                         T.C. Memo. 2011-177



                       UNITED STATES TAX COURT



         JONATHAN S. AND TRACY A. LANDOW, Petitioners v.
           COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent



     Docket Nos. 15506-09, 20206-09.     Filed July 25, 2011.



     David D. Aughtry and Hale E. Sheppard, for petitioners.

     Jennifer K. Martwick, for respondent.



             MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION


     CHIECHI, Judge:    Respondent determined the following defi-

ciencies in, additions under section 6651(a)(1)1 to, and




     1
      All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in
effect at all relevant times. All Rule references are to the Tax
Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
                                - 2 -

accuracy-related penalties under section 6662(a) on petitioners’

Federal income tax (tax):

                             Addition to        Accuracy-Related
                              Tax Under              Penalty
 Year     Deficiency       Sec. 6651(a)(1)     Under Sec. 6662(a)
 2003    $4,318,104.00            --               $863,620.80
 2004           749.00            --                    --
 2005        93,009.45         $3,962.45             18,601.89
 2006        89,040.00            --                 17,808.00
 2007       211,976.00         16,300.70             42,395.20

     The issues remaining for decision are:2

     (1) Did a certain transaction in 2003 between petitioner

Jonathan S. Landow and Derivium Capital, LLC, constitute a loan

or a sale of securities?    We hold that that transaction was a

sale of securities by petitioner Jonathan S. Landow.

     (2) In the light of our holding with respect to issue 1, are

petitioners required to recognize under section 1042(e) any gain

realized on the sale of securities by petitioner Jonathan S.

Landow described in that issue?    We hold that they are.

     (3) In the light of our holdings with respect to issues 1

and 2, are petitioners entitled to defer under section 1033 any

gain realized on the sale of securities by petitioner Jonathan S.

Landow described in issue 1?    We hold that they are not.



     2
      Our resolution of the issues presented for petitioners’
taxable year 2003 in the case at docket No. 15506-09 resolves the
issues presented for their taxable years 2005, 2006, and 2007 in
the case at docket No. 20206-09. Petitioners concede the defi-
ciency for their taxable year 2004, which is not related to the
issues presented here.
                                - 3 -

                         FINDINGS OF FACT

     All of the facts in these cases, which the parties submitted

under Rule 122, have been stipulated by the parties and are so

found.3

     Petitioners resided in New York at the time they filed the

petitions in these cases.

     In 1994, petitioner Jonathan S. Landow (Mr. Landow) orga-

nized New York Medical, Inc. (NY Medical), under the laws of

Delaware.   Mr. Landow has developed NY Medical into a successful

provider of medical services.

     Around early 2000, Mr. Landow was considering diversifying

his personal assets and simultaneously rewarding employees of NY

Medical through the establishment of an employee stock ownership

plan (ESOP).   In May 2000, Mr. Landow contacted Irwin Selinger of

Corporate Solutions Group, LLC (CSG), an affiliate of American

Express Corporate Services, to assist him in establishing an ESOP

for NY Medical.   Around July 25, 2000, NY Medical and CSG exe-

cuted an agreement (ESOP advisory agreement) pursuant to which

CSG was to provide certain services to NY Medical, including

establishing and implementing an ESOP, financing that ESOP’s

purchase of certain stock of NY Medical from Mr. Landow, and


     3
      The parties reserved objections based on relevancy to
certain of the stipulated facts. We need not and shall not
address those respective objections. That is because we have not
relied on any of the facts to which the parties reserved those
objections in resolving the issues presented.
                                - 4 -

aiding Mr. Landow to defer under section 1042 any gain that he

realized on his sale of that stock.     On a date not established by

the record, NY Medical established the New York Medical, Inc.,

Employee Stock Ownership Trust (NY Medical ESOP) that was to be

effective on January 1, 2000.

     At a time not established by the record between July and

November 2000, NY Medical and Mr. Landow decided to engage in a

so-called seller-financed ESOP transaction with leveraged quali-

fied replacement property (QRP), as defined in section 1042.

After that decision and pursuant to the ESOP advisory agreement,

CSG solicited on behalf of NY Medical certain information from

various financial institutions regarding the terms on which those

financial institutions would lend NY Medical the funds necessary

to purchase certain stock of that company from Mr. Landow.    At a

time not established by the record, NY Medical decided to obtain

financing for that purchase from Citibank, N.A. (Citibank).

     On November 30, 2000, NY Medical, Mr. Landow, and Citibank

executed a letter agreement (Citibank letter agreement), and NY

Medical executed a demand note (Citibank demand note) payable to

Citibank.   Pursuant to that letter agreement, Citibank agreed to

lend NY Medical $15 million, which was the amount payable under

that demand note.   The Citibank letter agreement provided in

pertinent part:

          As a condition to our [Citibank] making funds
     available to NY Med[ical], NY Med[ical] shall use the
                              - 5 -

     proceeds to immediately make a $15,000,000 loan to the
     ESOT [the NY Medical ESOP] (the “ESOT Loan”). The ESOT
     shall use the proceeds of the ESOT Loan to purchase the
     stock of NY Med[ical] from Landow. Landow shall use
     the proceeds of the sale of the stock to make a loan to
     NY Med[ical] (the “Sub Loan”). NY Med[ical] shall use
     the proceeds of the Sub Loan to repay our advance [of
     $15 million] under the Note. The proceeds shall be
     advanced to each party under the Blocked Account Agree-
     ments[4] referred to above. This letter shall serve as
     an instruction letter from each party to us to advance
     the funds from each of the Blocked Accounts to fund the
     ESOT Loan, the Stock purchase and the Sub Loan. NY
     Med[ical] hereby instructs us to debit the Blocked
     Account maintained on behalf of NY Med[ical] and apply
     the amounts therein to repay the advance under the
     Note.




     4
      On Nov. 30, 2000, NY Medical, the NY Medical ESOP, and Mr.
Landow separately executed respective documents, each of which
was titled “BLOCKED ACCOUNT AGREEMENT” (blocked account agree-
ment). Each of those blocked account agreements contained
materially identical provisions. The blocked account agreement
that Mr. Landow executed provided in pertinent part:

          2. The Customer [Mr. Landow] has opened the
     Pledged Account and will cause to be deposited therein
     and will maintain therein cash from time to time. The
     Customer hereby pledges to the Bank, and grants to the
     Bank a lien, mortgage and security interest in, all
     cash or other assets deposited from time to time in the
     Pledged Account. At any time amounts are due and
     payable to the Bank with respect to the obligations of
     the Customer to the Bank, including the obligations
     under Customer’s guaranty of the $15,000,000 Demand
     Note of the New York Medical, Inc. to the Bank dated as
     of the date hereof (the “Obligations”), whether prior
     to or during the occurrence of a default or Event of
     Default and whether or not Bank has made any demand or
     the Obligations have matured, the Bank may, at its
     discretion, may [sic] appropriate and apply the funds
     in the Pledged Account to the payment of the Obliga-
     tions. The Bank shall have sole dominion and control
     over the Pledged Account. * * *
                               - 6 -

     Pursuant to the Citibank letter agreement, on November 30,

2000, (1) Citibank lent NY Medical $15 million, (2) NY Medical

used the proceeds of that loan in order to lend the NY Medical

ESOP $15 million, (3) the NY Medical ESOP used those proceeds to

purchase from Mr. Landow 450,000 shares of NY Medical’s stock for

$15 million, (4) Mr. Landow used those proceeds to lend NY

Medical $15 million, and (5) NY Medical used the proceeds of that

loan to pay Citibank $15 million in full satisfaction of its

obligation under the Citibank demand note.   After the above-

described transactions were effected, Mr. Landow (1) did not

retain any cash from his sale of certain stock of NY Medical to

the NY Medical ESOP and (2) held a note of NY Medical in the

amount of $15 million evidencing his loan to that company.

     After the sale of certain of Mr. Landow’s stock of NY

Medical to the NY Medical ESOP, Mr. Landow sought to purchase

certain QRP in order to defer under section 1042 recognition of

any gain that he had realized on the sale of that stock.   Be-

cause, as discussed above, Mr. Landow did not retain any cash

from his sale of certain stock of NY Medical to the NY Medical

ESOP, he was unable to buy that QRP without borrowing the funds

to do so.   Citibank offered to extend Mr. Landow a line of credit

not exceeding $12 million in order to facilitate Mr. Landow’s

purchase of certain QRP.
                              - 7 -

     On November 1, 2000, NY Medical, Mr. Landow, and Citibank

executed a document titled “REVOLVING CREDIT NOTE (Multiple

Advances)” (revolving credit note).   Pursuant to that note,

Citibank made available to Mr. Landow a line of credit not

exceeding $12 million (Citibank line of credit), which was a

recourse loan and on which Mr. Landow was allowed to draw during

the period November 1, 2000, to October 31, 2001.   Pursuant to

the revolving credit note, in the event of Mr. Landow’s default

under that note Citibank retained “all of the rights and remedies

provided to it (i) under the Loan Documents, (ii) under applica-

ble laws, and (iii) as a secured party by the Uniform Commercial

Code in effect in New York State at that time.”   The revolving

credit note also required Mr. Landow to maintain a minimum net

worth of not less than $30 million.

