DocketNumber: Docket No. 37357-87
Judges: TANNENWALD
Filed Date: 1/11/1993
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
Decision will be entered under Rule 155.
P received a distribution from a foreign subsidiary which constituted an ordinary income dividend under
*6 OPINION
TANNENWALD,
The issue for *2 decision is the amount of foreign taxes that petitioner should be deemed to have paid under
For all relevant years, Brunswick International Limited (BIL), a Delaware corporation, was a wholly owned subsidiary of petitioner and joined petitioner in the filing of consolidated U.S. corporate income tax returns. BIL held 499,999 of the 500,000 issued and outstanding shares of Sherwood Medical Industries Limited (SMIL), a United Kingdom corporation, during the taxable years at issue and had a basis in such shares of $ 1,200,000. SMIL was a first-tier subsidiary of BIL during the entire period beginning with SMIL's incorporation on December 15, 1967, and ending on March 9, 1982. During that period, SMIL distributed no dividends, and its U.S. shareholders did not include any income with respect to SMIL under Subpart F of the
Beginning in 1971, SMIL maintained a French branch operation. During the period from 1971 until 1973, SMIL also maintained a West German branch operation. The French and German branches engaged primarily in sales of products manufactured by SMIL or by Sherwood Medical Industries, Inc., a Delaware corporation affiliated with petitioner. *4 *8
*5 Taxable Earnings Total U.K. French German Year and Foreign Taxes Taxes Taxes Ending Profits Taxes Paid Paid Paid 12/31/67 $-0 $ -0- $ -0- $ -0- $ -0- 12/31/68 -0- -0- -0- -0- 12/31/69 (75,567) -0- -0- -0- -0- 12/31/70 (74,446) -0- -0- -0- -0- 12/31/71 620,771 194,657 194,657 -0- -0- 12/31/72 1,311,618 191,399 69,271 111,030 11,098 11/30/73 1,966,794 287,547 -0- 271,602 15,945 11/30/74 806,925 76,935 -0- 76,935 -0- 11/30/75 63,796 -0- 63,796 -0- 11/30/76 (3,154,856) 26,030 -0- 26,030 -0- 11/30/77 (306,355) 9,537 -0- 9,537 -0- 11/30/78 621,024 13,387 -0- 13,387 -0- 11/30/79 1,555,368 -0- -0- -0- -0- 11/30/80 3,165,102 -0- -0- -0- -0- 11/30/81 329,901 31,413 31,413 -0- -0- 11/30/82 (147,136) -0- -0- -0- -0- Total $ 5,302,833 $ 894,701 $ 295,341 $ 572,317 $ 27,043
In March 1982, petitioner and its subsidiary, BIL, transferred to American Home Products Corporation (American) the stock of a number of petitioner's direct and indirect subsidiaries, including SMIL, in exchange for stock of petitioner which was held by American. Petitioner and respondent agree that the exchange of stock of petitioner held by American for stock of SMIL was a taxable disposition on which the amount realized therein by BIL was $ 7,967,910.
On its consolidated U.S. corporate income tax return for*6 the taxable year ended December 31, 1982, petitioner reported BIL's gain on the disposition of its SMIL stock as capital gain and, consequently, did not claim any foreign tax credits under
(a) Treatment of Taxes Paid By Foreign Corporation. -- For purposes of this subpart, a domestic corporation which owns at least 10 percent of the voting stock of a foreign corporation from which it receives dividends in any taxable year shall be deemed to have paid the same proportion of any income, war profits, or excess profits taxes paid or deemed to be paid by such foreign corporation to any foreign country or to any possession of the United States, on or with respect to the accumulated profits of such foreign corporation from which such dividends were paid, which the amount of such dividends (determined without regard to section 78) bears to the amount of such accumulated profits in excess of such income, war profits, and excess profits taxes (other than those deemed paid).
Thus, the foreign tax credit is determined by application of the following formula:
Foreign Taxes Deemed Paid = Foreign Income Taxes Paid x
The Secretary shall have full power to determine from the accumulated profits of what year or years such dividends were paid, treating dividends paid in the first 60 days of any year as having been paid from the accumulated profits of the preceding year or years (unless to his satisfaction shown otherwise), and in other respects treating dividends as having been paid from the most recently accumulated gains, profits, or earnings. *10 Accordingly, dividends are deemed to be paid*9 out of the most recently accumulated profits of the foreign corporation. If a dividend received by a U.S. corporation exceeds the foreign subsidiary's accumulated profits of the most recent year, any excess is sourced to the accumulated profits of prior years in reverse chronological order.
The parties have locked horns on the question of how the $ 5,302,833 treated as a dividend should be sourced under
Alternatively, petitioner advances two sourcing formulae, one based on an allocation of SMIL's deficits to the profit years in proportion to such profits, thereby reducing the profits and the creditable taxes for those years, and the other based upon the application of the principles of the net operating carryover provisions of section 172, treating deficits as net operating losses to be carried backward and forward.
