DocketNumber: Docket No. 6226-90
Citation Numbers: 100 T.C. 293, 1993 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 17, 100 T.C. No. 18
Judges: GERBER,SHIELDS,COHEN,CLAPP,JACOBS,WRIGHT,PARR,COLVIN,LARO,CHABOT,BEGHE,CHIECHI,RUWE,SWIFT,WELLS,HALPERN,WHALEN
Filed Date: 3/31/1993
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
*17 R determined that P did not qualify as a DISC and was required to pay income tax on its commission income. R contends that P failed to meet the 95-percent gross receipts requirement of
*294 GERBER,
The major issue for consideration is the validity of certain aspects of
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated, and the stipulation of facts and attached exhibits are incorporated by this reference. Petitioner's principal place of business at the time of the filing of the petition in this case was Los Angeles, California.
Hughes Aircraft Co. (Hughes) manufactured sophisticated electronic products for use in the defense industry. Petitioner, Hughes International Sales Corp. (HISC), was incorporated by Hughes on October 19, 1973, in the State of California. Hughes owned 100 percent of HISC's one class of voting common stock outstanding during the years in issue. Hughes formed HISC to be its export sales representative*19 and exporter.
HISC elected to file its Federal income tax returns on a fiscal year basis ending on March 31. On December 20, 1973, HISC filed an election to be taxed as a DISC under
Hughes filed its consolidated Federal income tax returns on a 52-53 week year ending on the Sunday closest to December 31. During the years in issue, Hughes employed two methods of accounting for income tax purposes. For some transactions it used the accrual method of accounting and, for eligible long-term contracts, it used a variation of the accrual method of accounting -- the completed contract method of accounting. Hughes received permission to use the completed contract method of accounting as described in
HISC's only sources of income were commissions from the sales representative agreements and interest income from foreign accounts receivable, which HISC received as commissions from Hughes and its subsidiaries. See
For the taxable year ending on March 31, 1982, HISC reported commission income of $ 7,918,257 and interest income of $ 2,743,634 for a total of $ 10,661,891. Hughes and its subsidiaries claimed corresponding commission expense deductions. Hughes transferred $ 9,586,815 of foreign receivables to HISC in December 1981 to pay commissions of $ 7,384,200 and interest of $ 2,202,615. Hughes paid the remaining $ 1,075,076 owed ($ 10,661,891 - $ 9,586,815) in May 1982 by transferring additional foreign receivables to HISC.
On HISC's Federal income tax return for the year ended March 31, 1982, HISC reported qualified export receipts of*296 $ 168,763,350. Omitted from that amount was $ 11,854,320 of qualified export receipts that could have been included but were not due to a bookkeeping error. Additionally, HISC included $ 1,751,283 of domestic sales in qualified export receipts. HISC argues that the commissions on the domestic sales were inadvertently included. The domestic sales were received under a contract which originally had been limited to foreign sales. After that contract was in effect and prior to the taxable years under consideration, Hughes and the customers modified*22 the contract to include some domestic sales. After the contract modification and during the taxable year ended March 31, 1982, commissions from domestic sales, along with foreign sales, were paid to and reported by HISC.
A portion of HISC's qualified export receipts was attributable to long-term contracts that Hughes reported using the completed contract method of accounting. If HISC had used the completed contract method of accounting to compute its qualified export receipts, its qualified export receipt amount for the taxable year ended March 31, 1982, would have been reduced by $ 67,298,357.
For the taxable year ending on March 31, 1983, HISC reported commission income of $ 28,338,991 and interest income of $ 2,408,715 for a total of $ 30,747,706. Hughes and its subsidiaries claimed corresponding commission expense deductions. Hughes transferred $ 9,086,512 of foreign receivables to HISC in December 1982 to pay commissions of $ 7,145,280 and interest of $ 1,941,232. Hughes paid the remaining $ 21,661,194 owed ($ 30,747,706 - $ 9,086,512) to HISC in May 1983 by transferring additional foreign receivables.
On HISC's Federal income tax return for the year ended March 31, 1983, *23 HISC reported qualified export receipts of $ 348,315,640. Of the qualified export receipts, $ 13,784,333 was attributable to domestic sales and petitioner argues that it should not have been included. A portion of HISC's qualified export receipts was attributable to long-term contracts that Hughes reported using the completed contract method of accounting. If HISC had used the completed contract method of accounting to compute the corresponding portion of its qualified export receipts, the qualified amount for the taxable*297 year ended March 31, 1983, would have been reduced by $ 241,451,118.