     The revolving credit note permitted Mr. Landow to choose at

the time he drew against the line of credit thereunder one of two

alternative methods of calculating interest:   (1) An interest

rate that was one percentage point greater than the LIBOR rate as

defined in that note5 or (2) an interest rate that was one and




     5
      The revolving credit note defined the term “LIBOR rate” as
the interest rate that Citibank’s London office offered to prime
banks in the London interbank market.
                               - 8 -

one-half percentage points less than the base rate as defined in

that note.6

     On November 1, 2000, Mr. Landow executed a document titled

“General Hypothecation Agreement” (hypothecation agreement).

Pursuant to that agreement, Mr. Landow pledged as security for

the Citibank line of credit certain rights to the QRP that he

intended to purchase with the loan proceeds that he borrowed

against that line of credit.   In this regard, the hypothecation

agreement provided in pertinent part:

          I. That, as security for all indebtedness and
     other liabilities of the undersigned [Mr. Landow] * * *
     pursuant to the Revolving Credit Note dated the date
     hereof * * * (the “Note”), together with all obliga-
     tions of the undersigned hereunder or under any other
     document or agreement executed and delivered by the
     undersigned in connection with the Note and this Agree-
     ment (the “Obligations”), the Lender [Citibank] shall
     have and is hereby given a lien upon and a security
     interest in any and all property in which the under-
     signed at any time has rights and which at any time has
     been delivered, transferred, pledged, mortgaged or
     assigned to, or deposited in or credited to an account
     with, the Lender, or any third party(ies) acting in its
     behalf or designated by it, including, but not limited
     to, Pledged Collateral (as herein defined)[7] contained

     6
      The revolving credit note defined the term “base rate” as
the interest rate that Citibank periodically published as its
base rate.
     7
      The hypothecation agreement defined the term “Pledged
Collateral” to mean:

     The undersigned [Mr. Landow] will maintain at all times
     in the Pledged Account assets acceptable to the Lender
     [Citibank], consisting of Eligible Floating Rate Notes,
     Eligible CP [commercial paper] and other marketable
     securities, cash and cash equivalents. Such Eligible
                                                   (continued...)
                              - 9 -

     in the Pledged Account (as herein defined),[8] or other-
     wise at any time is in the possession or under the
     control or recorded on the books of or has been trans-
     ferred to the Lender, or any third party(ies) acting in
     its behalf or designated by it, whether expressly as
     collateral or for safekeeping or for any other or
     different purpose, * * * and in any and all property in
     which the undersigned at any time has rights and in
     which at any time a security interest has been trans-
     ferred to the Lender. Stock dividends and the distri-
     butions on account of any stock or other securities
     subject to the terms and provisions hereof, including
     FRN Interest (as herein defined)[9] shall be deemed an
     increment thereto and if not received directly by the
     Lender shall be delivered immediately to it by the
     undersigned in form for transfer.

         *      *       *       *       *       *       *

          III. That, in addition to its rights and inter-
     ests as herein set forth, the Lender may, at its option
     at any time(s) following the occurrence of an Event of
     Default and with notice to the undersigned, appropriate
     and apply to the payment or reduction, either in whole
     or in part, of the amount owing on any one or more of
     the Obligations, whether or not then due, any and all
     moneys now or hereafter with the Lender, any affiliate
     of the Lender or any third party acting in its behalf


     7
      (...continued)
     Floating Rate Notes, Eligible CP and other marketable
     securities, cash and cash equivalents, and any addi-
     tional securities, cash and cash equivalents pledged to
     the Lender from time to time and deposited in the
     Pledged Account, together with any income and distribu-
     tions in connection with the securities and any pro-
     ceeds thereof deposited in the Pledged Account, as to
     which the Lender has a perfected first position secu-
     rity interest * * *
     8
      The hypothecation agreement defined the term “Pledged
Account” to mean “Account No. * * * in the name of the under-
signed [Mr. Landow] maintained by Citibank, N.A.”
     9
      The hypothecation agreement defined the term “FRN Interest”
to mean “All interest paid in respect of Eligible Floating Rate
Notes and Eligible CP [commercial paper]”.
                        - 10 -

or designated by it, on deposit or otherwise to the
credit of or belonging to the undersigned, it being
understood and agreed that the Lender shall not be
obligated to assert or enforce any rights, liens or
security interests hereunder or to take any action in
reference thereto, and that the Lender may in its
discretion at any time(s) relinquish its rights as to
particular property or in any instance without thereby
affecting or invalidating its rights hereunder as to
any other property hereinbefore referred to or in any
similar or other circumstance.

   *       *       *       *       *       *       *

     VII. That the Lender may, at its option and
without obligation to do so, transfer to or register in
the name of its nominee(s), including any “clearing
corporation” or “custodian bank” as defined in the
Uniform Commercial Code in effect in New York State and
any nominee(s) thereof, all or any part of the afore-
mentioned property and it may do so before or after the
maturity of any of the Obligations and with or without
notice to the undersigned.

     VIII. That the Lender may assign or otherwise
transfer all or any of the Obligations, and may deliver
all or any of the property to the transferee(s), who
shall thereupon become vested with all the powers and
rights in respect thereof given to the Lender herein or
otherwise and the Lender shall thereafter be forever
relieved and fully discharged from any liability or
responsibility with respect thereto, all without preju-
dice to the retention by the Lender of all rights and
powers not so transferred. Furthermore that the Lender
may, in connection with any such assignment, transfer
or delivery, disclose to the assignee or transferee or
proposed assignee or proposed transferee any informa-
tion relating to the undersigned furnished to the
Lender by or on behalf of the undersigned, provided,
that, prior to any such disclosure, the assignee or
transferee or proposed assignee or proposed transferee
shall agree to preserve the confidentiality of any
confidential information related to the undersigned
received by it from the Lender.

   *       *       *       *       *       *       *
                                - 11 -

          XV. That the following additional terms and
     conditions are as set forth below:

          *     *        *        *      *       *       *

          (g) Minimum Collateral Value. The undersigned
     shall comply with the following minimum collateral
     value requirements.

          *     *        *        *      *       *       *

             (iii) If at any time the undersigned has not
     satisfied the obligation to deposit additional Pledged
     Collateral or repay the Obligations as required in the
     event of an FRN Facility Margin Call, such occurrence
     shall be deemed an Event of Default, and the Lender
     shall have the immediate right, without notice or other
     action * * * to exercise any or all of the remedies
     available to the Lender under this Agreement or other-
     wise, including the right to immediately sell the
     Pledged Collateral.

     On November 1, 2000, NY Medical executed a document titled

“GENERAL SECURITY AGREEMENT”.    Pursuant to that agreement, NY

Medical granted to Citibank a security interest in all of NY

Medical’s assets as collateral for its obligations under the

revolving credit note.

     Between November 2, 2000, and November 29, 2001, Mr. Landow

purchased as QRP the following floating rate notes (FRNs)10 at a

total cost of $15 million:




     10
      A floating rate note is a debt instrument with a variable
interest rate that is determined on the basis of a certain
benchmark (e.g., the yield for U.S. Treasury bills). The inter-
est rate on an FRN is adjusted periodically to reflect any
changes in the relevant benchmark.
                                 - 12 -

     Date of      Principal                              Date of
    Purchase        Amount          Issuer              Maturity
    11/2/2000     $3,094,000   Proctor & Gamble         8/15/2050
    11/2/2000      3,000,000   E.I. Dupont             12/27/2039
    6/20/2001      3,000,000   Merck & Co.             12/27/2040
    9/17/2001      3,000,000   United Parcel Service    6/21/2051
   11/13/2001      1,500,000   Minnesota Mining        12/21/2041
   11/29/2001      1,156,000   Minnesota Mining        12/21/2041
   11/29/2001        250,000   E.I. Dupont             10/9/2041

(We shall refer collectively to the FRNs that Mr. Landow pur-

chased between November 2, 2000, and November 29, 2001, as the

FRN portfolio.)

     During December 2001, Mr. Landow received proposals from

certain financial institutions, including Citibank and J.P.

Morgan Chase, in which those institutions proposed to make

available to Mr. Landow a line of credit not exceeding $13.5

million.

     On February 11, 2002, Mr. Landow and petitioner Tracy A.

Landow (Ms. Landow) executed the following documents that amended

the revolving credit note and the hypothecation agreement:      (1) A

document titled “Amended and Restated REVOLVING CREDIT NOTE

(Multiple Advances)” (amended revolving credit note) and (2) a

document titled “Amended and Restated General Hypothecation

Agreement” (amended hypothecation agreement).

