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Date: 12-08-2021
Case Style:
United States of America v. Edward Holland, Jr.
Case Number: 18-1712
Judge: Raymond M. Kethledge
Court:
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of Michigan at Detroit
Plaintiff's Attorney: Geoffrey J. Klimas, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Defendant's Attorney:
Description:
Cincinnati, Ohio - Income Tax lawyer represented Defendant charged with income tax evasion.”
The Internal Revenue Service has authority to investigate and to make assessments for
taxes not paid “at the time and in the manner provided by law.” 26 U.S.C. § 6201(a). If a
taxpayer “neglects or refuses” to pay an assessed amount, the government obtains a lien in that
amount upon “all property” owned by the taxpayer. Id. § 6321. The government can then seize
the taxpayer’s property to satisfy the government’s claim for unpaid taxes. Id. § 6331.
Holland has stipulated that he owes the government about $20 million in unpaid taxes
and penalties. The question here is whether the property that the government now seeks to seize
belongs to him, rather than to the partnership to which he transferred that property more than 20
years ago.
Holland made his name as a Motown songwriter in the 1960s, with hits like “Stop in the
Name of Love” and “Baby Love.” He later sold his song-rights to two music companies, in
exchange for the right to royalty payments for the songs. Those royalty assets then served as
Holland’s primary source of income.
Beginning in the 1970s, Holland failed fully to report and pay taxes on his royalty
income. As a result, between 1986 and 1990, the IRS levied Holland’s royalty assets and
recovered approximately $1.5 million. In June 1997, the IRS informed him that it intended again
to levy the royalty assets, this time to satisfy taxes owed for 1996.
No. 18-1712 United States v. Holland, et al. Page 3
Meanwhile, in October 1997, Holland retained a team of professionals to prepare and
execute a transaction—which was itself common enough in financial circles—by which he
would convert his interest in future royalty payments into a present lump sum of cash.
Specifically, Holland would create a partnership wholly owned by him, to which he would
transfer title to the royalty assets, which were then worth about $23.3 million; the partnership
would then borrow (by means of the issuance of notes) $15 million, for which the royalty assets
would serve as collateral. Holland’s representatives informed the IRS about the pending
transaction in advance; the agency replied that Holland was free to “conduct his normal course of
business” at that time.
Over the next several months, Holland’s professionals prepared to execute the
transaction, while the IRS continued to investigate his tax liabilities. In April 1998, the IRS told
Holland that it was examining his tax payments for 1995. A month later, the IRS told Holland
that it thought he owed about $1.8 million in taxes and penalties, as well as $2.1 million in
interest, for his underpayments for the 1991–94 years. The IRS did not, however, record an
assessment for that amount at that time.
A few days later, Holland executed the transaction to monetize his royalty assets. At the
close of the transaction, Bankers Trust (which served as a trustee of sorts for the deal) paid $8.4
million directly to Holland and about $5 million in fees to the lawyers and bankers who
structured it. Bankers Trust also placed $1.7 million in escrow, which was then used to pay
Holland’s debts—notably including the entire amount (about $1.4 million, for the 1986 and 1990
years) of the IRS’s assessments against Holland at that time. The IRS did not assess any
additional amounts against Holland until 2003, more than four years later.
In December 2005, the partnership entered into an agreement with Royal Bank of
Scotland to refinance the partnership’s outstanding debt from the 1998 deal. Under this
agreement, Royal Bank paid about $9 million to Bankers Trust to pay off the notes issued by the
partnership in 1998. Royal Bank also paid $1.1 million to Holland and made available to the
partnership a $4.3 million credit line. As collateral, Royal Bank received a security interest in
the royalty assets. During 2006 and 2007, the partnership requested the remaining $4.3 million
of the loan from Royal Bank, which then sent those funds directly to Holland or his creditors.
No. 18-1712 United States v. Holland, et al. Page 4
The IRS thereafter recorded numerous liens against Holland for unpaid taxes.
In February 2012, the IRS concluded that the partnership held the royalty assets as Holland’s
nominee, alter ego, or fraudulent transferee—in essence, that his transfer of those assets to the
partnership was a fraud upon his creditors. As a result, the IRS recorded a $20 million lien
against the partnership, thereby treating its assets as Holland’s own.
The government later brought this lawsuit to enforce that lien, naming Royal Bank as an
interested party. The district court thereafter ordered the partnership to sell the royalty assets, for
which it obtained $21 million. The court put those proceeds into an interpleader fund, to be
distributed to the partnership’s creditors in order of priority. The government then moved for
summary judgment on its claim to enforce its lien against the partnership’s assets (now the
$21 million in cash). That lien—if valid against the partnership, as opposed to being valid
against only the taxpayer himself—would take priority over Royal Bank’s security interest in the
proceeds, thereby largely frustrating the bank’s ability to collect on its 2005 loan. Royal Bank
thus filed a cross-motion for summary judgment, arguing that the 1998 and 2005 transactions
were legitimate rather than fraudulent, and that the partnership’s assets therefore should not be
treated, for purposes of the IRS’s assessments, as Holland’s own. The district court granted
Royal Bank’s motion and denied the government’s, holding as a matter of law that the 1998 and
2005 transactions had not been devices to thwart Holland’s creditors. The court thus entered
final judgment in favor of Royal Bank under Civil Rule 54(b). This appeal followed.
II.
We review de novo the district court’s decisions on the motions for summary judgment.
