. The Children’s
    Trusts also acquired the Ballantyne Trust’s interest in
    Rhodes, the general partner of Leeds and Fourth. The
    foreclosure had no effect on the Ballantynes as a practical
    matter, however, because New Horizon chose not to foreclose
    on the McCall and Fourth properties, or to take any of the
    Ballantynes’ personal property that it had acquired as a result
    of the foreclosure.
    6. Present action
    In January 2008, Appellants filed these now-consolidated
    quiet title actions seeking to remove the federal tax liens
    encumbering the McCall and Fourth properties. The district
    court concluded that Appellants held bare legal title to the
    properties as nominees of the Ballantynes. The district court
    looked to federal case law to supply the standards for
    evaluating the nominee doctrine under California law. The
    court’s determination was based on findings that: (1) the
    initial transfer of the properties to Appellants in exchange for
    partnership units was undertaken as part of a larger scheme to
    transfer the properties to the Children’s Trusts without
    adequate consideration; (2) the Ballantynes failed to show
    that the multiple transfers between and amongst the shell
    entities were effectuated for any purpose other than to evade
    substantial tax liabilities; (3) the Ballantynes continued to
    maintain possession and control over the McCall property
    throughout the relevant time period, and retained the power
    to direct the distribution of income from the Fourth property;
    and (4) few, if any, of the transactions discussed at trial were
    conducted at arms length. Appellants timely appealed the
    judgment. We have jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    .
    14         FOURTH INVESTMENT LP V . UNITED STATES
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    We review de novo the district court’s interpretation of
    state law. Salve Regina Coll. v. Russell, 
    499 U.S. 225
    , 231
    (1991). We review the district court’s findings of fact for
    clear error, and its conclusions of law de novo. Red Lion
    Hotels Franchising, Inc. v. MAK, LLC, 
    663 F.3d 1080
    , 1087
    (9th Cir. 2011).
    DISCUSSION
    The IRS has broad powers to impose federal tax liens
    under 
    26 U.S.C. § 6321
    . Section 6321 provides that a lien
    may be imposed “upon all property and rights to property . . .
    belonging to” a taxpayer who has failed to pay taxes owed
    after assessment and demand. The Supreme Court has
    interpreted section 6321 to apply to all property of a taxpayer,
    including property that is held by a third party as the
    taxpayer’s nominee or alter ego. G.M. Leasing Corp. v.
    United States, 
    429 U.S. 338
    , 350–51 (1977).
    “A nominee is one who holds bare legal title to property
    for the benefit of another.”3 Scoville v. United States,
    3
    As aptly described by one scholar,
    Typical nominee . . . scenarios start with people falling
    behind on their taxes. Facing the loss of their homes or
    businesses to the federal government some taxpayers
    take steps to try to separate themselves from their
    valuable assets. The taxpayer’s house may be deeded
    to a friend, although the taxpayer continues to reside
    there. Or perhaps all the taxpayer’s cash disappears,
    yet the taxpayer’s personal bills are being paid by a
    closely-held and controlled corporation. The factual
    FOURTH INVESTMENT LP V . UNITED STATES                     15
    
    250 F.3d 1198
    , 1202 (8th Cir. 2001) (citations omitted).
    Although the Supreme Court has clearly indicated that the
    IRS may impose nominee tax liens, see G.M. Leasing Corp.,
    