     The amended revolving credit note amended the revolving

credit note by (1) increasing to $13.5 million the line of credit

that Citibank was to make available to Mr. Landow (Citibank
                              - 13 -

increased line of credit), (2) substituting Ms. Landow for NY

Medical as a borrower under that note, and (3) reducing to $15

million the minimum net worth that petitioners were to maintain.

In all other material respects, the amended revolving credit note

was identical to the revolving credit note.

     The amended hypothecation agreement did not make any mate-

rial amendments to the portions of the hypothecation agreement

quoted above.   The only amendments that the amended hypothecation

agreement made to the terms of that hypothecation agreement were

to (1) increase to $13.5 million the line of credit that Citibank

was to make available to Mr. Landow, (2) add reference to Ms.

Landow as a borrower on the amended revolving credit note, and

(3) delete from the definition of the term “Pledged Collateral”

the references in the hypothecation agreement to “Eligible CP”.

(We shall refer to the transactions by which Citibank extended

the Citibank line of credit and the Citibank increased line of

credit, Mr. Landow drew upon those lines of credit to purchase

the FRNs, and he pledged as collateral those FRNs as the Citibank

transaction.)

     As of December 31, 2002, the end of petitioners’ taxable

year 2002, Mr. Landow met the requirements of section 1042 with

respect to his sale of certain stock of NY Medical to the NY

Medical ESOP.   As a result, Mr. Landow was not required to

recognize any of the gain that he realized on that sale.
                                    - 14 -

        In proposing a line of credit to Mr. Landow, Citibank

informed him that the use of FRNs as QRP would achieve a result

known as “zero-cost borrowing”,11 which was Mr. Landow’s objec-

tive.        However, Citibank failed to provide such zero-cost borrow-

ing during 2001 and 2002.        As a result, Mr. Landow did not meet

his objective of zero-cost borrowing and therefore Mr. Landow

retained CSG on June 12, 2002, in order to assist him in negoti-

ating with a different lender a new loan of $13.5 million that

would replace the Citibank increased line of credit.

     From June to August 2002, Mr. Landow negotiated with Morgan

Stanley Dean Witter & Co. (Morgan Stanley) regarding that com-

pany’s refinancing the Citibank increased line of credit.         On

June 17, 2002, Morgan Stanley sent Mr. Landow a letter in which

it proposed providing him with a so-called margin loan of $13.5

million at an interest rate equal to the three-month London

interbank offered rate plus 35 basis points.12         In that letter,

Morgan Stanley also indicated that, as security for such a loan,

it would require Mr. Landow to deposit with Morgan Stanley not

only the FRN portfolio but also $5 million of additional assets.




        11
      Zero-cost borrowing was possible, according to Citibank,
because the interest that Mr. Landow earned on the FRNs would
entirely offset the periodic interest that Citibank charged on
any line of credit that it made available to him.
        12
             A basis point is equal to 0.01 percent.
                               - 15 -

       On July 10, 2002, Morgan Stanley sent Mr. Landow a second

letter in which it changed to its so-called cost-of-funds index

rate the interest rate that it would set for any margin loan that

it agreed to make to him.13   In that letter, Morgan Stanley also

proposed charging Mr. Landow a management fee of 1.25 percent of

the $5 million of assets that that company required as additional

security for any $13.5 million margin loan that it made to him.

       Around August 2002, CSG informed Mr. Landow about Derivium

Capital, LLC (Derivium).    Sometime later in 2002, Mr. Landow

conducted certain research into Derivium and its founder, Charles

Cathcart (Mr. Cathcart).    As part of that research, Mr. Landow

read numerous articles and other materials about Derivium and

Mr. Cathcart as well as certain marketing materials that Derivium

had prepared.    In addition, Mr. Landow engaged certain independ-

ent financial advisors and legal advisors to assist him in

evaluating Derivium and any transactions that it might propose to

him.

       On August 19, 2002, Derivium prepared a separate document

titled “ESOP QRP LOAN--INDICATIVE FRN LOAN TERM SHEET” (proposed




       13
      Morgan Stanley’s cost-of-funds index rate was calculated
by using certain short-term interest rate indices.
                              - 16 -

loan term sheet)14 with respect to each of Mr. Landow’s FRNs.15

In each of those documents, Derivium proposed to lend Mr. Landow

on a nonrecourse basis 90 percent of the face value of the FRN to

which the document pertained at a net interest rate calculated by

reference to either the one-month London interbank offered rate

or the three-month London interbank offered rate and taking into

account interest paid on that FRN.     Each of the proposed loan

term sheets proposed prohibiting (1) Derivium from calling before

maturity the loan to which each such sheet pertained unless Mr.

Landow was in default on that loan and (2) Mr. Landow from

prepaying before maturity the principal of that loan.     The

respective proposed loan term sheets set forth the terms of the

proposed loans as ranging from 27 to 38 years and required annual

net interest payments on those loans (i.e., the respective



     14
      Our use of terms like “loan”, “lend”, “collateral”, “bor-
row”, “maturity”, and “interest” when describing the proposed
transaction and the actual transaction between Mr. Landow and
Derivium is for convenience only. Our use of any such terms is
not intended to imply, and does not imply, that the transaction
at issue between Mr. Landow and Derivium constitutes a loan for
tax purposes.
     15
      Although we have found that Mr. Landow purchased seven
FRNs, he purchased on different dates in November 2001 two FRNs
issued by Minnesota Mining, both with maturity dates of Dec. 21,
2041. In making its proposals to Mr. Landow, Derivium treated
and referred to those two FRNs as one FRN, and for convenience we
shall refer to those two FRNs as one FRN. As discussed below,
Derivium proposed to make only one loan to Mr. Landow with
respect to the two FRNs issued by Minnesota Mining and separate
loans with respect to the remaining five FRNs that Mr. Landow
purchased, or a total of six loans.
                               - 17 -

amounts, if any, that Mr. Landow was to pay after taking into

account the respective interest payments under the FRNs) that

ranged from $1,207.50 to $15,098.72 depending on the respective

face values of the FRNs.

     On August 29, 2002, Derivium sent Mr. Landow certain infor-

mation with respect to the loans that Derivium proposed to make

to him (proposed Derivium loans), including a document titled

“MASTER AGREEMENT TO PROVIDE FINANCING AND CUSTODIAL SERVICES”

and a separate schedule A with respect to each of his FRNs.    Each

of those schedules contained information that was materially

identical to the information contained in the respective proposed

loan term sheets that Derivium had prepared with respect to those

FRNs.

     On September 20, 2002, Derivium sent Mr. Landow certain

sample documents, including sample documents titled (1) “MASTER

AGREEMENT TO PROVIDE FINANCING AND CUSTODIAL SERVICES”,

(2) “SCHEDULE A-1 PROPERTY DESCRIPTION AND LOAN TERMS”, and

(3) “SCHEDULE D DISCLOSURE ACKNOWLEDGEMENT AND BROKER/BANK

INDEMNIFICATION”.

     From September 23 to 26, 2002, Derivium sent Mr. Landow

revised versions of certain of the documents that it had sent to

him on August 29, 2002.    Those revised versions of those docu-

ments did not materially differ from the documents that Derivium

had sent to Mr. Landow on August 29, 2002.
                                  - 18 -

     At Mr. Landow’s request, around January 16, 2003, Derivium

sent him revised versions of respective schedules A, numbered A-1

through A-6, with respect to the six loans for which his FRNs

were to serve as collateral (revised proposed schedules A).16

Each of those schedules provided that Mr. Landow was permitted to

pay before maturity the principal of the loan to which each such

schedule pertained but only under limited conditions.

     On a date not disclosed by the record between January 16 and

March 7, 2003, Mr. Landow requested from Derivium additional

revisions to certain of the documents that Derivium had sent to

him with respect to the proposed Derivium loans.17      On March 7,

2003, Mr. Cathcart sent to Mr. Landow a letter responding to that

request.     That letter stated in pertinent part:

     To address the concern about what would happen in a
     bankruptcy setting, we have the following suggested
     language that we have added in another case: “DC and


     16
      The respective revised proposed schedules A, numbered A-1
through A-6, pertained to the respective loans for which the
following FRNs were to serve as collateral:

          Schedule No.                      FRN
               A-1       E.I. Dupont maturing 10/9/2041
               A-2       United Parcel Service maturing 6/21/2051
               A-3       E.I. Dupont maturing 12/27/2039
               A-4       Merck & Co. maturing 12/27/2040
               A-5       Minnesota Mining maturing 12/21/2041
               A-6       Proctor & Gamble maturing 8/15/2050

     17
      The record does not contain any letter or other communica-
tion by which Mr. Landow requested certain revisions to certain
of the documents that Derivium had sent him.
                             - 19 -

     the Lender acknowledge that the Collateral is the asset
     of the Client and is not subject to the claims of any
     creditors of DC or the Lender.” Please let us know if
     that would accomplish the intended need.

     For the pre-payment provision, the Lender can agree to
     pre-payment at five-year windows, with one-year advance
     notice and a penalty of 6.0%. Please let us know if
     that accomplishes the need in that area.

