DocketNumber: Docket No. 20755-12.
Citation Numbers: 143 T.C. 1, 2014 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 30, 143 T.C. No. 1
Judges: Lauber
Filed Date: 7/17/2014
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
In 2008 P, a U.S. corporation, paid a fine to the Commission of the European Community (Commission) for participating in a pricefixing cartel that violated the competition provisions of European Community (EC) law. P subsequently claimed a deduction for this payment on its 2008 Federal income tax return. R disallowed the claimed deduction under
1.
2.
3.
*1 LAUBER,
Petitioner does not dispute that the €20 million payment was a "fine or similar penalty" or that this payment was made "for the violation of * * * [a] law." The question the parties have submitted for resolution by summary judgment is whether the payment was made "to a government." The answer depends on whether the European Community (EC), and specifically the Commission, is an "agency or instrumentality" of "[t]he government of a foreign country" within the meaning of
We hold that the term "government of a foreign country" as used in this regulation can refer to a single government or to multiple governments and thus embraces the governments of the EC member states. We further hold that the EC, and specifically the Commission, is an "instrumentality" of the EC member states considered individually and collectively. We believe these holdings to be consistent with a recent opinion of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, which holds that the EC is an "agency or*32 instrumentality of a foreign state" for purposes of the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (FSIA),
The following facts are not in dispute and are derived principally from the pleadings, the stipulation of facts, and the related exhibits. At the time petitioner filed its petition, its principal place of business was in Michigan.*33
The EC was established in 1958 pursuant to the Treaty Establishing the European Economic Community (EC Treaty).*34
Under the EC Treaty, shared objectives were to be implemented by the EC acting alone, by the EC and the member *4 states sharing competences, or by the EC's undertaking to support, coordinate, or supplement actions of the individual member states. The EC Treaty defines the EC's areas of authority and limits its powers to act outside those areas.
The Parliament, a semi-legislative body, consists of representatives directly elected by the citizens of the member states. The Council is a legislative body composed of government ministers from each member state who are authorized to commit their respective governments.
The Commission functions in effect as the EC's executive branch. It consists of a President from one member state, who is nominated by the Council and approved by the Parliament, and a commissioner from each other member state. The latter must be approved by the Parliament and by the Council, which appoints each Commission member to a five-year term.
To further economic unity and the goal of a well-regulated common market, the EC Treaty tasks the Commission with enforcing rules governing competition and free trade. These include rules that bar price-fixing, abusive market positions, and mergers that violate competition mandates.
During 2008 the relationship between the Commission and the competition authorities of the member states was governed by a regulation enacted by the Council in 2002.
Regulation 1/2003 requires the Commission and national authorities to apply EC competition law in "close cooperation."
*6 The Commission is authorized to conduct necessary inspections, with the aid of national authorities, by entering places of business, examining books and records, and sealing business premises.
Although Regulation 1/2003 permits national authorities to bring infringement actions, the Commission has a right of first refusal to commence its own proceeding. A national authority must inform the Commission in writing before taking any formal steps toward conducting its own investigation. If the Commission does not act at that time, the relevant national authority, before issuing any decision concerning infringement, must inform the Commission of the impending decision.*39 The Commission again has the option (rarely exercised at this juncture) to commence a proceeding of its own. The Commission's initiation of proceedings relieves national authorities of their competence to apply EC competition rules to the matter. Once the Commission issues a decision, national authorities and courts are barred from taking any action inconsistent with its decision.
After beginning a proceeding, the Commission continues to share information with relevant national authorities and may consult in a collaborative manner with the Council or the Parliament.*40 Before recording a decision finding infringement, the Commission confers with the Advisory Committee on Restrictive Practices and Dominant Positions, composed of representatives of national authorities of the member states. Member states, through this committee, may have their opinions heard, but they cannot override the Commission's decision or dictate the final outcome.
*7 Commission decisions are ultimately enforced by national authorities. EC Treaty art. 256. National authorities are required to enforce Commission decisions with no formality other than verification of the decision's authenticity, without modifying the decision or limiting its scope.
