In two more of at least four similar cases, former Ernst & Young consulting partners were denied refunds of tax they paid on stock received from a merger with Cap Gemini that lost most of its value while in restricted accounts.
In 2000, Cap Gemini agreed to purchase E&Y’s consulting practice for stock. The tax, audit and consulting partners received stock, and the consulting partners agreed to work for Cap Gemini. The purchase contract specifically classified the transaction as a taxable purchase.
The contract permitted the partners to sell 25% of their shares to pay their tax liability from the sale. The remaining 75% was put into a restricted account and could not be sold for more than four years. If partners left Cap Gemini or were fired for specified reasons, they would forfeit stock in the restricted account under a liquidated damages schedule. The sales contract provided that the fair market value of the restricted stock was 95% of its closing price on the date of the transaction (May 23, 2000), or $148.53 per share.
One of the partners, Robert Bergbauer, received 10,740 shares of Cap Gemini. On his 2000 tax return, Bergbauer reported his entire gross proceeds from the sale of $1,613,379 and a total tax liability of $676,493.
Throughout the negotiations, E&Y distributed the proposed documents to its partners. It held a meeting to discuss thetransaction and to allow the partners to ask questions. The reason the transaction was structured as a currently taxable sale was to prevent the IRS from reclassifying some of the restricted stock as compensation for services and to ensure favorable tax treatment for the consulting partners on its future sale. Included in the transaction documents signed by Bergbauer and the other partners was a form that stated that the partners would report the transaction as a taxable sale at the stated value.
By two years after the sale, the value of the restricted stock had fallen to $16 per share. Bergbauer filed an amended return claiming that the sale was not fully taxable at closing and obtained a refund of $276,510, including interest. The IRS sued in 2005 to recover it. The case was stayed for more than a year while other cases of the estimated more than 200 similarly situated taxpayers were resolved.
Bergbauer argued that as a cash method taxpayer, under section 451, he did not have to report the restricted stock until received.
The U.S. District Court for Maryland, where the case was tried, pointed out that two other district courts had ruled previously on similar arguments brought by other former E&Y partners. In