     Around April 9, 2003, Mr. Landow executed the following

documents with respect to the proposed Derivium loans:   (1) A

document titled “MASTER AGREEMENT TO PROVIDE FINANCING AND

CUSTODIAL SERVICES” (Derivium master agreement), (2) respective

schedules A, numbered A-1 through A-6, with respect to the six

loans for which his FRNs were to serve as collateral titled “FRN

PROPERTY DESCRIPTION AND LOAN TERMS” (Derivium schedules A),18

and (3) a document titled “SCHEDULE D FRN DISCLOSURE ACKNOWLEDGE-

MENT AND BROKER/BANK INDEMNIFICATION” (Derivium schedule D).19

(We shall refer collectively to the Derivium master agreement,

the Derivium schedules A, and the Derivium schedule D as the

Derivium transaction documents.)   The Derivium master agreement

and the Derivium schedules A were also executed by Derivium and

Bancroft Ventures Ltd. (Bancroft), a company which was located in


     18
      Each of the Derivium schedules A, numbered A-1 through A-
6, pertained to the same loan and FRN as the revised proposed
schedule A with the same number. See supra note 16.
     19
      At no time before Apr. 9, 2003, the date on which Mr.
Landow and Derivium entered into the transaction at issue, did
Derivium request or require that Mr. Landow complete a loan
application or that he provide any personal financial informa-
tion.
                                 - 20 -

the Isle of Man and which was the entity that served as the

lender under the Derivium transaction.

     The Derivium master agreement provided in pertinent part:

     This Agreement is made for the purpose of engaging DC
     [Derivium] to provide or arrange financing(s) and to
     provide custodial services to the Client [Mr. Landow],
     with respect to certain properties and assets (“Proper-
     ties”) to be pledged as security, the details of which
     financing and Properties are to be set out in loan term
     sheets and attached hereto as Schedule(s) A (“Sched-
     ule(s) A”).

          *        *       *       *        *       *       *

     3.       FUNDING OF LOAN

              The contemplated Loan(s) will be funded according
              to the terms identified in one or more term
              sheets, which will be labeled as Schedule A, indi-
              vidually numbered and signed by both parties, and,
              on signing, considered a part of and merged into
              this Master Agreement. The Client understands
              that by transferring securities as collateral to
              DC and under the terms of the Agreement, the Cli-
              ent gives DC and/or its assigns, the right, with-
              out requirement of notice to or consent of the
              Client, to assign, transfer, pledge, repledge,
              hypothecate, rehypothecate, lend, encumber, short
              sell, and/or sell outright some or all of the
              securities during the period covered by the loan.
              The Client understands that DC and/or its assigns
              have the right to receive and retain the benefits
              from any such transactions and that the Client is
              not entitled to these benefits during the term of
              a loan. The Client agrees to assist the relevant
              entities in completing all requisite documents
              that may be necessary to accomplish such trans-
              fers.

     4.       RETURN OF CLIENT COLLATERAL

              DC agrees to return, at the end of the loan term,
              the same collateral (or cash equivalent if the
              Client’s collateral securities have reached their
              maturity date or the collateral has been called by
                        - 21 -

     the issuer), as set out and defined in Schedule(s)
     A attached hereto, upon the Client satisfying in
     full all outstanding loan balances, including all
     outstanding net interest payments due, if any,
     and/or all late payment penalties due, if any.

5.   REGISTRATION AND SUBCUSTODIANS

     DC may place the Client Assets i) with any domes-
     tic or foreign depository or clearing corporation
     or system that provides handling, clearing or
     safekeeping services; ii) with the issuer of a
     security in non-certificate form; iii) with any
     domestic or foreign bank or depository as
     subcustodian; and DC will pay the fees and ex-
     penses of the foregoing entities.

Each of the Derivium schedules A provided in pertinent part:

3.   Anticipated
     Loan Amount:   90% of the face value * * *

4.   Interest Rate: Loan interest rate (LIR) will be
                    indexed to [1 or] 3 month [as the
                    case may be] $US LIBOR (“LIBOR”)
                    * * *

5.   Interest       Interest on the collateral will be
     Payments:      received by the Lender and applied
                    against interest due on the Loan,
                    with the result that net interest
                    due per dollar on the Loan will be
                    determined by the * * * Annual Net
                    Interest Rate Formula * * * The
                    * * * formula reduces to the Annual
                    Net Interest Payment/Loan Amount.
                    * * *

6.   Late Payment   A late fee of 5% of the Quarterly
     Penalty:       Net Interest Payment due will be
                    assessed for any Net Interest Pay-
                    ment past due by 30 days or more
                    and will be payable within 60 days
                    of the Net Interest Payment due
                    date.
                                 - 22 -

7.       Default:            Borrower will be considered in
                             default if any Quarterly Net Inter-
                             est Payment or late payment penalty
                             is past due by 90 days or more.

     *        *          *         *       *       *       *

10.      Prepayment:         Except as provided for in Paragraph
                             14, prepayment of the Loan can be
                             made on any date which is a five-
                             year anniversary date of this Loan,
                             provided DC is noticed of this
                             election at least one year prior to
                             a five-year anniversary date and a
                             pre-payment fee of 6.0% of the Loan
                             amount has been paid to DC or the
                             Lender at the time of said elec-
                             tion.

11.      Margin
         Requirement:        None, beyond initial collateral.

12.      Non-Callable:       Loan cannot be called by Lender
                             before maturity as long as Borrower
                             is not considered in Default. If
                             Borrower is in Default, the Loan
                             may be called by Lender at Lender’s
                             discretion.

13.      Non-Recourse:       Non-recourse to Borrower, recourse
                             against the Collateral only.

14.      Creditor            DC and the Lender acknowledge that
         Claims:             the Collateral is the asset of the
                             Client and is not subject to the
                             claims of any creditors of DC or
                             the Lender. Should any creditor of
                             DC or the Lender contest the owner-
                             ship of the Collateral in any court
                             or similar proceeding, DC shall
                             provide immediate notice to the
                             Client and Client shall have the
                             right to prepay the Loan (without
                             any fee) and recover the Collateral
                             provided that the benefit of any
                             transaction entered into by DC or
                             the Lender shall be held by the
                             Client for DC’s or the Lender’s
                             - 23 -

                         benefit and such benefit shall be
                         the only compensation due to DC or
                         the Lender.

The respective Derivium schedules A also provided as follows:

                                          Annual Net
                             Loan Term     Interest
             Schedule No.   (in years)   Payment Due
                  A-1            28          $921.25
                  A-2            28         9,480.00
                  A-3            36        11,055.00
                  A-4            37         9,480.00
                  A-5            38         9,322.56
                  A-6            27        11,556.09

     The Derivium schedule D provided in pertinent part:

     The Client understands that by transferring securities
     as collateral to DC and under the terms of the Agree-
     ment, the Client gives DC the right, without notice to
     the Client, to transfer, pledge, repledge, hypothecate,
     rehypothecate, lend, short sell, and/or sell outright
     some or all of the securities during the period covered
     by the loan. The Client understands that DC has the
     right to receive and retain the benefits from any such
     transactions and that the Client is not entitled to
     these benefits during the term of a loan. On repayment
     of a loan in full by the Client, including all out-
     standing net interest payments due, if any, and/or all
     late payment payment [sic] penalties due, if any, DC
     has the obligation to return to the Client the same
     collateral (or cash equivalent if the Client’s collat-
     eral securities have reached their maturity date or the
     collateral has been called by the issuer), as set out
     and defined in Schedule(s) A attached hereto.

     None of the Derivium transaction documents required Mr.

Landow to make any payments against the principal of the loans

before maturity of those loans.

     On April 14, 2003, Derivium executed a document titled

“LETTER OF AGREEMENT” as a supplement to the Derivium transaction
                             - 24 -

documents (Derivium letter agreement).   That agreement provided

that Bancroft was to make certain payments and credits to Mr.

Landow to compensate him for (1) the accrued interest on each of

his FRNs that remained unpaid on the date of the closing of each

of the loans that Bancroft made to him and (2) the interest that

Wachovia Securities (Wachovia) was to charge him on certain

margin debt associated with the FRN portfolio between the time

that he transferred from Citibank to Wachovia that portfolio and

that margin debt and the time that he transferred to Bancroft’s

account with Wachovia that portfolio and that margin debt.

Pursuant to the Derivium letter agreement, on May 5, 2003,

Bancroft sent Mr. Landow a check in the amount of $4,846.41 as

compensation for the interest that Wachovia charged him.