This case arises from an investigation that the Commission conducted of Guardian Industries Corp. (Guardian) and its wholly owned Luxembourg subsidiary, Guardian Europe S.à.r.l. (Guardian Europe). Guardian and Guardian Europe manufactured and sold float glass, fabricated-glass products, fiberglass insulation, and other building materials to customers in Europe and elsewhere. In 2004 a group of glass producers and suppliers approached petitioner with a view to discussing and agreeing on prices and price increases for glass products. The Commission suspected that these companies were fixing*41 prices of their products and initiated an investigation into this suspected anticompetitive behavior.
In November 2007 the Commission concluded its investigation and issued a decision determining that Guardian and Guardian Europe had participated in a cartel that infringed the competition provisions of EC Treaty article 81 by fixing prices. In December 2007 the Commission notified Guardian and Guardian Europe of its decision and advised that they were jointly and severally liable for a fine of €148 million. In March 2008 petitioner paid the Commission €20 million; Guardian Europe paid the Commission €91 million; and the two companies provided the Commission a guaranty covering the remaining €37 million. Neither the payment by Guardian Europe nor the guaranty is at issue here.
Guardian timely filed its Federal income tax return for 2008. On its return Guardian deducted the payment it made to the Commission, which was $30,260,000 when converted to dollars at the relevant exchange rate. Following an examination, the IRS sent petitioner a notice of deficiency disallowing this deduction under
The purpose of summary judgment is to expedite litigation*42 and avoid unnecessary and expensive trials.
The Treasury Regulations provide that no deduction shall be allowed for a fine or penalty paid to: (1) The government of the United States, a State, a territory or possession of the United States, the District of Columbia, or the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico; (2) The government of a foreign country; or (3) A political subdivision of, or corporation or other entity serving as an agency or instrumentality of, any of the above.
Respondent agrees that the Commission is neither "[t]he government of a foreign country" nor "[a] political subdivision" thereof. Accordingly, the question for decision is whether the Commission is an "entity serving as an agency or instrumentality" of "[t]he government of a foreign country" within the meaning of this regulation. The parties have not brought to our attention, and we have not discovered, any prior authority that addresses this question directly.*44
The Commission is required to act on behalf of the EC and its member states collectively, and it is forbidden to act in the exclusive interest of any single government. Before we examine whether the Commission is an "agency or instrumentality," therefore, we must answer the threshold question whether the term "government of a foreign country," as used in
As a general matter of statutory interpretation, "unless the context indicates otherwise--words importing the singular include and apply to several persons, parties, or things."
In
In
We are instructed to apply the singular-includes-the-plural canon of construction "unless the context indicates otherwise."
Congress enacted
Like the District Court in
Because the terms "agency" and "instrumentality" as used in
Our initial inquiry is whether the language of the regulation is so plain as to permit only one reasonable*50 interpretation of the phrase "agency or instrumentality."
We do not agree that the phrase "agency or instrumentality" has an unambiguous plain meaning. A term is ambiguous if it is "capable of being understood in two or more possible senses or ways."
Judicial precedent is hostile to the notion that the terms "agency" and "instrumentality" have an unambiguous plain meaning that dictionaries can illuminate. We have discovered at least five distinct tests that courts have employed to determine, in various contexts, whether an entity is an "agency" or "instrumentality" of government.
Moreover, we find little merit in the definition that petitioner proposes to capture the plain meaning of these terms. If we adopted Guardian's definition of "agency or instrumentality," these words in the regulation would become superfluous. According to Guardian, an entity qualifies as an "agency or instrumentality" only if it acts as a division or subsidiary branch of a government to which it is subordinate and by which it is controlled. Under this definition, an "agency or instrumentality" equates to a "political subdivision."
It is a well-accepted canon of construction that a statute ought to be construed so that no clause, sentence, or word is *15 rendered superfluous, void, or insignificant.
Petitioner tries to support its proposed definition of "agency or instrumentality" by relying on the canon of construction "noscitur a sociis"--a Latin phrase meaning "it is known by its associates." This canon of construction "hold[s] that the meaning of an unclear word or phrase should be determined by the words immediately surrounding it." Black's Law Dictionary 1160-1161. While "noscitur a sociis" is most commonly applied to lists of three or more terms, it may apply "when two or more words are grouped together."*55 2A Norman J. Singer & J.D. Shambie Singer, Sutherland Statutory Construction, sec. 47:16, at 359 (7th ed. 2014). Because "political subdivision" appears in the same clause as "agency or instrumentality," petitioner argues that the latter phrase should be given a limiting construction that essentially equates it to the former.