Respondent, *10 utilizing the method set forth in
Initially, we observe that the precise issue before us is one of first impression. Nevertheless, we are not without guidance from the decided cases in which the courts have struggled to synthesize the application of the statutory provisions in respect of "dividends", "accumulated profits", and "foreign*11 taxes paid on or with respect to such accumulated*11 profits"
*12 As long ago as 1942, the Supreme Court stated that the statute was designed "to permit identification of the accumulated profits of each taxable year out of which the dividends might have been paid and to give credit for a proportion of the subsidiary's taxes attributable to such accumulated profits." See
Accordingly, under these provisions a dividend is allocated first to the full extent that it can be absorbed by the "accumulated profits" of the most recent year from which it was paid; the remainder is then allocated to the "accumulated profits" of the next most recent year to the extent that it can be absorbed by such "accumulated profits," and so on down the years. A separate foreign tax credit is then computed for each of the years to which the dividend has been allocated, and*13 the determination for each such year is made only in respect of that portion of the dividend that is allocated to such year. * * * The foreign tax credit under
*12 See also
We think that the same principle should apply in respect of both sourcing determinations, i.e., the accumulated*15 profits from which the dividend was paid and the appropriate year for crediting foreign taxes, in order to avoid adding further complexity to the complex definitional concepts which already permeate the foreign tax credit provisions. Cf.
Essentially, petitioner seeks to transform the guidelines of avoidance of double taxation and subsidiary-branch equivalence into immutable mandates. This we are not prepared to do. In the first place, petitioner's aggregate approach includes the crediting*16 of foreign taxes which were paid in years in which petitioner sustained losses. In
Second, petitioner's aggregate approach is nothing more than a device to source the 1982 dividend from SMIL to years in which the foreign*17 taxes were substantially greater in order to be in the position of getting the same credits to which BIL would have been entitled had SMIL paid the dividend in those years. See 1 Owens and Ball, The Indirect Credit, par. 2/6C3 at 171 (1975). But the fact of the matter is that the dividends were not paid in those years for reasons best known to BIL. Indeed, the prospect of postponement of dividends in light of the possibility of higher foreign taxes in later years caused the Congress, in 1986, to adopt the pooling method which petitioner advocates herein. See
Third, it is important to recognize that taxes in respect of which petitioner seeks credit were paid on a total of $ 5,657,033, representing SMIL's profits in 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1978, and 1981, an amount which exceeds the amount of SMIL's accumulated profits as of 1982 and therefore the amount of the dividend. Concededly, the difference is relatively small ($ 5,657,033 minus $ 5,302,833), but it clearly indicates that, under petitioner's aggregate approach, the taxes for which credit is sought were paid on amounts which have not been subject to U.S. tax. This difference would be substantially*20 greater if the $ 4,720,470 representing SMIL's profits for 1979 and 1980 -- years in which no foreign taxes*15 were paid -- are added in. Indeed, if SMIL had paid foreign taxes in those years, the amount of the claimed credit, under petitioner's aggregate method, would be increased accordingly although there would be no increase in the amount of the dividend includable in petitioner's income. In our view, where the amount of dividend income is less than the amounts subjected to foreign tax, credit should be available only to the extent that foreign taxes were paid on the lesser amount. See
Fourth, petitioner's position, that respondent's method penalizes it in that credit would have been available for the taxes SMIL paid in 1971, 1972, 1973, and 1974 if SMIL*21 had been a branch instead of a subsidiary, ignores the fact that SMIL's profits, as a branch, would have been subject to U.S. tax in those years. To be sure, had SMIL been a branch, petitioner would have been entitled to deduct, for U.S. tax purposes, the losses sustained in 1968, 1969, 1970, 1975, and 1976. However, petitioner could have achieved substantial branch equivalent treatment if it had caused SMIL (as it could have through its ownership of BIL) to distribute its profits in the earlier years as dividends, thereby avoiding the loss of the credits which it now seeks to obtain. See
The long and the short of the matter is that we conclude petitioner's method fails to satisfy the requirements of
We recognize that respondent's method is not without its imperfections, which Congress recognized when it adopted petitioner's aggregate approach in respect of post-1986 years. See
In reaching our conclusion, we have taken into account the fact that the application of respondent's method can sometimes cause the permanent loss of credit for foreign taxes paid. But the fact that this condition can occur does not, in and of itself, justify the allowance of a credit not permitted by the statute. Cf.
Our conclusion that respondent's method should be sustained renders it unnecessary for us to consider in detail the*17 alternative methods of sourcing suggested by petitioner. It is sufficient to observe that they simply represent ad hoc approaches designed to salvage something less than credit for 100 percent of the taxes SMIL paid over the years but more than the credit allowed by respondent, and seem to have some of the same infirmities as are present in petitioner's primary position.
In order to take into account concessions by the parties on other issues,
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code as in effect for the years at issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. The record contains no evidence of SMIL's activities in the United Kingdom, but it is not disputed that SMIL paid United Kingdom income taxes.↩
3. Amounts stated in parentheses reflect deficits in earnings and profits of SMIL for the year indicated. We note that, in 1973, SMIL apparently changed its taxable year from a calendar year to fiscal year ending November 30. The record contains no explanation of this change but the fact of change appears irrelevant to our analysis.↩
4. Even though SMIL incurred losses for 1975, 1976, and 1977, taxes were paid to France in those years due to the profitable operations of that branch during such years.↩
5. The accumulated profits of a foreign subsidiary are defined as the sum of: (1) The earnings and profits of the subsidiary and (2) the foreign income taxes imposed on or with respect to the gains, profits, and income to which such earnings and profits were attributable.
6. For taxable years beginning after Dec. 31, 1986, the foreign tax credit, in respect of dividends paid out of post-1986 earnings of a foreign subsidiary, is determined under an amended version of
7. These phrases have been described as not being "defined with gemlike clarity". See Bittker and Eustice, Federal Income Taxation of Corporations and Shareholders, par. 17.11 at 17-43 (5th ed. 1987).↩
8. See also 1 Owens and Ball, The Indirect Credit, par. 2/6C3 at 173, 175 n.262 (1975).↩
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