     On April 14, 2003, Mr. Landow sent Wachovia a letter in

which he gave it instructions with respect to his FRN portfolio

and certain transactions that he anticipated undertaking.    That

letter stated in pertinent part:

     Landow will deposit into the Account [a certain account
     that Mr. Landow maintained at Wachovia] on April 16,
     2003 the floating rate notes (“FRNs”) described below
     [the FRN portfolio] * * *

          Simultaneously with the receipt of an aggregate of
     $13.5 million * * * hereinafter defined as “Total Loan
     Proceeds Due” from Bancroft Ventures Limited
     (“Bancroft”), you are irrevocably authorized and uncon-
     ditionally instructed to transfer and deliver (in
     essence, a delivery vs. payment transaction) the above-
     described FRNs [the FRN portfolio] from the Account to
     Bancroft * * *
                               - 25 -

     Pursuant to the Derivium loan documents, on April 15, 2003,

Mr. Landow instructed Citibank to transfer the FRN portfolio from

a certain account that he maintained at Citibank to a certain

account that he maintained at Wachovia.   Around the same date,

Citibank complied with those instructions and transferred the FRN

portfolio to Wachovia.

     On April 21, 2003, Mr. Landow executed certain documents

authorizing Wachovia to transfer each of Mr. Landow’s FRNs from

his account at Wachovia to a certain account that Bancroft

maintained at Wachovia.   On the same date, Bancroft sold each of

those FRNs.20   Bancroft realized net sales proceeds of

$14,257,180.88 from the sale of the FRN portfolio.   At the time

Bancroft sold the FRN portfolio, Mr. Landow was not aware of that

sale and did not become aware that Bancroft had sold the FRN

portfolio until some time after 2003.

     On April 22, 2003, Derivium sent Mr. Landow a facsimile.     In

that facsimile, Derivium informed Mr. Landow (1) that Bancroft

had completed certain “hedging transactions” with respect to the

FRN portfolio, (2) that the total of the six loans that Bancroft

was to make to him was $13.5 million, and (3) that those loans

were to close and the proceeds were to be transferred to Mr.

Landow on April 24, 2003.



     20
      Bancroft’s sale of each of the FRNs was to settle on Apr.
24, 2003.
                              - 26 -

     On April 24, 2003, Bancroft transferred to Mr. Landow $13.5

million.   (We shall refer collectively to the transactions in

which Mr. Landow transferred the FRN portfolio to Bancroft and

Bancroft transferred to Mr. Landow $13.5 million in cash as the

Derivium transaction.)   On the same date, Derivium sent Mr.

Landow a facsimile in which it informed him that each of the six

loans had closed and that the proceeds of those loans totaling

$13.5 million had been transferred to his account at Wachovia.

On April 24, 2003, Derivium sent Mr. Landow a second facsimile.

Derivium included with that facsimile two documents titled

“VALUATION CONFIRMATION” and “ACTIVITY CONFIRMATION” (activity

confirmation documents), respectively, with respect to each of

the FRNs that Bancroft had sold on April 21, 2003.   The respec-

tive activity confirmation documents listed the principal amounts

of the six loans and the total value of the collateral (i.e., the

FRNs) transferred to Bancroft with respect to those loans.

     After the Derivium transaction was effected, Mr. Landow used

a portion of the proceeds that he received as part of that

transaction to repay the outstanding balance on the Citibank

increased line of credit of $13.5 million.

     From around July 2003 through around April 2005, Bancroft

sent Mr. Landow the following with respect to each of the six

loans that it made pursuant to the Derivium transaction docu-

ments:   (1) Quarterly account statements reflecting the interest
                              - 27 -

accrued on the loan, any credits arising from interest accrued on

the FRN that served as collateral for the loan, and the net

amount of interest due from Mr. Landow for each of the calendar

quarters ended June 30 and September 30, 2003, March 31, June 30,

September 30, and December 31, 2004, and March 31, 2005 and

(2) yearend account statements reflecting interest payments that

Mr. Landow made during each of the calendar years 2003 and 2004.

From around October 2003 through August 2005, Mr. Landow paid

Bancroft for each calendar quarter for which he received an

account statement, except the quarter ended June 30, 2003,21 net

interest of $12,953.72.

     At a time during 2004 not established by the record, peti-

tioners filed Form 1040, U.S. Individual Income Tax Return (Form

1040), for their taxable year 2003 (2003 joint return).   In that

return, petitioners claimed, inter alia, a deduction of $167,159

for investment interest paid, including investment interest paid

to Citibank and Bancroft of $120,083 and $35,587, respectively.

Petitioners attached to the 2003 joint return Schedule D, Capital

Gains and Losses (Schedule D), for their taxable year 2003 (2003

Schedule D).   In that schedule, petitioners reported for their



     21
      For the calendar quarter ended June 30, 2003, the interest
that accrued on the FRN portfolio during that quarter was greater
than the interest that accrued during that quarter on the six
loans that Bancroft had made to Mr. Landow. As a result, on July
14, 2003, Bancroft paid Mr. Landow the difference between those
amounts.
                                - 28 -

taxable year 2003 a net short-term capital loss of $1,147,323

consisting of total short-term capital gains of $201,773 and a

short-term capital loss carryover from their taxable year 2002 of

$1,349,096.    In the 2003 Schedule D, petitioners also reported

for their taxable year 2003 a net long-term capital loss of

$130,290 consisting of a long-term capital loss of $2,187 and a

long-term capital loss carryover from their taxable year 2002 of

$128,103.    Petitioners claimed in the 2003 joint return a capital

loss of $3,000 and carried forward the remainder of the loss

reported in the 2003 Schedule D (i.e., $1,274,613) to their

taxable years 2004, 2005, 2006, and 2007.    Petitioners did not

report in the 2003 Schedule D or anywhere else in the 2003 joint

return any gain with respect to the Derivium transaction.

     At a time during 2005 not established by the record, peti-

tioners filed Form 1040 for their taxable year 2004 (2004 joint

return).    In that return, petitioners claimed, inter alia, a

deduction of $45,278 for investment interest paid during that

year.22    Petitioners attached to the 2004 joint return Schedule D

for their taxable year 2004 (2004 Schedule D).    In that schedule,

petitioners reported for their taxable year 2004 a net short-term

capital loss of $1,120,292 consisting of total short-term capital


     22
      Petitioners netted the interest that accrued on Mr.
Landow’s FRNs against the interest that accrued on the six loans
that Bancroft had made to him and included the difference in the
investment interest for which they claimed a deduction in the
2004 joint return.
                              - 29 -

gains of $24,031 and a short-term capital loss carryover from

their taxable year 2003 of $1,144,323.   In the 2004 Schedule D,

petitioners also reported for their taxable year 2004 a net long-

term capital loss of $215,987 consisting of total long-term

capital losses of $85,697 and a long-term capital loss carryover

from their taxable year 2003 of $130,290.   Petitioners claimed in

the 2004 joint return a capital loss of $3,000 and carried

forward the remainder of the loss reported in the 2004 Schedule D

(i.e., $1,333,279) to their taxable years 2005, 2006, and 2007.

Petitioners did not report in the 2004 Schedule D or anywhere

else in the 2004 joint return any gain with respect to the

Derivium transaction.

     On August 18, 2005, Bancroft sent Mr. Landow a letter in

which it informed him that “Optech Limited (‘Optech’) has ac-

quired your Floating Rate Loan(s) from Bancroft Ventures Limited

(‘Bancroft’) and Optech is now the lender of record for your

transaction(s).”   That letter also informed Mr. Landow that

interest payments due on the six loans, including interest due

for the calendar quarter ended June 30, 2005, were to be paid to

Optech Ltd. (Optech).

     From around August 2005 to around April 2007, Optech sent

Mr. Landow the following with respect to each of the six loans

that Bancroft had made pursuant to the Derivium transaction

documents:   (1) Quarterly account statements reflecting the
                              - 30 -

interest accrued on the loan, any credits arising from interest

accrued on the FRN that served as the collateral for the loan,

and the net amount of interest due from Mr. Landow for each of

the calendar quarters ended June 30, September 30, and December

31, 2005, March 31, June 30, September 30, and December 31, 2006,

and March 31, 2007, and (2) yearend account statements reflecting

interest payments that Mr. Landow made during each of the calen-

dar years 2005 and 2006.   From around August 2005 to around

September 2007, Optech sent to Mr. Landow with respect to each of

the six loans that Bancroft had made to him an invoice for

interest due on the loan for each of the calendar quarters ended

June 30, 2005, through September 30, 2007.

     Around July 18, 2005, Mr. Landow engaged John W. Moscow (Mr.

Moscow), an attorney with the law firm of Rosner, Moscow &

Napierala, LLP.   Mr. Landow engaged Mr. Moscow to investigate the

status of Bancroft and of the FRN portfolio that Mr. Landow had

transferred to Bancroft pursuant to the Derivium transaction

documents.

     On September 19, 2005, Mr. Landow sent Optech a letter in

which he requested that Optech provide him with documentation

evidencing that Optech had acquired the FRN portfolio from

Bancroft and where Optech was holding that portfolio.   Mr. Landow

did not receive any response from Optech.    On each of September

21 and October 25, 2005, and April 13, 2006, Mr. Landow contacted
                             - 31 -

Optech and restated his request that Optech provide him with

documentation evidencing that Optech had acquired the FRN portfo-

lio from Bancroft and where Optech was holding that portfolio.