    429 U.S. at
    350–51, it has provided only limited guidance
    concerning how such nominee determinations are to be made.
    However, the Court has explained that application of the
    federal tax lien statutes involves questions of both state and
    federal law. See Drye v. United States, 
    528 U.S. 49
    , 58
    (1999); see also United States v. Craft, 
    535 U.S. 274
    , 278
    (2002). “The federal tax lien statute itself ‘creates no
    property rights but merely attaches consequences, federally
    defined, to rights created under state law.’” Craft, 
    535 U.S. at 278
     (quoting United States v. Bess, 
    357 U.S. 51
    , 55
    (1958)). Consequently, in making nominee determinations in
    a tax lien context, we must “look initially to state law to
    determine what rights the taxpayer has in the property the
    Government seeks to reach[.]” Drye, 528 U.S. at 58; see also
    United States v. Nat’l Bank of Commerce, 
    472 U.S. 713
    , 722
    (1985) (noting that “state law controls in determining the
    nature of the legal interest which the taxpayer had in the
    property” (citations and internal quotations omitted)). After
    determining that the taxpayer has a property interest under
    state law, we “then [look] to federal law to determine whether
    scenarios are as creative and varied as are taxpayers
    themselves. However, the tax collector’s reaction is
    usually consistent: upon discovering that a third party
    is being used to thwart the IRS’s collection efforts, the
    government will file a notice of a federal tax lien
    identifying the third-party target as the taxpayer’s
    nominee or alter ego and will attempt to satisfy the tax
    liability from assets held by the third party.
    Teresa Dondlinger Trissel, A Uniform Standard for Alter Ego and
    Nominee Tax Litigation, 58 Fed. Law. 38, 38 (2011).
    16        FOURTH INVESTMENT LP V . UNITED STATES
    the taxpayer’s state-delineated rights qualify as ‘property’ or
    ‘rights to property’ within the compass of the federal tax lien
    legislation.” Drye, 528 U.S. at 58.
    The Government contends that nominee doctrine should
    be governed by federal common law rather than state law.
    We reject this position, just as it has been uniformly rejected
    by our sister circuits and by nearly every federal court that
    has examined the issue.4,5
    The government correctly notes that under Drye, “the
    Code and interpretive case law place under federal, not state,
    control the ultimate issue whether a taxpayer has a beneficial
    4
    See Berkshire Bank v. Town of Ludlow, 
    708 F.3d 249
    , 252 (1st Cir.
    2013) (clarifying that state law, rather than federal law, provides the
    “substantive rules” of nominee doctrine) (quoting Dalton v. Comm’r of
    Internal Revenue, 
    682 F.3d 149
    , 157 (1st Cir. 2012)); see also Holman v.
    United States, 
    505 F.3d 1060
    , 1067–68 (10th Cir. 2007) (rejecting the
    government’s argument that a “uniform federal rule should . . . govern
    whether the nominee theory is to apply,” and remanding for application
    of Utah law); Spotts v. United States, 
    429 F.3d 248
    , 253 (6th Cir. 2005)
    (“Because there is no indication that the district court applied [state] law
    before determining the scope of the federal tax lien we must reverse.”); cf.
    Old W. Annuity & Life Ins. Co. v. Apollo Grp., 
    605 F.3d 856
    , 861 (11th
    Cir. 2010) (in a case involving alter ego theory, rejecting under Drye the
    government’s argument that federal common law, rather than state law,
    governs for purposes of determining the taxpayer’s interest in the
    property).
    5
    W e have not previously provided precedential guidance on this issue,