Hughes accrued the commissions payable to HISC in the same year that it shipped the export product to the foreign purchaser. Hughes deducted the commissions in the year accrued, which was the same year HISC included the commissions in income. In the years in which the commissions were accrued, HISC included amounts in its qualified export receipts and gross receipts based on invoices that Hughes sent to foreign purchasers upon shipment of export property.
Hughes deferred the income from accounts reported under the completed contract method of accounting if the contract was not completed during*24 the taxable year. HISC, under the accrual method of accounting, included in its qualified export receipts and gross receipts amounts attributable to underlying long-term contracts deferred by Hughes in which Hughes paid HISC a commission. HISC was not on the completed contract method in connection with these transactions, and reported the receipts or income earlier than it would have if subject to the completed contract method. Correspondingly, Hughes claimed the commission deductions due to HISC in the year accrued, which was before Hughes was required to report income from the long-term contracts under the completed contract method of accounting.
OPINION
In 1971, in order to encourage and increase exports, Congress enacted
To qualify as a DISC a corporation must make an election and meet certain requirements.
The gross receipts test can be expressed as a fraction with qualified export receipts being the numerator and gross receipts being the denominator. To pass the test, the fraction must result in a ratio that is equivalent to 95 percent or greater.
*299
HISC was created in 1973 by Hughes in response to the 1971 DISC legislation. HISC is a commission agent for Hughes. Hughes is a related supplier. *29 that the DISC legislation was intended to encourage, or that virtually all of HISC's receipts were from bona fide export receipts. However, HISC would fail the gross receipts test and not be qualified as a DISC, in both years, under respondent's argument that Hughes' method of accounting be used to determine the numerator and HISC's method of accounting be used to determine the denominator. As a preliminary matter, we think respondent has misinterpreted the regulations.
Respondent interprets the regulations as requiring HISC to eliminate unreported long-term contract gross receipts, under Hughes' method of accounting, only from the numerator of the fraction (qualified export receipts), and not the denominator (gross receipts). We do not agree.
On that assumption, i.e., if Hughes' accounting method is used to compute qualified export receipts and gross receipts, HISC would fail the test in at least 1 year. For the taxable year ended March 31, 1983, HISC claims that Hughes inadvertently paid it commissions on domestic sales. Although "inadvertently" paid and/or included, Hughes in fact paid those commissions to HISC.
Petitioner, on opening brief, argued that because the domestic commissions were included*32 inadvertently, they should be ignored for purposes of the gross receipts test. HISC asserted that, under the sales representative agreements, it was not entitled to a commission for these sales; therefore, the transaction should not be included for the gross receipts test. HISC alternatively argued that, under
Petitioner had received and included the commission and respective gross receipts in its return and computations. Petitioner has not shown that it had anything less than unfettered use and enjoyment of the commissions on the domestic transaction through the time of trial (for about 10 years). *302 complied with the contract or not.
*35 For the year ended March 31, 1982, HISC would pass the 95-percent gross receipts test irrespective of whether the completed contract or accrual method of accounting is used in the computations. *36 However, for the year ended March 31, 1983, HISC would fail the 95-percent gross receipts test if it utilized Hughes' completed contract method of accounting.
*303
HISC asks us to invalidate the portion of
Respondent argues that
*304
With respect to interpretative regulations, section 7805(a) provides the Secretary with general authority to prescribe all needful rules and *39 regulations. A regulation "'must be sustained unless unreasonable and plainly inconsistent with the revenue statutes,' and 'should not be overruled except for weighty reasons.'"
Respondent's concern*40 involves the possibility that Hughes is obtaining a timing benefit in addition to the tax benefit Congress provided to encourage exports. Respondent argues that without
However, a DISC is a separate corporation,
*42 The legislative history directly undercuts
*44 The accounting method otherwise employed by HISC is the accrual method of accounting.
*45 To reflect the foregoing,
Reviewed by the Court.
HAMBLEN, PARKER, SHIELDS, COHEN, CLAPP, JACOBS, WRIGHT, PARR, COLVIN, and LARO,
CHABOT,
HAMBLEN, COHEN, BEGHE, and CHIECHI,
RUWE,
It is clear that HISC erroneously received commissions on some of Hughes' domestic sales even though, under the commission agreement between HISC and Hughes, HISC was only entitled to commissions on export sales. This situation and its effect on the 95-percent gross receipts requirement of
If the commission arrangement provides that the commission agent will receive a commission only with respect to sales or leases of export property, or the furnishing of services, which result in qualified export receipts, the commission agent will not take into account the gross receipts or gross income, as the case may be, derived by the principal from any transaction for which the commission agent would not be entitled to a commission under the commission arrangement.