Mr. Landow did not receive any response from Optech.

     Mr. Moscow sent Mr. Cathcart, Derivium’s founder, separate

letters on November 29, 2005 (November 29, 2005 letter), and

December 1, 2005 (December 1, 2005 letter), that were addressed

to different places regarding the Derivium transaction and

certain concerns of Mr. Landow about that transaction.23   Those

letters stated in pertinent part:

          You have been the subject of a recent article in
     Forbes magazine, as has Derivium Capital LLC and
     Bancroft Ventures Ltd (IOM). My client, Dr. Landow, is
     concerned about the custody and control of his securi-
     ties [the FRN portfolio] * * *. As you know he negoti-
     ated a contract different from that proposed to others,
     and he has every expectation that you will return his
     securities to him. The sentence in the Forbes article
     that you sold the stock is therefore extremely disturb-
     ing.

          We have not received any notice pursuant to para-
     graph 14 of the Schedule A-4 FRN Property Description
     and Loan Terms.[24] Given your contractual obligation
     to return the securities and the absence of such notice
     it is our expectation that you are in a position to
     return the securities when obligated to do so.



     23
      The record does not establish whether Mr. Cathcart sent
Mr. Landow or Mr. Moscow any response to the November 29, 2005
letter or the December 1, 2005 letter.
     24
      Par. 14 of the “Schedule A-4 FRN Property Description and
Loan Terms” required Derivium to notify Mr. Landow in the event
that a creditor of Derivium or Bancroft contested ownership of
the FRN that was the subject of that schedule.
                                 - 32 -

     Because Mr. Landow was unable to confirm that Optech had

acquired the FRN portfolio from Bancroft, around March 2006 he

opened a bank account with Long Island Commercial Bank in the

name of “Jonathan S. Landow FBO Accrued Interest Charges for

Floating Rate Note Portfolio” (interest escrow account).      In

March 2006, Mr. Landow deposited into the interest escrow account

$51,814.88, which equaled four quarterly interest payments of

$12,953.72 on the six loans that Bancroft had made pursuant to

the Derivium transaction documents.       Thereafter, and until April

2009, Mr. Landow deposited into the interest escrow account all

quarterly interest payments due on the six loans that Bancroft

had made pursuant to the Derivium transaction documents.

     At a time during 2006 not established by the record, peti-

tioners filed Form 1040 for their taxable year 2005 (2005 joint

return).   In that return, petitioners claimed, inter alia, a

deduction of $109,906 for investment interest paid during that

year, including $51,815 that Mr. Landow paid to “BANCROFT &

SUCCESSOR” during that year.25    Petitioners attached to the 2005

joint return Schedule D for their taxable year 2005 (2005 Sched-

ule D).    In that schedule, petitioners reported for their taxable

year 2005 a net short-term capital loss of $991,991 consisting of


     25
      Petitioners netted the interest that accrued on Mr.
Landow’s FRNs against the interest that accrued on the six loans
that Bancroft had made to him and included the difference in the
investment interest for which they claimed a deduction in the
2005 joint return.
                               - 33 -

total short-term capital gains of $125,301 and a short-term

capital loss carryover from their taxable year 2004 of

$1,117,292.   In the 2005 Schedule D, petitioners also reported

for their taxable year 2005 a net long-term capital loss of

$99,628 consisting of total long-term capital gains of $116,359

and a long-term capital loss carryover from their taxable year

2004 of $215,987.   Petitioners claimed in the 2005 joint return a

capital loss of $3,000 and carried forward the remainder of the

loss reported in the 2005 Schedule D (i.e., $1,088,619) to their

taxable years 2006 and 2007.   Petitioners did not report in the

2005 Schedule D or anywhere else in the 2005 joint return any

gain with respect to the Derivium transaction.

     At a time during 2007 not established by the record, peti-

tioners filed Form 1040 for their taxable year 2006 (2006 joint

return).   In that return, petitioners claimed, inter alia, a

deduction of $55,040 for investment interest paid during that

year, including $38,860 that Mr. Landow paid with respect to “FRN

NOTES” during that year.26   Petitioners attached to the 2006

joint return Schedule D for their taxable year 2006 (2006 Sched-

ule D).    In that schedule, petitioners reported for their taxable

year 2006 a net short-term capital loss of $1,082,140 consisting


     26
      Petitioners netted the interest that accrued on Mr.
Landow’s FRNs against the interest that accrued on the six loans
that Bancroft had made to him and included the difference in the
investment interest for which they claimed a deduction in the
2006 joint return.
                               - 34 -

of total short-term capital losses of $93,149 and a short-term

capital loss carryover from their taxable year 2005 of $988,991.

In the 2006 Schedule D, petitioners also reported for their

taxable year 2006 a net long-term capital gain of $378,116

consisting of total long-term capital gains of $477,744 and a

long-term capital loss carryover from their taxable year 2005 of

$99,628.   Petitioners claimed in the 2006 joint return a capital

loss of $3,000 and carried forward the remainder of the loss

reported in the 2006 Schedule D (i.e., $701,024) to their taxable

year 2007.   Petitioners did not report in the 2006 Schedule D or

anywhere else in the 2006 joint return any gain with respect to

the Derivium transaction.

     At a time during 2008 not established by the record, peti-

tioners filed Form 1040 for their taxable year 2007 (2007 joint

return).   In that return, petitioners claimed, inter alia, a

deduction of $144,122 for investment interest paid during that

year, including $51,815 that Mr. Landow paid with respect to “FRN

NOTES” during that year.27   Petitioners attached to the 2007

joint return Schedule D for their taxable year 2007 (2007 Sched-

ule D).    In that schedule, petitioners reported for their taxable

year 2007 a net short-term capital gain of $2,522,746 consisting


     27
      Petitioners netted the interest that accrued on Mr.
Landow’s FRNs against the interest that accrued on the six loans
that Bancroft had made to him and included the difference in the
investment interest for which they claimed a deduction in the
2007 joint return.
                               - 35 -

of total short-term capital gains of $3,226,770 and a short-term

capital loss carryover from their taxable year 2006 of $704,024.

In the 2007 Schedule D, petitioners also reported for their

taxable year 2007 a net long-term capital gain of $312,942

consisting of only long-term capital gains.   Petitioners reported

in the 2007 joint return a capital gain of $2,835,688 consisting

of the net short-term capital gain and the net long-term capital

gain that they reported in the 2007 Schedule D.   Petitioners did

not report in the 2007 Schedule D or anywhere else in the 2007

joint return any gain with respect to the Derivium transaction.

     On March 31, 2009, respondent issued to petitioners a notice

of deficiency (2003-2004 notice) with respect to petitioners’

taxable years 2003 and 2004.   In that notice, respondent deter-

mined, inter alia, that the Derivium transaction constituted a

sale by Mr. Landow of the FRN portfolio with respect to which

petitioners are required to recognize a capital gain of $13.5

million.28


     28
      Because of respondent’s determination with respect to the
Derivium transaction, respondent further determined in the 2003-
2004 notice to use the short-term loss carryover and the long-
term loss carryover that petitioners claimed in the 2003 Schedule
D to offset a portion of the gain that respondent determined
resulted from the Derivium transaction. As a result, the capital
loss carryforward of $1,274,613 that petitioners claimed in their
2003 joint return was reduced to zero and was not available to
carry forward to their taxable years 2004, 2005, 2006, and 2007.
However, because, as discussed above, petitioners reported in the
2004 Schedule D long-term capital losses for their taxable year
2004 in excess of short-term capital gains for that year, peti-
                                                   (continued...)
                              - 36 -

     On July 6, 2009, respondent issued to petitioners a notice

of deficiency with respect to petitioners’ taxable years 2005,

2006, and 2007 (2005-2007 notice).     In that notice, respondent

determined, inter alia, to reduce the respective capital loss

carryovers that petitioners had reported in their 2005 joint

return, their 2006 joint return, and their 2007 joint return.

That determination was based on respondent’s determination in the

2003-2004 notice that the Derivium transaction constituted a sale

in 2003 by Mr. Landow of the FRN portfolio and that petitioners

are required to recognize a capital gain of $13.5 million for

their taxable year 2003.   As discussed supra note 28, the short-

term loss carryover and the long-term loss carryover that peti-

tioners claimed in the 2003 Schedule D were used to offset a

portion of the gain that respondent determined resulted from the

Derivium transaction.   As a result, the capital loss carryover

that petitioners claimed in their 2003 joint return was not

available to carry forward to any of their taxable years after

2003.

     As of around May 2010, Mr. Landow had not paid any of the

$13.5 million principal of the six loans that Bancroft had made

to him pursuant to the Derivium transaction documents.