    and two of our unpublished dispositions appear to be inconsistent with one
    another. Compare Adam v. United States, 400 F. App’x 175, 176 (9th Cir.
    2010) (the district court must look to state law in evaluating nominee
    status); with United States v. Wheeler, 403 F. App’x 301, 302 (9th Cir.
    2010) (affirming the application of federal law to determine nominee
    relationship without reference to state’s nominee doctrine).
    FOURTH INVESTMENT LP V . UNITED STATES               17
    interest in any property subject to levy for unpaid federal
    taxes.” Drye, 528 U.S. at 57. Nevertheless, in reaching that
    ultimate issue, Drye requires that we “look initially to state
    law” to determine the taxpayer’s ownership interest in the
    property. Id. at 58; see also Mark A. Segal, IRS Attacks Asset
    Transfers Designed to Thwart Tax Collections, 80 Practical
    Tax Strategies 78, 79 (2008) (noting that “[s]tate law
    generally holds significance to the determination of whether
    a party is a nominee” due to “the long-standing recognition of
    the role of state law in determining property rights”).
    The government further urges that the federal common
    law must govern nominee determinations because the ability
    to collect taxes is a vital federal interest. The government’s
    position is predicated on a fear that state courts will construe
    their own nominee doctrines in such a way as to “frustrate
    specific objectives of the federal” government. United States
    v. Kimbell Foods, Inc., 
    440 U.S. 715
    , 728 (1979). To date,
    however, this concern has proven to be unfounded, because
    state law nominee doctrine is typically “so similar” to its
    federal common law counterpart “that the distinction is of
    little moment.” Shades Ridge Holding Co., Inc. v. United
    States, 
    888 F.2d 725
    , 728 (11th Cir. 1989).                 The
    government’s concern that diverging state law nominee
    doctrines will undermine a “nationally uniform body of law,”
    Kimbell Foods, 
    440 U.S. at 728
    , is similarly misplaced
    because courts across many jurisdictions “[a]lmost
    universally” utilize the same criteria in evaluating nominee
    relationships. Dalton, 682 F.3d at 158.
    Moreover, should a state ever adopt an interpretation of
    the nominee doctrine that frustrates federal objectives, or
    disrupts commercial relationships, recourse may be sought
    through the legislative or federal regulatory processes. See
    18      FOURTH INVESTMENT LP V . UNITED STATES
    Robert T. Danforth, The Role of Federalism in Administering
    a National System of Taxation, 
    57 Tax Law. 625
    , 659 (2004)
    (suggesting that “[i]n cases involving the federal tax lien,
    federal courts should respect state definitions of property and
    rights to property” and that “[i]f this approach leads to abuse
    or raises other tax policy concerns, the remedies should come
    from Congress, not the courts”); see also Teresa Dondlinger
    Trissell, A Uniform Standard for Alter Ego and Nominee Tax
    Litigation, 58 Fed. Law. 38, 40 (2011) (advocating that
    Congress or the IRS, through federal regulations, establish a
    uniform standard for nominee determinations). Because the
    state law abuses conjured by the government are merely
    theoretical at this point in time, we decline the government’s
    invitation to ignore state law in evaluating the validity of a
    tax lien in the nominee context.
    Accordingly, we adopt the interpretation of Drye
    advanced by the reasoning of our sister circuits and hold that
    questions of nominee status require a “fact-specific state-law
    inquiry” prior to determining whether a nominee lien may
    lawfully be enforced as a matter of federal law. Holman,
    
