DocketNumber: Docket No. 12089-10.
Judges: DAWSON
Filed Date: 12/11/2013
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Decision will be entered for respondent with respect to the deficiency and for petitioner with respect to the accuracy-related penalty.
P is the successor in interest to G. G was contractually obligated to purchase, and in 1999 did purchase, securities from S and T for $98.6 million. The securities were capital assets of G. In 2004 S offered to redeem the securities for $20 million. G's board of directors decided to abandon the securities for no consideration because a $98.6 million ordinary loss would produce tax savings greater than the $20 million offered by S. On June 24, 2004, G voluntarily surrendered the securities to S and T for no consideration. On its Federal income tax return for the tax year ending June 30, 2004, G reported a $98.6 million ordinary abandonment loss deduction under
An abandonment loss cannot be claimed on a sale or exchange of property.
*534 DAWSON, This case was submitted fully stipulated pursuant to Petitioner is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Delaware. It is the successor in interest to Pilgrim's Pride Corp. of Georgia f.k.a. Gold Kist, Inc., a Delaware corporation (GK Inc.), which was the successor in interest to Gold Kist Inc., a Georgia cooperative marketing association (GK Coop). GK Co-op was organized as a cooperative association in 1936 under the Georgia Cooperative Marketing Act. Beginning in 1978, GK Co-op was taxed as a nonexempt cooperative under subchapter T of the Code and was required to file an annual Form 990-C, Farmers' Cooperative Association Income Tax Return. In 1999 GK Co-op was contractually required to purchase certain securities for an aggregate total of $98.6 million from Southern States Cooperative, Inc. (Southern States), and Southern States Capital Trust I (Trust), a Delaware statutory trust established by Southern States.*42 Consequently, on October 5, 1999, GK Co-op purchased 40,000 shares of Step-Up Rate Series *41 B Cumulative Redeemable Preferred Stock (series B preferred stock)*43 of Southern States for $39.2 million *536 and 60,000 shares of Step-Up Rate Capital Securities, Series A (series A securities)*44 *45 issued by the Trust for $59.4 *537 million. The series B preferred stock and the series A securities, collectively referred to herein as the Securities, are securities as defined in The Securities generally provided for quarterly dividend payments that under certain circumstances could be unilaterally deferred by Southern States. Southern States ceased paying and began to defer the quarterly dividends payable on the series B preferred stock beginning with the April 2002 quarterly dividend. In October 2002 Southern States notified GK Co-op that the quarterly dividends on the series A securities for that quarter and subsequent quarters were deferred and would not be paid by Southern States. In early 2004 Southern States offered to redeem the Securities from GK Coop for less than GK Co-op had paid for them.*46 its balance sheet before making the public offering. Southern States rejected GK Co-op's counteroffer and instead proposed to redeem the Securities for $20 million. At a meeting held on May 24, 2004, GK Co-op's board of directors decided to abandon the Securities for no consideration because a $98 million ordinary loss would produce tax savings greater than the $20 million offered by Southern States. As a result, GK Co-op rejected the $20 million offer and ceased all negotiations with Southern States. At the time, GK Co-op valued the Securities at $38.8 million on its Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) financial statements. On June 24, 2004, GK Co-op voluntarily and irrevocably surrendered the Securities to Southern States and the Trust *538 for no consideration*47 that immediately before GK Co-op surrendered the Securities they were worth at least the $20 million Southern States offered to pay for them. On its timely filed Form 990-C for *48 the tax year ending June 30, 2004, GK Co-op reported a $98.6 million ordinary loss deduction under On December 21, 2009, respondent issued the statutory notice of deficiency to petitioner as successor in interest to GK Co-op with respect to GK Co-op's tax year ending June 30, 2004. The notice of deficiency determined, inter alia, that GK Co-op's loss on the abandonment of the Securities was a capital loss rather than an ordinary loss as claimed by GK Co-op on its tax return. Generally, It appeared to the Court that Gain or loss attributable to the cancellation, lapse, expiration, or other termination of-- (1) a right or obligation (other than a securities futures contract, as defined in (2) a The parties agree that the Securities are property and were capital assets in the hands of GK Co-op. Shares of stock are intangible interests or rights that the owner has in the management, profits, and assets of a corporation, while the certificate of stock is tangible evidence of the stock ownership of the person designated therein and of the rights and liabilities resulting from such ownership. The rights set forth in the certificate of the series *55 A securities are similar to the stock rights set forth in the certificate of the series B preferred stock. The series A securities, as well as the series B preferred stock, were intangible property comprising those rights. The value of the Securities was attributable to the aggregate value of those intangible rights, and the loss from the abandonment of the Securities is the result of the termination of those rights. *542 Respondent asserts that the surrender of the Securities terminated all of petitioner's rights with respect to those capital assets, and therefore Statutes are to be construed so as to give effect to the plain meaning of the words in the text unless we find that a word's *56 plain meaning is inescapably ambiguous. We look first to the relevant text of Petitioner appears to argue that, under Petitioner's primary position is that the phrase "right or obligation with respect to