     28
      (...continued)
tioners are entitled for their taxable year 2004 to the $3,000
deduction for capital losses that they claimed in their 2004
joint return.
                               - 37 -

                              OPINION

     Petitioners bear the burden of proving that respondent’s

determination in the 2003-2004 notice that the Derivium transac-

tion constitutes a sale in 2003 by Mr. Landow of the FRN portfo-

lio is erroneous.29   See Rule 142(a); Welch v. Helvering, 290

U.S. 111, 115 (1933).

     Shortly before the parties filed their respective opening

briefs, we decided Calloway v. Commissioner, 135 T.C. 26 (2010).

We held on the basis of the facts presented there that a transac-

tion between the taxpayer and Derivium in which the taxpayer

transferred to Derivium purportedly as collateral certain securi-

ties and Derivium purportedly lent the taxpayer an amount equal

to 90 percent of the fair market value of those securities

constituted the taxpayer’s sale of those securities, and not a

loan to the taxpayer of that amount.    In reaching that holding,

we found that the taxpayer (1) transferred to Derivium legal

title to certain securities that he owned, (2) gave Derivium the

right to sell those securities at any time and without notice to

the transferor and to retain any and all benefits from any such

sale, and (3) left the taxpayer with at best an option to repur-



     29
      As discussed above, our resolution of the issues presented
by respondent’s determination in the 2003-2004 notice that the
Derivium transaction constitutes a sale in 2003 by Mr. Landow of
the FRN portfolio resolves the issues presented by respondent’s
determinations in the 2005-2007 notice. See supra notes 2 and
28.
                               - 38 -

chase the securities at the end of the term of the purported loan

in question.   Id. at 34-36.

     In resolving the issue presented in Calloway, we relied on

various facts relating to the Derivium transaction at issue in

that case, including the following:     (1) The taxpayer transferred

to Derivium under the agreements that he executed the securities

that he owned and gave it an unrestricted right to sell those

securities and retain all benefits from any such sale;30 (2) the

purported loan was nonrecourse; (3) except for the securities

that the taxpayer transferred to Derivium purportedly as collat-

eral for the purported loan there were no margin requirements;

(4) the taxpayer was entitled to credit against the interest that

accrued on the purported loan from Derivium any dividends paid on

the securities that he transferred to that company; and



     30
      In Calloway v. Commissioner, 135 T.C. 26, 29 (2010), the
agreement between the taxpayer and Derivium provided in pertinent
part:

     “[Petitioner] understands that by transferring securi-
     ties as collateral to * * * [Derivium] and under the
     terms of the * * * [master agreement], * * * [peti-
     tioner] gives * * * [Derivium] the right, without
     notice to * * * [petitioner], to transfer, pledge,
     repledge, hypothecate, rehypothecate, lend, short sell,
     and/or sell outright some or all of the securities
     during the period covered by the loan. * * * [Peti-
     tioner] understands that * * * [Derivium] has the right
     to receive and retain the benefits from any such trans-
     actions and that * * * [petitioner] is not entitled to
     these benefits during the term of a loan. * * * [Empha-
     sis added.]” [Bracketed insertions, asterisks, and
     emphasis in Calloway.]
                                - 39 -

(5) Derivium did not require the taxpayer to make any payment of

the principal of the purported loan before maturity.    Calloway v.

Commissioner, supra at 29, 34-36.

     The facts listed above on which we relied in Calloway are

present in the instant cases.    In the Derivium transaction at

issue here:   (1) Mr. Landow transferred to Bancroft under the

Derivium transaction documents the FRNs that he owned and gave it

an unrestricted right to sell those FRNs and to retain all

benefits from any such sale;31 (2) each of the six loans that

Bancroft made to Mr. Landow pursuant to the Derivium transaction

documents were nonrecourse loans; (3) except for the FRNs that

Mr. Landow transferred to Derivium as collateral for the loans

that Bancroft made to him there were to be no margin require-

ments; (4) under each of the Derivium schedules A Mr. Landow was

entitled to credit against the interest accrued on each loan the



     31
      The Derivium master agreement that Mr. Landow executed
provided in pertinent part:

     The Client [Mr. Landow] understands that by transfer-
     ring securities as collateral to DC [Derivium] and
     under the terms of the Agreement, the Client gives DC
     and/or its assigns, the right, without requirement of
     notice to or consent of the Client, to assign, trans-
     fer, pledge, repledge, hypothecate, rehypothecate,
     lend, encumber, short sell, and/or sell outright some
     or all of the securities during the period covered by
     the loan. The Client understands that DC and/or its
     assigns have the right to receive and retain the bene-
     fits from any such transactions and that the Client is
     not entitled to these benefits during the term of a
     loan.
                              - 40 -

interest accrued on each FRN that he transferred to Derivium;32

and (5) Derivium and Bancroft did not require Mr. Landow to make

any payments of the principal of any of the six loans before

maturity.

     Petitioners do not dispute that the facts listed above

relating to the Derivium transaction at issue here are materially

indistinguishable from the facts listed above relating to the

Derivium transaction at issue in Calloway v. Commissioner, supra.

Petitioners argue, however, that there are certain other facts in

the present cases that make the Derivium transaction at issue

here materially distinguishable from the Derivium transaction at

issue in Calloway.   Therefore, petitioners maintain, Calloway

does not control the resolution of whether the Derivium transac-

tion at issue here constitutes a sale by Mr. Landow of his FRN

portfolio.33


     32
      We do not find it material that in the present cases Mr.
Landow was required by the Derivium transaction documents to pay
quarterly to Bancroft the net difference between the interest
accrued on each of the six loans that Bancroft made to him
pursuant to those documents and the interest accrued on each of
the FRNs that he transferred to Bancroft, whereas in Calloway v.
Commissioner, supra at 29, the taxpayer was required to pay
interest only at the end of the three-year loan term.
     33
      Petitioners also contend that the Derivium transaction is
materially indistinguishable from the Citibank transaction which
respondent acknowledges constituted a loan by Citibank to Mr.
Landow that was collateralized by the FRN portfolio. Because of
respondent’s acknowledgment that the Citibank transaction consti-
tuted a loan to Mr. Landow and because petitioners maintain that
the Citibank transaction and the Derivium transaction are materi-
                                                   (continued...)
                             - 41 -

     Petitioners point out that in the Derivium transaction at

issue here, unlike in the Derivium transaction at issue in

Calloway, (1) Mr. Landow did not enter into the Derivium transac-

tion for the purpose of minimizing his risk of loss with respect

to the FRN portfolio and monetizing the value of that portfolio

without paying tax on the proceeds; (2) at all times petitioners

treated the Derivium transaction as a loan; and (3) Mr. Landow

“never surrendered his FRNs to Derivium or its affiliates, and

has taken significant steps to locate and recover the FRNs” in

contrast to the taxpayer in Calloway who “voluntarily surrendered

his collateral at the expiration of the three-year loan term”.34




     33
      (...continued)
ally the same, petitioners assert (1) that the Derivium transac-
tion constitutes six loans by Bancroft to Mr. Landow that were
collateralized by the FRN portfolio or (2) that the Citibank
transaction constituted a sale in 2000 by Mr. Landow of the FRN
portfolio. On the record before us, we reject petitioners’
contentions. On that record, we find the Citibank transaction to
be materially distinguishable from the Derivium transaction.
     34
      With respect to the third alleged difference between these
cases and Calloway v. Commissioner, supra, it appears that
petitioners are contending that Mr. Landow did not abandon his
obligations under the Derivium transaction documents and there-
fore did not allow Bancroft to retain the FRNs that he trans-
ferred to it. However, the six loans that Bancroft made to Mr.
Landow had terms ranging from 27 to 38 years, and none of those
loans had reached maturity as of the time that the parties
submitted these cases under Rule 122. More importantly, because
those six loans were nonrecourse loans, Mr. Landow, like any
other nonrecourse borrower, had the right to “walk away” from his
obligations to repay those loans and to allow the lender to
retain the FRNs that he had transferred to it.
                               - 42 -

      Petitioners are correct that none of the above-listed facts

were present in Calloway v. Commissioner, 135 T.C. 26 (2010).

However, those facts were present in Shao v. Commissioner, T.C.

Memo. 2010-189, and/or Kurata v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2011-

64,35 two cases in which we held that Calloway was controlling

and that the respective transactions at issue in those cases

constituted sales of securities by the respective taxpayers, and

not loans to those respective taxpayers.36

      In Shao v. Commissioner, supra, there was no evidence that

the taxpayer entered into the transaction for the purpose of

monetizing her securities without paying tax on the proceeds.