    505 F.3d at 1068
    ; see also Spotts, 
    429 F.3d at 251
     (“[B]efore
    determining what, if any, federal tax consequences attach, we
    must first address the pertinent questions of state property
    law.”).
    1. California law and nominee doctrine
    Appellants assert that California does not recognize a
    nominee lien theory of ownership. They are mistaken.
    California cases unambiguously confirm the existence of
    nominee ownership. See Lewis v. Hankins, 
    262 Cal. Rptr. 532
    , 536 (Ct. App. 1989) (determining that “the parcels were
    beneficially owned by defendant because such entities were
    FOURTH INVESTMENT LP V . UNITED STATES              19
    mere agents or nominees of defendant” (emphasis added));
    see also Parkmerced Co. v. City & Cnty. of S.F., 
    197 Cal. Rptr. 401
    , 403 (Ct. App. 1983); Baldassari v. United States,
    
    144 Cal. Rptr. 741
    , 744 (Ct. App. 1978); Baumann v.
    Harrison, 
    115 P.2d 530
    , 535 (Dist. Ct. App. 1941). Despite
    California’s longstanding recognition of nominee ownership,
    however, California courts have not yet specified the factors
    relevant to determining whether a person or entity holds title
    as a nominee. Given “‘the absence of a controlling California
    Supreme Court decision’” dictating the criteria relevant to a
    nominee analysis, we “‘must predict how the California
    Supreme Court would decide the issue, using intermediate
    appellate court decisions, statutes, and decisions from other
    jurisdictions as interpretive aids.’” Kairy v. SuperShuttle
    Int’l, 
    660 F.3d 1146
    , 1150 (9th Cir. 2011) (quoting Gravquick
    A/S v. Trible Navigation Int’l Ltd., 
    323 F.3d 1219
    , 1222 (9th
    Cir. 2003)).
    When California courts encounter a dearth of California
    appellate decisions on a particular legal question, they “often
    look to decisions of California federal courts and out-of-state
    cases in resolving” the issue. August Entm’t, Inc. v. Phila.
    Indem. Ins. Co., 
    52 Cal. Rptr. 3d 908
    , 916 (Ct. App. 2007).
    The California Supreme Court specifically gives “‘great
    weight’” to federal court decisions “when they reflect a
    consensus.” Coral Constr., Inc. v. City & Cnty. of S.F.,
    
    235 P.3d 947
    , 958 (Cal. 2010) (quoting Barrett v. Rosenthal,
    
    146 P.3d 510
    , 526 (Cal. 2006)). Applying these principles
    here, we predict that the California Supreme Court would
    likely find the federal court cases evaluating nominee
    ownership to be highly persuasive, for at least two reasons.
    First, the federal decisions reflect an “almost universal[]”
    consensus regarding the factors relevant to a nominee
    analysis. Dalton, 682 F.3d at 158. Second, those factors
    20        FOURTH INVESTMENT LP V . UNITED STATES
    have been adopted by federal courts in California.6 See, e.g.,
    United States v. Bell, 
    27 F. Supp. 2d 1191
    , 1195 (E.D. Cal.
    1998).
    The practice of grafting federal nominee doctrine onto an
    amorphous state law scheme is quite common. See Stephanie
    Hoffer, et al., To Pay or Delay: The Nominee’s Dilemma
    under Collection Due Process, 
    82 Tul. L. Rev. 781
    , 809
    (2008) (explaining that “[d]ue to the nonstatutory nature of
    nominee theory, courts have been faced with a dearth of state
    precedent” and are thus frequently forced to canvass the law
    of other jurisdictions). Indeed, federal courts evaluating “ill-
    defined” nominee doctrines in Alabama, Maine, Montana,
    Nebraska, New Jersey, and Virginia, have looked to “federal
    law to supply standards for evaluating” that state’s nominee
    doctrine. May v. A Parcel of Land, 
    458 F. Supp. 2d 1324
    ,
    1337–38 (S.D. Ala. 2006); see also Dalton, 682 F.3d at 157;
    Cody v. United States, 
    348 F. Supp. 2d 682
    , 694 (E.D. Va.
    2004); Baum Hydraulics Corp. v. United States, 
    280 F. Supp. 2d 910
    , 916 (D. Neb. 2003); LiButti v. United States,
    
    968 F. Supp. 71
    , 75 (N.D.N.Y. 1997); Towe Antique Ford
    Found. v. I.R.S., Dep’t of Treasury, U.S., 
    791 F. Supp. 1450
    ,
    1454 (D. Mont. 1992).
    We thus confirm that California law recognizes a nominee
    theory of property ownership. We also predict that if the
    6
    Those factors are: “(1) whether inadequate or no consideration was
    paid by the nominee; (2) whether the property was placed in the nominee’s
    name in anticipation of a lawsuit or other liability while the transferor
    remains in control of the property; (3) whether there is a close relationship
    between the nominee and the transferor; (4) whether they failed to record
    the conveyance; (5) whether the transferor retained possession; and (6)
    whether the transferor continues to enjoy the benefits of the transferred
    property.” Spotts, 
    429 F.3d at
    253 n.2 (internal quotation marks omitted).
    FOURTH INVESTMENT LP V . UNITED STATES             21
    California Supreme Court had occasion to evaluate the factors
    relevant to determining nominee ownership under California
    law, it would adopt the uniform set of factors generally
    recognized by federal courts. See, e.g., Spotts, 
    429 F.3d at
    253 n.2.
    2. Application of the nominee theory of ownership
    Appellants assert that even if California recognizes
    nominee ownership, the district court erred in concluding that
    Appellants hold title to the McCall and Fourth properties as
    nominees of the Ballantynes.
    The district court properly evaluated Appellants’ nominee
    status in light of the six-factor test set forth in Spotts and
    other federal cases. Those factors are:
    (1) whether inadequate or no consideration
    was paid by the nominees;
    (2) whether the properties were placed in the
    nominees’ names in anticipation of a lawsuit
    or other liability while the transferor remains
    in control of the property;
    (3) whether there is a close relationship
    between the nominees and the transferor;
    (4) failure to record the conveyances;
    (5) whether the transferor retained possession;
    and
    22      FOURTH INVESTMENT LP V . UNITED STATES
    (6) whether the transferor continues to enjoy
    the benefits of the transferred property.
    