property" means a contractual and other derivative right or obligation with respect to property and not the inherent property rights and obligations arising from the ownership of the property. We disagree. Webster's Third New International Dictionary 1934 (2002) defines the prepositional phrase "with respect to" to mean "as regards: insofar as concerns: with reference to". In its everyday usage the phrase "rights with respect to property" includes the rights inherent in the ownership of the property, including stock. Most significantly, Congress has used the phrase "with respect to property" in other provisions of the Code to include rights arising out of the ownership of the property or characteristics of the property. We hold that the plain meaning of the phrase "a right or obligation * * * with respect to property" encompasses the property rights inherent in intangible property as well as ancillary or derivative contractual rights. Petitioner asserts that the legislative history to the 1997 amendment of Congress made relatively minor changes to The legislative history to TRA 1997 shows that Congress believed that the law was deficient because (1) it taxed transactions involving capital assets that were economically equivalent to a sale or exchange of a capital asset differently from a sale or exchange, (2) it effectively provided some, but not all, taxpayers with an election to treat gains from modifications of property rights as capital gains or losses from such modifications as ordinary losses, and (3) its lack of certainty made the tax laws unnecessarily difficult to administer. In describing the then-current law, the Senate Finance Committee referred to the considerable amount of litigation dealing with whether modifications of legal relationships between taxpayers are to be treated as a "sale or exchange". Petitioner points to those examples and the committee's statement that it "believes that some transactions, such as settlements of contracts to deliver a capital asset, are economically equivalent to a sale or exchange of such contracts since the value of any asset is the present value of the future income that such asset will produce." S. Rept. No. 105-33, Moreover, the Senate Finance Committee was critical of the existing law because it taxed similar economic transactions differently and effectively provided taxpayers with an election to sell the property right if the resulting transaction results in a gain or extinguish the property right if the resulting transaction results in a loss. The intended effects of extending In our view Congress extended the application of Petitioner also argues that the amendment in 2008 to Petitioner argues that, if Under On its return GK Co-op claimed an ordinary loss on the surrender of the Securities as an abandonment under Petitioner argues that, if The surrender of the Securities terminated all of GK Co-op's rights with respect to the Securities which were capital assets in the hands of GK Co-op. The loss on the surrender of the Securities is attributable to the termination of those rights. Accordingly, the loss is treated as a loss from the sale of a capital asset pursuant to Petitioner is not entitled to a deduction for an abandonment loss pursuant to In reaching our holdings, we have considered the arguments and contentions of the parties not discussed herein, and conclude that they are moot, irrelevant, or without merit. To reflect the foregoing,
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code (Code) of 1986 in effect for the year at issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. Respondent concedes that petitioner is not liable for the accuracy-related penalty under
3. On April 24, 2013, this case was reassigned by order of the Chief Judge to Judge Howard A. Dawson, Jr.↩, for disposition.
4. Pursuant to an asset purchase agreement dated July 23, 1998, GK Co-op agreed to sell one of its divisions to Southern States for approximately $255 million paid in part in cash and in part by Southern States' assumption of certain liabilities. The sale was completed in October 1998. Southern States obtained a bridge loan which it expected to repay with funds raised in a public offering. As part of the financing arrangement, when Southern States failed to consummate the public offering by October 5, 1999, it required GK Co-op to purchase the securities central to the issue in this case. Southern States and the Trust filed a Form S-1 with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to register (i) capital securities in the Trust for sale to the public and (ii) common securities in the Trust for sale to Southern States. Southern States intended to use the proceeds from the sale of these securities to repay the outstanding principal balance of the bridge loan.
5. The certificate evidencing the series B preferred stock states: This certifies that Gold Kist Inc. [GK Co-op] is the owner of Forty Thousand (40,000) fully-paid and non-assessable shares of the Step-Up Rate Series B Cumulative Redeemable Preferred Stock, of the par value of $100.00 each, with a stated liquidation preference of $1000.00 per share, of Southern States Cooperative, Incorporated (the "Association"), transferable on the books of the Association by the holder hereof in person or by duly authorized attorney upon the surrender of this certificate properly endorsed. * * * * The Association will furnish to any stockholder without charge, upon written request, a full statement of the designations, preferences, limitations and relative rights of the shares of the Step-Up Rate Series B Cumulative Redeemable Preferred Stock and to each other class or series of shares of the Association. The shares represented hereby have not been registered under the Securities Act of 1933 or under the securities laws of any state and are subject to certain restrictions on the transfer hereof, which restrictions are set forth in Section 9 of Article C(1)(c) of the Articles of Incorporation of the Association and in a Purchase Agreement of even date herewith between the Association and Gold Kist Inc.