The majority holds that the regulation "does not apply where a commission was paid". Majority op. p. 13. The regulation itself contains no such exception. The only reason given for the majority's interpretation is its fear that a literal application of
A literal reading of the regulation need not result in any unintended tax benefits. For example, in order to determine if a DISC meets the 95-percent gross receipts test, it would be necessary to determine whether the commissions paid to the DISC were for export sales pursuant to the commission agreement. It seems evidence that any examination of these transactions that uncovered unqualified domestic sales commissions, which were not payable pursuant to the commission agreement, should result in the disallowance of deductions taken by the principal.
For the foregoing reasons, I disagree with the majority's holding that
SWIFT and WELLS,
BEGHE,
I also associate myself with most of the observations and much of the reasoning of Judge Halpern's dissent. But although I think it would have been preferable for the Court to have required the parties to address adequately the paragraph (e)(2) regulation issue, I do not dissent. I regard the "results" reached by the majority as our decision, in which I join, that HISC has no deficiencies in Federal income tax because it continued to qualify as a DISC for the taxable years in issue.
Because the parties made such an inadequate presentation on the paragraph (e)(2) regulation issue, I would rule for respondent on this issue. Petitioner did not carry its burden of persuasion in presenting facts and in effect conceded the*310 issue by not making a coherent legal*52 argument. Therefore the Court is justified in sustaining respondent's determination that the improperly/inadvertently commissioned domestic receipts should be included in the denominator of the fraction.
Having expressed my reservations about our treatment of the domestic receipts and the paragraph (e)(2) regulation, I would advance an additional reason to support our conclusion that
Hughes is the parent of an affiliated group of corporations that file consolidated returns, but HISC is not a member of that group. This is because, for consolidated return purposes, the term "includible corporation" does not include a "DISC (as defined in
This statutory separation of a DISC from its parent and siblings has operated in this case to require us to decide it in a vacuum, without addressing the tax treatment of the related items on the consolidated returns of the Hughes affiliated group that bracketed the fiscal years of HISC that are before us. Respondent appears to have missed the boat in failing to disallow Hughes' deduction of the commissions on the domestic receipts, and in failing to defer its deductions of the commissions on the qualified export receipts arising from the long-term contracts. As a result, the tax treatment*311 of Hughes' deductions is not before us, and respondent may well have been whipsawed.
HALPERN,
Having disposed of respondent's astonishing proposition that qualified export receipts, a subset of gross receipts, are to be determined using a method of accounting different from that used to determine gross receipts, HISC would have been home free as a DISC were it not for the "commissions" from domestic sales received by HISC. Petitioner argues that those "commissions" inadvertently were included in gross income. What precisely petitioner means by that is unclear. Does petitioner mean that the domestic "commissions" inadvertently were included in gross income, when, perhaps, they should not have been included because they represented a contribution to capital or were offset by an obligation to make reimbursement? Alternatively, does petitioner mean that they were correctly included*55 in gross income but incorrectly characterized as commissions? We do not know. The findings of fact made by the majority state only that "during the taxable year ended March 31, 1982, commissions from domestic sales * * * were paid to and reported by HISC." Majority op. p. 5. (Assumably the same was true for HISC's taxable year ended March 31, 1983, the only year for which it would make a difference.) The majority's opinion, insofar as it concerns the treatment of such "commissions" under
If the domestic "commissions" were either not includable as gross income or not includable as commissions, then it is likely that (as with HISC's taxable year ended March 31, 1982) we could avoid any confrontation with either
*57
WHALEN,
1. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the years in issue unless otherwise indicated.↩
2. Revenue Act of 1971, Pub. L. 92-178, sec. 501, 85 Stat. 497, 535.↩
3. Secs. 991-997.↩
4. Although the 95-percent asset and receipt requirements are rather stringent, Congress was not attempting to fashion an all or nothing technical type test. By enacting deficiency distribution provisions for corporations, which for reasonable cause failed to meet certain of the requirements, Congress evidenced its intent not to make this a trap for the unwary. See
5.
6.
7.