    Id.
     “Virtually without exception, courts focus on the totality
    of the circumstances,” and no single factor is dispositive.
    Dalton, 682 F.3d at 158.          Rather, the overarching
    consideration is “whether the taxpayer exercised active or
    substantial control over the property.” In re Richards,
    
    231 B.R. 571
    , 579 (E.D. Pa. 1999).
    The federal tax liens properly attached to the McCall and
    Fourth properties only if one or both of the Ballantynes
    individually held title to the properties (or held title to the
    properties through a revocable inter-vivos trust in which
    Susanne was the sole trustee and beneficiary), or if
    Appellants are found to have been nominees of the
    Ballantynes as of the dates of the various tax assessments.
    See 
    26 U.S.C. §§ 6321
    , 6322. The assessments at issue in
    this case were made on January 2, 1995, June 30, 1997, and
    November 16, 1998. The first assessment occurred before
    Susanne caused the Ballantyne Trust to transfer the McCall
    and Fourth properties to Appellants. If Appellants are
    adjudged to be independent third-party purchasers who paid
    “adequate and full consideration” for the properties, then the
    federal tax lien related to the initial assessment would not
    attach to the properties. See 
    26 U.S.C. § 6323
    (a), (h)(6). The
    tax lien related to the January 1995 assessment will attach,
    however, if Appellants are found to have been nominees of
    the Ballantynes at the time of the initial transfer.
    We agree with the district court that an evaluation of the
    totality of the circumstances in this case strongly indicates
    that Appellants were nominees of the Ballantynes as of June
    1995, the date of the initial transfer of the properties, and on
    FOURTH INVESTMENT LP V . UNITED STATES              23
    the dates of the subsequent assessments. Nearly every factor
    supports the existence of a nominee relationship.
    The first factor, which considers whether inadequate or no
    consideration was paid by the nominee, strongly favors the
    government. Although the Fourth and McCall properties
    were initially transferred for adequate consideration,
    consisting of partnership interests in Leeds and Fourth
    Investment, those interests were subsequently transferred to
    Hemet C in exchange for promissory notes that were
    improperly reduced in value, and the assumption of various
    unsecured “debts” owed to family members or family-owned
    entities (many of which were already in default). The district
    court properly found that these reduced notes and unsecured
    debts of dubious value rendered consideration inadequate.
    Appellants nevertheless assert that any inadequacy of
    consideration relating to the Hemet C transfer cannot affect
    their ownership interests with regard to the first transfer,
    which was supported by adequate consideration. Appellants
    fail to recognize, however, that we evaluate the nominee issue
    in light of the totality of the circumstances, and that in this
    case, among other factors, Don acknowledged that the
    transfers were all part of a larger scheme to convey the
    properties to the Children’s Trusts.
    The second factor, whether the properties were transferred
    to the nominees in anticipation of a lawsuit while the
    transferor remained in control of the property, similarly
    supports the existence of a nominee relationship. The record
    demonstrates that the Ballantynes transferred the properties
    only weeks after their tax court trial. Moreover, Don
    acknowledged that the transfers were effectuated to protect
    against “future liabilities.”     After the transfers, the
    Ballantynes maintained possession of the McCall residence,
    24      FOURTH INVESTMENT LP V . UNITED STATES
    directed the income stream of the Fourth property, and
    controlled both properties through their ownership and
    control of Leeds and Fourth Investment. See Berkshire Bank,
    708 F.3d at 253. Indeed, the Ballantynes continued to exert
    the same type of control over the properties that an owner
    would. For example, they funded the property expenses of
    the McCall residence instead of paying the monthly rent
    required in the lease, and they failed to notify the tenants of
    the Fourth property regarding a change in the ownership of
    the property. Although Susanne resigned from her positions
    at Rhodes (the 1% general partner of Leeds and Fourth
    Investment) prior to the third assessment, it is undisputed that
    she continued to perform services for the limited partnerships
    exactly as she had before her resignation, by, for example,
    signing checks for Leeds and Fourth Investment through
    1999, and acting as bookkeeper through at least 2004.
    Though Appellants contend that Susanne performed these
    managerial functions after her resignation as an employee of
    Ocean Business Services LLC, we agree with the district
    court that Ocean Business (yet another Ballantyne-owned
    entity) was simply another vehicle utilized by the Ballantynes
    to obscure their continued control of Leeds and Fourth
    Investment.
    The third factor, which evaluates the closeness in
    relationship between the nominees and the transferor, also
