199
Storyparadox1
Susie King Taylor 360x1000
1confidencegames
Mary Ann Evans 360x1000
12albion
13albion
1lauber
5albion
7confidencegames
3defense
Office of Chief Counsel 360x1000
499
10abion
storyparadox3
2confidencegames
1theleasofus
1falsewitness
Anthony McCann1 360x1000
7albion
Margaret Fuller2 360x1000
Susie King Taylor2 360x1000
Margaret Fuller5 360x1000
Betty Friedan 360x1000
Tad Friend 360x1000
2defense
9albion
1transcendentalist
3paradise
1trap
2falsewitness
Margaret Fuller 360x1000
Margaret Fuller3 360x1000
George F Wil...360x1000
Richard Posner 360x1000
299
1lookingforthegoodwar
LillianFaderman
Adam Gopnik 360x1000
Margaret Fuller 2 360x1000
6albion
AlexRosenberg
6confidencegames
399
Edmund Burke 360x1000
1lafayette
3confidencegames
3theleastofus
Margaret Fuller4 360x1000
George M Cohan and Lerarned Hand 360x1000
Maurice B Foley 360x1000
1empireofpain
Lafayette and Jefferson 360x1000
2paradise
1madoff
5confidencegames
Gilgamesh 360x1000
2theleastofus
4confidencegames
Maria Popova 360x1000
lifeinmiddlemarch2
2gucci
11albion
Anthony McCann2 360x1000
Thomas Piketty3 360x1000
2jesusandjohnwayne
Ruth Bader Ginsburg 360x1000
storyparadox2
Stormy Daniels 360x1000
2trap
Brendan Beehan 360x1000
2lafayette
1gucci
1defense
Margaret Fuller1 360x1000
1paradide
lifeinmiddlemarch1
3albion
8albion'
1albion
1jesusandjohnwayne
4albion
James Gould Cozzens 360x1000
Thomas Piketty1 360x1000
14albion
2lookingforthegoodwar
2albion
11632
Thomas Piketty2 360x1000
Spottswood William Robinson 360x1000
Samuel Johnson 360x1000
Mark V Holmes 360x1000
2transadentilist
Learned Hand 360x1000

Larry Lawrence, Roberto Salazar and Ricardo Garcia were instrumental in winning their clients large settlements from Firestone in 2001.  They each got paid over a million dollars in fees.  Being a plaintiff’s lawyer has some elements of feast or famine about it.  It is understandable that they wanted to do something about the large tax liabilities in the wakes of their ships that had finally come in. They sought help from Joe Garza, an attorney from Dallas, Texas.  The result was not great for them as this recent Tax Court decision shows.  The case has both humor and practical utility.

The humor comes in little nuggets that the Court scattered through the decision.  For example it explains that Mr. Garza learned about the “Son-of-Boss” deals that he recommended by paying $50,000 for some “dark side” continuing legal education.  The networking that brought Mr. Garza in front of Lawrence, Salazar and Garcia is summed up in the sentence – Bad ideas can be especially contagious in a small town.

The most important practical part of the case is the ruling that a partnership or an LLC consisting of yourself and your own disregarded entity is not a partnership for income tax purposes. The transactions were also disallowed on Section 183 grounds (activities not entered into for profit).

What Mr. Garza designed for his legal brethren was a quite elegant version of the Son-of-Boss transaction.  The idea is that you sell a foreign currency call option and use the proceeds of the sale to purchase a foreign currency call option in the same currency with the same counterparty and the same expiration date.  There is a slight difference in strike price.  You are more or less guaranteed to lose on the transaction, particularly after transaction costs, but, in principle, if on the option expiration the currency price is in the very narrow range between the two contracts, “the sweet spot”, you hit a home run.

The tax magic of the transaction comes from putting both contracts into a partnership.  On a variation of an old accounting  joke, I call the technique “debit by the window, credit out the window”.  You have basis in the call option that you bought, but your obligation under the call option that you wrote does not meet the definition of a liability.  In essence you have created basis in your partnership interest out of thin air.  The variations on the technique have to do with how you use that free basis.

Mr. Garza’s technique was elegant.  The partners also contributed a few thousand dollars in Canadian currency. After the options expired the partnership was liquidated. In a partnership liquidation you apply the partners basis to the property distributed.  So you end up with say $10,000 in Canadian currency with $1,000,000 basis.  Foreign currency losses are generally ordinary.  This is really great because you now have a pool of potential ordinary loss that you can use as needed.

The Tax Court disbelieved the attorneys when they said that they were really in it for the big score they would get by hitting the sweet spot.  Apparently the sweet spot is something of an illusion, because the counterparty Deutsche Bank was in a position to rig the scoring so they would never hit it.  When Deutsche Bank determined the market price on the option expiration it had as much as three cents of play in the pricing.  The “sweet spot” was only two cents wide.  The Tax Court noted that the attorneys did not have extensive experience in foreign currency trading:

 Before November 2001, Lawrence had never invested in foreign currency other than trading U.S. dollars against the Mexican peso back when he was a busboy and waiter.

“Other than buying a Krugerrand during a vacation in South Africa,” Garcia had also never invested in foreign currency before.

I find one of the other reasons that the transaction failed even more interesting.  Each lawyer formed a single member LLC that was the other member of the LLC that received the option contracts and Canadian currency.  They did not have the LLCs that were supposed to be their partners elect corporate status leaving them as disregarded entities.   In order to have a partnership, you need partners (plural). If it is you and your disregarded entity that does not do it.  They tried to argue that Texas community property laws made the disregarded entities deemed partnerships, but that did not fly.

When we disregard a partnership for tax purposes, we are holding that the rules of subchapter K of chapter 1 of the Code (which contains the substantive law governing the income taxation of partners) no longer apply, and that we will deem the partnership’s activities to be engaged in by one or more of its purported partners. A disregarded partnership has no identity separate from its owners, and we treat it as just an agent or nominee.

If the deal had otherwise worked it would have been really devastating to lose it on that basis, since an election by the disregarded entities to be treated as corporations would have saved it.  Actually it was just another nail in the coffin, but one to watch out for in transactions of more substance.

You can follow me on twitter @peterreillycpa.

Originally published on Forbes.com Feb 24th, 2013