Id.   In fact, the taxpayer in Shao entered into the Derivium

transaction at issue in that case in order to replace a certain

margin account that she had maintained with a certain financial

institution.   Id.   Moreover, the taxpayer in Shao treated her

transaction as a loan at all times and did not “voluntarily

surrender” at the end of the term of her purported loan the

securities that she had transferred to Derivium as purported




      35
      We decided Shao v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2010-189, and
Kurata v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2011-64, on the same day or
after the day the parties filed their respective reply briefs.
      36
      On brief, petitioners cite repeatedly the concurring
opinion of Judge Holmes in Calloway v. Commissioner, 135 T.C. at
53, as support for certain of their arguments. We note that
Judge Holmes was the author of our opinion in Shao v. Commis-
sioner, supra, which held Calloway to be controlling.
                               - 43 -

collateral for that purported loan.     Id.   Although the taxpayer

in Shao, like any other nonrecourse borrower, had the right to

“walk away” from the purported loan at the conclusion of the

three-year term of that purported loan, she chose to pay a

significant renewal fee in order to extend the term of the

purported loan.   Id.   Despite the foregoing factual differences

from Calloway v. Commissioner, supra, we held in Shao that

Calloway was controlling and that the Derivium transaction at

issue in Shao constituted a sale of securities by the taxpayer,

and not a loan to the taxpayer by Derivium.      Shao v. Commis-

sioner, supra.

     In Kurata v. Commissioner, supra, there also was no evidence

that the taxpayers entered into the Derivium transaction at issue

there for the purpose of monetizing their securities without

paying tax on the proceeds.    Id.   Moreover, the taxpayers in

Kurata treated the transaction as a loan during the term of that

purported loan and reported gain from the sale of the securities

when they chose to surrender those securities at the conclusion

of the three-year term of the purported loan.      Id.    Despite these

factual differences from Calloway, we held in Kurata that

Calloway was controlling and that the Derivium transaction at

issue in Kurata constituted a sale of securities by the taxpay-

ers, and not a loan to the taxpayers by Derivium.        Kurata v.

Commissioner, supra.
                              - 44 -

     Petitioners also point to certain other facts that they

contend make the Derivium transaction at issue here materially

distinguishable from the Derivium transaction at issue in

Calloway, including the following:     (1) Mr. Landow retained the

ability to prepay the loan principal under the Derivium transac-

tion documents and (2) those documents provided that the FRN

portfolio continued to be an asset of Mr. Landow.37

     With respect to the provision in the Derivium transaction

documents involved here that gave Mr. Landow the right to prepay

the loan principal, which the taxpayer in Calloway did not have,

that right of Mr. Landow was extremely limited.    He had the right

to prepay the loan principal only once every five years and only

after having given Derivium and Bancroft one-year advance notice.

The purported loan at issue in Calloway was for a term of three

years, Calloway v. Commissioner, supra, which was two years less

than the earliest point at which Mr. Landow was able to prepay

the principal of his loan.   Moreover, another condition to Mr.

Landow’s ability to prepay the loan principal was the requirement

that he pay at the time he gave the required notice a fee of 6

percent of the loan principal, which equaled $810,000--a signifi-


     37
       As noted supra note 35, we decided Shao v. Commissioner,
supra, and Kurata v. Commissioner, supra, on the same day or
after the day the parties filed their respective reply briefs.
If those two cases had been released before the parties filed
their respective briefs, we presume that petitioners would have
pointed out that the facts listed below were not present in those
cases.
                             - 45 -

cant disincentive to Mr. Landow’s exercising his prepayment

right.

     With respect to the provision in the Derivium transaction

documents that the FRN portfolio was to remain the asset of Mr.

Landow, we find that provision to be meaningless.   This is

evidenced by the fact that on the same date on which Mr. Landow

transferred the FRNs to Bancroft, Bancroft sold those FRNs, which

it was expressly allowed to do in those documents, and used 90

percent of the sale proceeds to make the six loans in question to

Mr. Landow.

     Based upon our examination of the entire record before us,

we find that the Derivium transaction at issue here is not

materially distinguishable from the Derivium transaction at issue

in Calloway v. Commissioner, supra.   On that record, we further

find that Calloway is controlling in these cases.   On the record

before us, we find that the Derivium transaction constitutes a

sale by Mr. Landow of the FRN portfolio to Bancroft, and not a

loan by Bancroft to Mr. Landow that was collateralized by that

portfolio.

     We turn now to petitioners’ argument that if we were to

find, as we have, that the Derivium transaction at issue here

constitutes a sale by Mr. Landow of the FRNs, they would not be

required under section 1042(e) to recognize any gain that Mr.

Landow realized as a result of that sale.   That is because,
                                - 46 -

according to petitioners, gain under that section is recognized

only where the taxpayer disposes of qualified replacement prop-

erty (i.e., the FRN portfolio), and Mr. Landow did not dispose of

the FRN portfolio; Derivium did.

       Petitioners’ argument misreads our Opinion in Calloway v.

Commissioner, 135 T.C. 26 (2010).     In Calloway, an important fact

was that Derivium sold the taxpayer’s stock immediately after the

taxpayer transferred it to Derivium.     Id. at 34-36, 38-39.   That

fact, combined with other facts, led us to hold in Calloway that

the taxpayer sold his stock when he transferred it to Derivium.

Id. at 39.    We did not hold in Calloway, as petitioners suggest,

that Derivium’s immediate sale of the taxpayer’s stock consti-

tuted the sale with respect to which the taxpayer was subject to

tax.    Id.   In making their argument under section 1042(e),

petitioners are focusing on the wrong transaction, namely,

Bancroft’s immediate sale of the FRNs.     The transaction on which

we must focus to address petitioners’ argument under section

1042(e) is Mr. Landow’s disposition by sale of the FRNs to

Bancroft.

       On the record before us, we have found that Mr. Landow sold

the FRN portfolio when he transferred that portfolio to Bancroft

pursuant to the Derivium transaction documents.     On that record,

we further find that petitioners are required under section
                                  - 47 -

1042(e) to recognize for their taxable year 2003 any gain that

Mr. Landow realized as a result of that sale.

     Petitioners also argue that if we were to find, as we have,

that the Derivium transaction constitutes a sale by Mr. Landow of

the FRNs, that sale would constitute a theft and therefore an

involuntary conversion under section 1033(a).38      Consequently,



     38
          Sec. 1033(a) provides in pertinent part:

     SEC. 1033.      INVOLUNTARY CONVERSIONS.

          (a) General Rule.--If property (as a result of its
     destruction in whole or in part, theft, seizure, or
     requisition or condemnation or threat or imminence
     thereof) is compulsorily or involuntarily converted--

           *        *       *        *       *       *       *

                    (2) Conversion into money.--Into money or
               into property not similar or related in service or
               use to the converted property, the gain (if any)
               shall be recognized except to the extent hereinaf-
               ter provided in this paragraph:

                         (A) Nonrecognition of gain.--If the
                    taxpayer during the period specified in sub-
                    paragraph (B), for the purpose of replacing
                    the property so converted, purchases other
                    property similar or related in service or use
                    to the property so converted, or purchases
                    stock in the acquisition of control of a
                    corporation owning such other property, at
                    the election of the taxpayer the gain shall
                    be recognized only to the extent that the
                    amount realized upon such conversion (regard-
                    less of whether such amount is received in
                    one or more taxable years) exceeds the cost
                    of such other property or such stock. Such
                    election shall be made at such time and in
                    such manner as the Secretary may by regula-
                    tions prescribe. * * *
                                 - 48 -

according to petitioners, they are entitled to purchase replace-

ment property as required by section 1033(a)(2)(A) and thereby

defer under section 1033(a) any gain that Mr. Landow realized as

a result of that sale.

     In Wheeler v. Commissioner, 58 T.C. 459 (1972), we explained

the scope and the purpose of section 1033 as follows:

     Congress clearly intended to extend the benefits of
     section 1033 * * * only to public takings and casualty-
     like conversions, and the limitation of its benefits to
     involuntary conversions--i.e., those “wholly beyond the
     control of the one whose property has been taken”--
     reflects that intent.

Id. at 463 (quoting Dear Publ. & Radio, Inc. v. Commissioner, 274

F.2d 656, 660 (3d Cir. 1960), affg. 31 T.C. 1168 (1959)).

     Mr. Landow voluntarily entered into the Derivium transaction

in which he transferred to Bancroft the FRN portfolio in exchange

for $13.5 million in cash and gave Bancroft the right, inter

alia, to sell the FRN portfolio without notice to him and to

retain the proceeds of that sale.

     On the record before us, we find that Mr. Landow’s sale of

the FRN portfolio to Bancroft in exchange for $13.5 million in

cash does not constitute an involuntary conversion, as defined in

section 1033.     On that record, we further find that petitioners

are not entitled to defer under that section any gain that Mr.

Landow realized as a result of that sale.39


     39
          In the light of our finding that petitioners are not
                                                       (continued...)
                             - 49 -

     We have considered all of the contentions and arguments of

the parties that are not discussed herein, and we find them to be

without merit, irrelevant, and/or moot.

     To reflect the foregoing and the concessions of the parties,


                                      Decisions will be entered

                                under Rule 155.




     39
      (...continued)
entitled to defer under sec. 1033 any gain that Mr. Landow
realized as a result of his sale of the FRNs, we need not and
shall not address petitioners’ argument that they are entitled to
an extension of the period under sec. 1033(a)(2)(B) within which
they must purchase replacement property.