    persuasively indicates the existence of a nominee
    relationship. The government established that Appellants
    (along with every other entity involved in the Ballantynes’
    complex scheme) were wholly owned and controlled by one
    or more of the Ballantynes or their children at the time of the
    initial transfer and subsequent assessments.
    FOURTH INVESTMENT LP V . UNITED STATES               25
    The fourth factor alone partially favors Appellants,
    because the conveyances of title between the Ballantynes and
    Appellants were ultimately recorded. However, this factor is
    not particularly persuasive because none of the conveyances
    was recorded promptly. Indeed, the district court suspected
    that the Ballantynes had backdated several of the documents
    produced at trial because so many of them had not been
    recorded until months or even years after their alleged
    execution. The fact that the recording of the property
    conveyances was similarly delayed (by more than three
    months in the case of the Fourth property, and by more than
    two years in the case of the McCall property) further
    strengthens this inference of backdating. Thus, we agree with
    the district court that, on balance, the fourth factor is only
    marginally helpful to the Ballantynes.
    Finally, the fifth and sixth factors, which consider
    whether the transferor continued to retain possession and
    enjoy the benefits of the transferred property, strongly favor
    the government. After the transfers, the Ballantynes
    continued to maintain possession of the McCall property and
    enjoy it as their primary residence exactly as they had before
    the transfer. They benefitted from a leasehold relationship in
    which they could ignore key terms of the lease, such as rent
    payment, without consequence. The Ballantynes also
    continued to enjoy the benefits of the Fourth property after
    the transfer by continuing to control the distribution of rental
    income. As the district court found, the Ballantynes
    additionally retained the benefit of transferring the Fourth
    property to their children in a way they believed would avoid
    the realization of any taxable gain.
    Because these factors inescapably affirm the existence of
    a nominee relationship when viewed in light of the totality of
    26      FOURTH INVESTMENT LP V . UNITED STATES
    the circumstances, the district court properly determined that
    Appellants held the McCall and Fourth properties as
    nominees of the Ballantynes.
    3. Required Joinder
    For the first time on appeal, Appellants assert that the
    district court’s judgment should be vacated because the more
    than thirteen shell entities involved in the Ballantynes’
    complex tax avoidance scheme were not joined in the action.
    Appellants’ claim is unavailing.
    Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 19(a) provides in relevant
    part that a person “must be joined as a party if that person
    claims an interest relating to the subject of the action and . . .
    disposing of the action in the person’s absence may as a
    practical matter impair or impede the person’s ability to
    protect the interest.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 19(a)(1). Appellants fail
    to identify the specific entities they contend must be joined or
    explain how the interests of those entities will be impaired by
    the judgment in this case absent joinder. Moreover, none of
    these entities ever attempted to join this litigation—and
    Appellants never moved to join them—despite the fact that
    the entities were both owned and controlled by the
    Ballantynes, who were considerably involved in the district
    court trial.
    In any event, the district court made no findings of fact
    regarding the validity of any third party’s interest in the
    properties; instead, it adjudicated only whether Leeds and
    Fourth Investment held title in the McCall and Fourth
    properties as nominees of the Ballantynes when the relevant
    tax liens attached to those properties. Appellants cite no
    authority requiring third party joinder in a situation such
    FOURTH INVESTMENT LP V . UNITED STATES               27
    as this one, where the district court has neither quieted title
    nor determined whether the federal tax liens are effective
    against third parties. “[W]hen the judgment appealed from
    does not in a practical sense prejudicially affect the interests
    of the absent parties, and those who are parties have failed to
    object to non-joinder in the trial court, [we] will not
    dismiss an otherwise valid judgment.” Sierra Club v.
    Hathaway, 
    579 F.2d 1162
    , 1166 (9th Cir. 1978) (citations
    omitted). Accordingly, Appellants have not established that
    the absent entities were necessary parties under Rule 19(a),
    and the district court properly resolved Appellants’
    ownership interests in the McCall and Fourth properties in
    their absence. See Eldredge v. Carpenters 46 N. Cal. Cntys.
    Joint Apprenticeship & Training Comm., 
    662 F.2d 534
    , 537
    (9th Cir. 1981).
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s judgment is
    affirmed.
    AFFIRMED.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 11-56997, 11-57009

