Federal Law Governs Pre-Notice Interest in Transferee Liability Case Where Assets Received Greater Than Total Corporate Tax, Penalties and Interest
In the case of Tricarichi v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2016-132 the Tax Court was asked to decide whether Ohio state law or federal law applied to the computation of interest owed for an individual found to have transferee liability under federal tax law. In an earlier case (T. C. Memo 2015-201) the Tax Court had found Michael liable for taxes due following a “Midco” transaction.
Roughly summarized, a “Midco” transaction involved the sale of a corporation owned by a shareholder who would sell his stock to a third party. In turn, that party would sell the assets of the corporation and use those assets to finance the purchase from Michael, leaving little or no assets in the corporation to pay the resulting corporate income tax. While the buyers claimed to have a way to offset that gain, the Courts have found in a number of cases that the shareholder should have realized the result was too good to be true and imposed transferee liability when the “offset” is later found invalid and a large corporate tax liability exists for a corporation with no remaining assets. Michael was one of those found to have such liability.
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