This argument is unconvincing for two reasons. First, "noscitur a sociis" is properly applied to limit the scope of a potentially broad statutory term, not to render that term altogether superfluous. For example, in
Second, "noscitur a sociis" is typically applied to a series of coequal terms that are in a syntactically equivalent position.
In sum, we conclude that
Courts tasked with ascertaining whether a particular entity is an "agency" or "instrumentality" of government have found it difficult to rely on dictionary definitions. Because "it [is] clear that any general definition can be of only limited utility to a court confronted with one of the myriad organizational arrangements for getting the business of the government done," courts have generally adopted a "more functional"*58 approach to this question.
We addressed a similar question in
In a variety of contexts, courts have stated that "[t]he authority to act with the sanction of government behind it determines whether or not a governmental agency exists."
We conclude that an entity should be regarded as an "agency or instrumentality" for purposes of
The member states created the EC to establish "a common market and an economic and monetary union" and "to promote throughout the Community a harmonious, balanced and sustainable development of economic activities." EC Treaty art. 2. "The management of a common currency and the maintenance of economic stability are quintessential national purposes."
The Commission acts as the executive branch of the EC. Because a proposal from the Commission is a prerequisite for *20 most actions by the Council and the Parliament, the Commission performs important government functions in every field in which the EC operates. In particular, the member states conferred upon the EC and the Commission the authority to enforce laws regarding free trade and competition.*63 The enforcement of competition laws and the implementation of competition policy--whether by the Commission in Europe or the Federal Trade Commission in the United States--constitute important government functions.See
The power to impose civil and criminal penalties for violation of law is an essential attribute of sovereignty. The Commission and national authorities are authorized*64 to impose the same types of penalties, under the same EC law, for the same types of anticompetitive behavior. Petitioner has stipulated that the €20 million penalty at issue was imposed "for violation of law." Because the Commission has been delegated final authority to impose penalties for violation of law, it clearly exercises sovereign power.
The Commission likewise has "[t]he authority to act with the sanction of government behind it."
We conclude that the Commission is an*65 "entity serving as an agency or instrumentality" of the EC member states within the meaning of
Guardian concedes that the €20 million penalty would be nondeductible under
Petitioner's central argument is that an agency or instrumentality must be Petitioner's approach has less appeal when one is considering the status of an entity as an "agency or instrumentality" of multiple governments. When sovereign states enter into a treaty to accomplish shared goals, it is rare that any signatory nation exercises unilateral control over the entities thus created. Typically, signatories voluntarily restrict their authority to act unilaterally, as the EC member states have done, in favor*68 of a collective regulatory scheme that they believe will serve their long-term interests. The fact that the Commission is not subordinate to, or subject to the control of, any individual member state thus has little relevance in deciding whether it is an "agency or instrumentality" of the member states collectively. The precedents dealing with entities created by multiple sovereigns supports this commonsense conclusion. In Neither of these observations undermines the status of the Commission as an "instrumentality" of the member states. No nation joined the EC expecting that every issue would be decided in its favor. European nations joined the union because they believed that the long-term strategic benefits of membership would out-weigh short-term tactical losses. In order for the Commission to constitute an "instrumentality" of the 27 member states, it is not necessary that each nation *24 benefit equally from, or be entirely happy with, every decision the Commission makes. Nor is the status of the Commission as an "instrumentality" of the EC member states undermined by the relative independence they have given it. The particular form that an entity assumes is not determinative as to whether it is an "agency" or "instrumentality" of government. Finally, petitioner contends that the test we have adopted proves too much. According to Guardian, if the Commission is recognized as an "agency or instrumentality" of government for purposes of Petitioner has provided no reason to believe that the nongovernmental entities it hypothesizes resemble the Commission in respects that are salient for purposes of our analysis. Petitioner has provided no evidence, for example, that such entities have been delegated sovereign powers to impose penalties, backed by the sanction of government, for violation of law. Absent such evidence, these entities could not qualify under this Opinion as instrumentalities of a foreign government for purposes of The courts have crafted various