If the commission arrangement provides that the commission agent will receive a commission only with respect to sales or leases of export property, or the furnishing of services, which result in qualified export receipts, the commission agent will not take into account the gross receipts or gross income, as the case may be, derived by the principal from any transaction for which the commission agent would not be entitled to a commission under the commission arrangement.↩
8. However, in its reply brief, petitioner conceded that the gross receipts attributable to the domestic commissions should only be included in the denominator of the fraction if
9. See
10. The legislative history contains the statement that the gross receipts for a commission DISC should be comparable to the gross receipts of a buy-sell DISC. H. Rept. 92-533 (1971),
Because a commission DISC and a buy-sell DISC are to be treated equally, interpreting
11. In addition to the claim of erroneously included domestic receipts, HISC claims to have failed to include some qualified export receipts for the taxable year ended Mar. 31, 1982. Those receipts were inadvertently omitted and HISC now seeks to include them. HISC has not shown that Hughes paid a commission on the amount it failed to include, either during the taxable year or within 60 days after the close of that year.
The sole focus of this case concerns whether HISC qualifies as a DISC and, more specifically, whether HISC met the 95-percent gross receipts test. HISC would meet the 95-percent gross receipts test and qualify as a DISC for the year ended Mar. 31, 1982, irrespective of how we would decide this issue. Accordingly, it is unnecessary for us to decide whether HISC may include the omitted qualified export receipts.↩
12. The calculation would be as follows:
348,315,640 - 13,784,333 - 241,451,118 / 348,315,640 + 2,408,715 - 241,451,118 = 93,080,189 / 109,273,237 = 85%↩
13. The calculation would be as follows:
348,315,640 - 13,784,333 / 348,315,640 + 2,408,715 = 334,531,307 / 350,724,355 = 95%↩
14. The three methods are described in
15. Respondent does not contend that HISC is precluded from using the accrual method of accounting under
16. The matching of income and deductions is normally addressed in
17. It is appropriate to defer to the legislative history in the setting of this case. Here the text of the statute is silent on the disputed point addressed by the regulation, but the legislative history, as contained in the House and Senate reports, accompanying the enactment of the statute, considers the point explicitly. The Secretary did not have legislative regulatory authority, and the regulation produces a result that departs from the legislative history. We are not persuaded that this departure is warranted by respondent's arguments, which focus on the alleged mismatching of income and deductions by Hughes. Respondent's concern in that respect does not come within the intended scope of the 95-percent gross receipts test. In this setting, the legislative history plays a more significant role.↩
18. HISC points out that it is not qualified to use the completed contract method of accounting. Instead, a commission is includable in HISC's income for the year in which Hughes shipped the product to the foreign buyer. Therefore, the proceeds from the sale are includable in HISC's income for that year for purposes of the gross receipts test.↩
1. We do not have Hughes' tax liability before us, and we apparently do not know whether respondent has disallowed deductions for the commissions on domestic sales. In any event, whether respondent has made proper adjustments to Hughes' tax liability should have no bearing on our application of the regulation.↩
2. HISC had no employees, and the only predicate for its receipt and retention of sales commissions was the agreement that provided for commissions on export sales.↩
3. The regulation was proposed in 1972 and adopted in 1977 when the congressional purpose was fresh in the minds of those who wrote the regulation.↩
1. Accepting arguendo that the domestic "commissions" themselves constitute an item of gross income (perhaps under the claim of right doctrine), then, if in fact that item does not constitute a commission under the commission agreement between HISC and Hughes, because HISC is not, under that agreement, entitled to any commission on domestic sales, only the item itself (and not any domestic sales gross receipts of Hughes) would be considered a gross receipt of HISC. See
348,315,640 - 13,784,333 - 241,451,118) / (348,315,640 + 2,408,715 - 241,451,118 - 13,784,333 + 2,490,242 =
93,080,189 / 97,979,146 = 95%↩
2. For that reason, I would not make too much of petitioner's reply brief "concession" described in majority op. note 8 that gross receipts attributable to the domestic commissions should only be included in the denominator of the gross receipts fraction if
Gehl Company v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 795 F.2d 1324 ( 1986 )
United States v. Lewis , 71 S. Ct. 522 ( 1951 )
Helvering v. Credit Alliance Corp. , 62 S. Ct. 989 ( 1942 )
Cwt Farms, Inc. And Cwt International, Inc. v. Commissioner ... , 755 F.2d 790 ( 1985 )
Bingler v. Johnson , 89 S. Ct. 1439 ( 1969 )
Commissioner v. South Texas Lumber Co. , 68 S. Ct. 695 ( 1948 )
National Muffler Dealers Assn., Inc. v. United States , 99 S. Ct. 1304 ( 1979 )
Dresser Industries, Inc. And Consolidated Subsidiaries v. ... , 911 F.2d 1128 ( 1990 )
L & F International Sales Corporation v. United States , 912 F.2d 377 ( 1990 )