6. The certificate evidencing the series A securities states: Southern States Capital Trust I, a statutory business trust created under the laws of the State of Delaware (the "Issuer Trust"), hereby certifies that Gold Kist, Inc. [GK Co-op] (the "Holder") is the registered owner of Sixty thousand (60,000) capital securities (aggregate Liquidation Amount Sixty Million ($60,000,000) Dollars) of the Issuer Trust representing a preferred undivided beneficial interest in the assets of the Issuer Trust and designated the Step-up Rate Capital Securities, Series A (liquidation amount $1,000 per Capital Security) (the "Capital Securities"). The Capital Securities are transferable on the books and records of the Issuer Trust, in person or by a duly authorized attorney, upon surrender of this certificate duly endorsed and in proper form for transfer as provided in Section 5.5 of the Trust Agreement (as defined below). The designations, rights, privileges, restrictions, preferences and other terms and provisions of the Capital Securities are set forth in, and this certificate and the Capital Securities represented hereby are issued and shall in all respects be subject to the terms and provisions of, the Amended and Restated Trust Agreement of the Issuer Trust, dated as of October 5, 1999, as the same may be amended from time to time (the "Trust Agreement"), among Southern States Cooperative, Incorporated, an agricultural cooperative corporation organized under the laws of Virginia, as Depositor, First Union National Bank, as Property Trustee, First Union Trust Company, National Association, as Delaware Trustee, and the Administrative Trustees named therein, including the designation of the terms of the Capital Securities as set forth therein. The Holder is entitled to the benefits of the Guarantee Agreement, dated as of October 5, 1999 (the "Guarantee Agreement"), entered into by Southern States Cooperative, Incorporated and First Union National Bank, as guarantee trustee, to the extent provided therein. The Issuer Trust will furnish a copy of the Trust Agreement and the Guarantee Agreement to the Holder without charge upon written request to the Issuer Trust at its principal place of business or registered office. Upon receipt of this certificate, the Holder is bound by the Trust Agreement and is entitled to the benefits thereunder.↩
7. The terms of the Securities neither required Southern States to offer to redeem the Securities from GK Co-op nor required GK Co-op to accept such an offer or make a counteroffer.↩
8. GK Co-op sent Southern States and Wachovia Bank, the registrar for the series A securities, letters dated June 24, 2004, stating that GK Co-op was irrevocably abandoning, relinquishing, and surrendering all of its rights, title, and interest to the Securities. The letters requested that Southern States and Wachovia take all necessary actions to remove GK Co-op's name and all other references to its ownership of the Securities. GK Co-op attached to the letter sent to Southern States the stock certificate for the series B preferred stock and a signed stock power. GK Co-op also attached to the letter sent to Wachovia the certificate for the series A securities and a signed stock power. By letter dated June 28, 2004, Southern States acknowledged its and Wachovia's receipt of the letters and the stock certificates attached thereto. Southern States also agreed to remove GK Coop's name from the appropriate securities registers and to take all other necessary actions to carry out GK Co-op's surrender of the Securities.↩
9. The parties stipulated into evidence a copy of an opinion letter dated July 30, 2004, from the law firm of Alston & Bird, LP, to GK Co-op, setting forth its opinion as to the Federal income tax treatment of the loss that GK Co-op had incurred when it abandoned the Securities (opinion letter). Respondent objects to the opinion letter only with respect to the deficiency on the ground of relevancy because respondent has conceded the accuracy-related penalty. Therefore, respondent's objection to the opinion letter on ground of relevancy as to the deficiency is sustained because that involves an issue of law.
10. In the petition, petitioner did not allege error with respect to respondent's adjustments in the notice of deficiency (i) allowing GK Co-op an additional bad debt deduction, (ii) adjusting GK Co-op's net operating loss, and (iii) adjusting GK Co-op's minimum tax credits from an earlier year.↩
11. Respondent filed numerous proofs of claim in the bankruptcy case for various Federal taxes including, but not limited to, income tax related to the deficiency determined in the notice of deficiency. Petitioner timely objected to the proofs of claim in the Bankruptcy Court. Pursuant to the order of the Bankruptcy Court entered July 8, 2010, the Bankruptcy Court will resolve respondent's proofs of claim and petitioner's objection to those claims in accordance with the final resolution of the underlying Federal tax disputes in this case.↩
12.
13.
14. The parties did not address
15. As originally enacted in the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 (ERTA),
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