Hatchett v. United States, 330 F.3d 875, 879 (6th Cir. 2003).
The government offers three theories as to why it thinks we should disregard the separate
form of Holland’s partnership and treat its assets as Holland’s own for purposes of the
government’s ability to collect on them. Those theories are that the partnership was Holland’s
“nominee”; that it was his “alter ego”; and that his transfer of the royalty assets to the partnership
was a fraudulent conveyance. With perhaps one exception, those theories present questions of
state law; and the parties’ dispute as to which state’s law should apply (Michigan, New York, or
No. 18-1712 United States v. Holland, et al. Page 5
Delaware) is immaterial here because the relevant law for each state is substantially the same.
(The potential exception as to the applicability of state law is the alter-ego theory, which the
government suggests is governed by “federal common law”; but that law, as recited by the
government, is no different than Michigan’s, so this dispute too is immaterial.)
All three theories fail as a matter of law for the reasons that the district court said they
did: namely, that Holland received adequate consideration for his transfer of the royalty assets to
the partnership in the 1998 transaction, and that the government otherwise lacks evidence that
the transfer of those assets was made with the goal of thwarting the government’s ability to
collect on its assessments against Holland. See generally, e.g., Spotts v. United States, 429 F.3d
248, 253 (6th Cir. 2005) (nominee theory); Servo Kinetics, Inc. v. Tokyo Precision Instruments
Co., 475 F.3d 783, 798 (6th Cir. 2007) (alter-ego theory); Mich. Comp. L. Ann. § 566.17
(fraudulent-conveyance theory). As an initial matter, the government does not dispute that
transactions to monetize future revenue are both common and facially legitimate, or that the use
of a separate corporate form (here, a partnership) in such transactions is often necessary to isolate
the future revenue stream as a source of collateral for the transaction. See, e.g., Paloian v.
LaSalle Bank, N.A., 619 F.3d 688, 695 (7th Cir. 2010) (Easterbrook, J.).
As for the adequacy of consideration, the transfer of assets itself in the 1998 transaction
left Holland financially no worse off than he had been before, since he owned the partnership.
Nor was the $15 million loan itself a device to thwart Holland’s creditors: $8.4 million of the
loan proceeds went back to Holland; another $1.7 million was used to pay off Holland’s debts,
including the entire $1.4 million of IRS assessments then pending against him; and the remaining
$5 million or so was used to pay the fees of the lawyers and bankers whom Holland retained to
prepare and execute the transaction. The government is correct, of course, that those transaction
costs “meant that the value of cash and partnership interests Holland ended up with was
$5 million less than the value of the royalty assets he paid to the partnership.” Gov’t Br. at 27.
That left $5 million less for Holland’s creditors to collect from him. But Holland had just paid
off substantially all of his extant creditors in that very transaction. And so far as consideration is
concerned, Holland undisputedly received the benefit of those lawyers’ and bankers’ services in
exchange for that $5 million. Moreover, if the payment of that $5 million harmed Holland’s
No. 18-1712 United States v. Holland, et al. Page 6
future creditors, it obviously harmed Holland first. That Holland himself might have been
fleeced by the $5 million tab for the 1998 transaction therefore provides no support for the
government’s assertion that the transaction’s purpose was to thwart his future creditors.
Nor does the government have other evidence creating a genuine issue as to whether the
transfer of his partnership assets was a fraud upon the IRS or his creditors. Even after the
close of the 1998 transaction, the government could have levied Holland’s shares in
the partnership—then worth $8.3 million, which was the amount the loan was
overcollateralized—along with the $8.4 million in cash that Holland received from the loan. The
reason the government did not do so is that Holland had just paid off all the IRS’s assessments as
a result of that very transaction; and the IRS did not record any additional assessments against
him until 2003, more than four years later. The government complains that by then Holland had
dissipated much of the $8.4 million that he received in the 1998 transaction. But that is what
people tend to do with money: spend it. The IRS’s more than four-year delay in making
additional assessments against Holland—rather than the 1998 transfer of royalty assets itself—is
to blame for the government’s collection difficulties now.
The government also emphasizes that, shortly before the 1998 deal, the IRS informed
him that it thought he owed $3.9 million in unpaid taxes, penalties, and interest for the 1991–94
tax years; but again the IRS did not record an assessment for those years until 2003, and then in
the amount of only $1.3 million. Moreover, that Holland’s representatives informed the IRS
about the 1998 deal in advance, and that the IRS made no objection to it, defeats any inference
that the transaction’s purpose was to thwart the IRS’s collection of unpaid taxes for those same
years. Finally, on this record, that Holland was often sloppy about observing corporate
formalities likewise does not support any inference that he transferred the royalty assets to thwart
his creditors.
In sum, Holland’s transfer of the royalty assets was part of a transaction pedestrian in
nature—the monetization of a future revenue stream—and executed with the knowledge and
indeed arguably the blessing of the IRS. In seeking to have us disregard that transfer, the
government in essence assumes—notwithstanding Holland’s satisfaction of all the IRS’s thenexisting assessments as a result of the 1998 deal—that Holland had a quasi-fiduciary duty not
No. 18-1712 United States v. Holland, et al. Page 7
only to preserve his assets, but to maintain them in a form easily accessible to the IRS years later.
On this record, at least, no rule of law supports that assumption
Outcome: The district court’s judgment is affirmed.
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