tests for determining whether an entity constitutes an agency or instrumentality of government for purposes of different statutory regimes. In *26 Although both parties discuss the Under the FSIA, an entity qualifies*74 for immunity from suit in U.S. courts if it is "an agency or instrumentality of a foreign state." One way in which an entity can qualify as an "agency or instrumentality" is if it constitutes "an organ of a foreign state or political subdivision thereof." (1) whether the foreign state created the entity for a national purpose; (2) whether the foreign state actively supervises the entity; (3) whether the foreign state requires the hiring of public employees and pays their salaries; (4) whether the entity holds exclusive rights to some right in the [foreign country]; and (5) how the entity is treated under foreign state law. *75 The first factor is whether a foreign state or foreign states "created the entity for a national purpose." This inquiry closely resembles the inquiry we have made as to whether the Commission "performs an important government function." The Court of Appeals in The second factor is whether a foreign state "actively supervises the entity," Respondent admits, and we agree, that the Commission, like the EC, operated with a significant degree of autonomy; that the Commission and its members were required to act independently of their member states; and that the Parliament was not directly answerable to the*76 governments of the member states. The Council, the body most closely controlled by the member states, lacked direct authority to appoint or remove members of the Commission. On the other hand, the member states did nominate the Commission's members and exercised ultimate control over it, defining its areas of authority and limiting its power to act outside those areas. EC Treaty art. 5. The Commission's only source of authority was the EC Treaty, which the member states retained power to amend. The fact that the relevant treaties were amended five times between 1987 and 2007 evidences the reality of that control.*77 The member states did exercise some influence over Commission decisions in the competition area. The member states coordinated and cooperated with the Commission through the European Competition Network regarding investigations and decisions. This cooperation included pooling experience, conducting joint investigations, sharing information, and allocating cases and resources. During the course of investigations, the Commission often consulted in a collaborative manner with the Council and the Parliament. Before recording infringement in a decision, the Commission was *28 required to confer with the Advisory Committee on Restrictive Practices and Dominant Positions, which was composed of representatives of national authorities of the member states. Thus, although the Commission could record an infringement contrary to the request of a member state, the member states had influence over its decisionmaking process. For reasons adequate to themselves, the member states have chosen to exercise their supervisory authority over the EC and the Commission through a consultative and collaborative, rather than an autocratic, process. In the competition arena, this supervision is "active" in the sense*78 that the Commission consults regularly with numerous organs of the EC and numerous representatives of the member states, all of whom have the ability to influence its decisions. Cognizant that the second Filler factor "does not require the foreign state to micro manage every aspect of the organ's activities," The third factor is whether "the foreign state requires the hiring of public employees and pays their salaries." The Court of Appeals in The Court of Appeals concluded that the formal arrangements used to pay diplomatic salaries*79 are "of small importance at best," The fourth factor is whether the entity "holds exclusive rights to some right in the foreign country." The Court of Appeals in The fifth factor considers "how the entity is treated under foreign state law." In Petitioner argues that the member states do not regard the Commission as an "agency*81 or instrumentality" below them but as a supranational body that is in some sense above them. The Court of Appeals answered this argument succinctly: This argument * * * depends on the proposition that a governmental entity created by a collectivity of governments * * * cannot be at once a supranational entity and an organ or agency of the actors that created *30 it. It appears to us that both descriptions are accurate, and the fact that the * * * [EC] functions as a supranational governmental entity does not negate its also being an organ and agency of its member states, which continue to exist as sovereign nations, notwithstanding having delegated some of their governmental powers to the supranational agency they created. On balance, we believe that three of the
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the tax years in issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. We round all monetary amounts to the nearest dollar.↩
2. The parties filed a stipulation of settled issues resolving the other substantive issue, concerning petitioner's subpart F foreign base company services income. Upon disposition of the pending motions, the only outstanding matters will be the accuracy-related penalties and computational adjustments.