Citation Numbers: 720 F.3d 1058

Judges: Jack, Mary, Milan, Murguia, Smith, Zouhary

Filed Date: 6/13/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/6/2023

Authorities (24)

Holman v. United States , 505 F.3d 1060 ( 2007 )

Shades Ridge Holding Company, Inc. v. United States of ... , 888 F.2d 725 ( 1989 )

27-fair-emplpraccas-479-27-empl-prac-dec-p-32254-linda-eldredge-and , 662 F.2d 534 ( 1981 )

Glenda S. Scoville v. United States , 250 F.3d 1198 ( 2001 )

Old West Annuity and Life Ins. Co. v. Apollo Group , 605 F.3d 856 ( 2010 )

Peggy Ann Schaefer Spotts v. United States , 429 F.3d 248 ( 2005 )

Barrett v. Rosenthal , 51 Cal. Rptr. 3d 55 ( 2006 )

The Sierra Club v. Stanley K. Hathaway , 579 F.2d 1162 ( 1978 )

gravquick-as-a-denmark-corporation-v-trimble-navigation-international , 323 F.3d 1219 ( 2003 )

Kairy v. SuperShuttle International , 660 F.3d 1146 ( 2011 )

CORAL CONSTRUCTION, INC. v. City and County of San Francisco , 50 Cal. 4th 315 ( 2010 )

Red Lion Hotels Franchising, Inc. v. MAK, LLC , 663 F.3d 1080 ( 2011 )

United States v. Bell , 27 F. Supp. 2d 1191 ( 1998 )

Towe Antique Ford Foundation v. Internal Revenue Service, ... , 791 F. Supp. 1450 ( 1992 )

United States v. Kimbell Foods, Inc. , 99 S. Ct. 1448 ( 1979 )

United States v. Bess , 78 S. Ct. 1054 ( 1958 )

G. M. Leasing Corp. v. United States , 97 S. Ct. 619 ( 1977 )

Richards v. United States (In Re Richards) , 231 B.R. 571 ( 1999 )

LiButti v. United States , 968 F. Supp. 71 ( 1997 )

Baum Hydraulics Corp. v. United States , 280 F. Supp. 2d 910 ( 2003 )

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