3. The parties submitted an extensive stipulation of facts with attached exhibits that deals comprehensively with relevant aspects of EC law. Where necessary, we have consulted resources outside the stipulation to provide a fuller picture.
4. We cite the consolidated version of the Treaty on European Union and of the Treaty Establishing the European Community, C 321 E/1.↩
5. In 2009 the Lisbon Treaty incorporated the EC, along with other European bodies, into the EU.
6. After 2008 articles 81 and 82 were replaced by articles 101 and 102. Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, 2008 O.J. (C 115) 47.↩
7. An EC Notice issued in 2004 explained the objectives of the ECN. Together the * * * [national authorities] and the Commission form a network of public authorities: they act in the public interest and cooperate closely in order to protect competition. The network is a forum for discussion and cooperation in the application and enforcement of EC competition policy. It provides a framework for the cooperation of European competition authorities in cases where Articles 81 and 82 of the Treaty are applied and is the basis for the creation and maintenance of a common competition culture in Europe.
8. "[T]he Commission would be foolish to ignore the inter-institutional context within which all European policy is made. It should come as no surprise to find, therefore, that the Commission has often encouraged parliamentary and Council involvement where formally none was necessary." Michelle Cini & Lee McGowan, Competition Policy in the European Union 44 (2009).
9. Petitioner stipulated that "[i]f the Commission was an 'agency or instrumentality' of the government of a foreign country within the meaning of
10. In his final summary judgment brief, respondent contends for the first time that his interpretation of the regulation is entitled to deference under
11. Indeed, it is not clear to what extent petitioner disputes the application of the singular-includes-the-plural canon of construction. In its final reply brief, petitioner agrees that "[t]he Commission is not automatically disqualified as an 'agency or instrumentality' of 'the government of a foreign country' solely because the European Community was formed by more than one Member State." Petitioner hypothesizes, for example, that "an agency or instrumentality of the Latvian Government could also serve as an agency or instrumentality of the Estonian Government," provided that the entity qualified as an "agency or instrumentality" under petitioner's proposed test.
12. Petitioner cites two cases in which courts determined the meaning of "instrumentality" by applying the canon of construction "noscitur a sociis."
13. For example, assume a regulation that defined a "disqualified person" to include "a family member of, or a business partner or associate of," an individual. The "noscitur a sociis" canon might properly be applied to give similar scope to the terms "business partner" and "associate." However, this canon could not properly be applied to equate "business partner or associate" with "family member." Similarly here, "noscitur a sociis" may reasonably be applied to give similar scope to the terms "agency" and "instrumentality." But this canon cannot properly be applied to equate "agency or instrumentality" with "political subdivision."
14. We noted in
15.
16. The United States recognizes the EC's sovereign authority over antitrust matters. In enacting the International Antitrust Enforcement Assistance Act of 1994, Pub. L. No. 103-438, 108 Stat. 4597 (current version at
17. The District Court in Eurocontrol is charged with the regulation and governance of aviation and air traffic in its [fifteen European] Member States. * * * [But for the creation of Eurocontrol], each of Eurocontrol's Member States likely would maintain its own FAA-equivalent to perform the duties presently performed by Eurocontrol within the borders of that nation. It is beyond dispute that each such entity would be an 'agency or instrumentality of a foreign state' within the meaning of the FSIA. Formation of Eurocontrol by these sovereigns should not change this result. * * *
18.
19. As noted earlier, petitioner agrees in theory that an entity can be an "agency or instrumentality" of government even though it has been formed by more than one sovereign.
20.
21. Significant amendments to the treaties include the following: (a) the Single European Act, June 29, 1987, 1987 O.J. (L l69) 1; (b) the TEU, also known as the Treaty of Maastricht, in 1993; (c) the EC Treaty, also known as the Treaty of Amsterdam, in 1997; (d) the Treaty of Nice amending the Treaty on European Union, the Treaties establishing the European Communities and certain related acts, Feb. 26, 2001, 2001 O.J. (C 80) 1; and (e) the Treaty of Lisbon amending the Treaty on European Union and the Treaty establishing the European Community, Dec. 13, 2007, 2007 O.J. (C 306) 1.
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