2009 Metropoulos Family Trust v. California Franchise Tax Board

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 27, 2022
DocketD078790
StatusPublished

This text of 2009 Metropoulos Family Trust v. California Franchise Tax Board (2009 Metropoulos Family Trust v. California Franchise Tax Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
2009 Metropoulos Family Trust v. California Franchise Tax Board, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 5/27/22

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

THE 2009 METROPOULOS FAMILY D078790 TRUST et al.,

Plaintiffs and Appellants, (Super. Ct. No. v. 37-2020-00011877-CU-MC-CTL)

CALIFORNIA FRANCHISE TAX BOARD,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Gregory W. Pollack, Judge. Affirmed. Dakessian Law, Mardiros Hagop Dakessian and Donald Eugene Chomiak for Plaintiffs and Appellants. Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman and Carley Ann Roberts for California Taxpayers Association as Amicus Curiae on behalf of Plaintiffs and Appellants. Rob Bonta, Attorney General, Tamar Pachter, Assistant Attorney General, Lisa W. Chao and Kara D. Siegel, Deputy Attorneys General, for Defendant and Respondent. Plaintiffs and appellants The 2009 Metropoulos Family Trust, The Evan D. Metropoulos 2009 Trust (the Family Trust and Evan Trust respectively or at times collectively the trusts), and the trusts’ trustee, the J.P. Morgan Trust Company of Delaware (the trustee), appeal from a summary judgment entered in favor of the California Franchise Tax Board (FTB) on plaintiffs’ complaint seeking a refund of 2014 income taxes. The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment, with plaintiffs arguing their pro-rata share of income received from an S corporation’s November 2014 sale of a wholly-owned subsidiary was not subject to California income tax. The plaintiff trusts, who were shareholders in the S corporation Pabst Corporate Holdings, Inc. (Pabst), argued the income was derived from the sale of intangible property, namely goodwill associated with the subsidiary’s business, whose taxation was governed by Revenue & Taxation Code section

17952 and its corresponding regulation (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 18, § 17952).1 The trial court denied plaintiffs’ motion and granted the FTB’s, ruling (1) because the S corporation had characterized the income as business income on its return, the trusts were bound to treat their respective shares of that income the same way on their federal and California tax returns; and (2) even if section 17952 applied, the trusts’ income would still be taxable since the S corporation’s corporate headquarters were in California, the underlying businesses based marketing and sales departments in California, and the S

1 Undesignated statutory references are to the Revenue & Taxation Code. Undesignated regulation references are to title 18 of the California Code of Regulations. As set out more fully below, section 17952 exempts from a nonresident’s taxable California income any income from intangible property unless that property has acquired a “business situs” in this state or the “nonresident buys or sells such property in this state . . . so regularly, systematically, and continuously as to constitute doing business in this state.” 2 corporation localized the goodwill in connection with its California business, giving the goodwill a “business situs” in this state. Arguing the matter involves strictly a question of statutory interpretation, plaintiffs contend the trusts are not taxed on income earned from the sale of the intangible goodwill. They maintain the character of the goodwill income is determined under the Personal Income Tax Law (§ 17001 et seq.), not as business income under the Corporation Tax Law (§ 23001 et seq.), which are assertedly independent of one another and have different sourcing schemes. According to plaintiffs, a single item of income can have different characterizations under the two schemes, and here, it is business income under the Corporation Tax Law and income from intangible property that under section 17952 of the Personal Income Tax Law is not sourced to California. They further contend the goodwill does not have a business situs in California within the meaning of section 17952 so as to render the income taxable. We hold that the nonresident trust shareholders of Pabst, a unitary multistate S corporation, are taxed on their pass-through pro rata share of the gain, which is business income sourced to California under the Uniform Division of Income for Tax Purposes Act (UDITPA or the Uniform Act; § 25120 et seq.). Our conclusion would not change even if the income could be characterized as from intangible goodwill within the meaning of section 17952, because we agree the goodwill acquired a business situs here, subjecting it to taxation in this state. We affirm the judgment. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Many of the key background facts are undisputed. We state them from the parties’ respective separate statements and the undisputed evidence in the record, viewing other facts in the light most favorable to plaintiffs. (See

3 B.H. v. County of San Bernardino (2015) 62 Cal.4th 168, 178; County of San Diego v. Superior Court (2015) 242 Cal.App.4th 460, 467.) In 2014, the Family Trust and the Evan Trust were respectively 20 percent and 39.5 percent shareholders of Pabst, a Delaware subchapter S corporation based in Connecticut. Pabst Holdings, Inc. is a wholly owned subsidiary of Pabst, and Pabst Brewing, as well as Falstaff Brewing Corporation, are wholly owned by Pabst Holdings, Inc. Pabst did business in California as Pabst Brewing. Pabst and its subsidiaries are what is termed a

“unitary” business.2 In November 2014, Pabst sold Pabst Holdings, Inc. in a transaction that Pabst treated for tax purposes as an asset sale under the Internal Revenue Code. The sale resulted in a long-term capital gain that Pabst reported as apportionable business income on its 2014 corporate tax return. Pabst allocated 6.6 percent of that income to the State of California. The return identified over 99 percent of the long-term capital gain as from the sale of “brand [and] intangibles.” (Capitalization omitted.) As Pabst shareholders, the Family Trust and Evan Trust each received a California Schedule K-1 form for tax year 2014, listing their respective distributive shares of income from Pabst for that year. The trustee reported

2 “ ‘A unitary business is generally defined as two or more business entities that are commonly owned and integrated in a way that transfers value among the affiliated entities.’ ” (Microsoft Corp. v. Franchise Tax Bd. (2006) 39 Cal.4th 750, 756, fn. 3; see also Jim Beam Brands Co. v. Franchise Tax Bd. (2005) 133 Cal.App.4th 514, 519, fn. 1.) Such a business “receives income ‘from or attributable to sources both within and without the state . . . .’ ” (Apple, Inc. v. Franchise Tax Bd. (2011) 199 Cal.App.4th 1, 9, quoting § 25101.) “[S]trong centralized management is important to the unitary business concept.” (Tenneco West, Inc. v. Franchise Tax Bd. (1991) 234 Cal.App.3d 1510, 1526.)

4 the income as apportionable to California on the trusts’ respective 2014 California Form 541 fiduciary income tax returns. The Family Trust and Evan Trust respectively paid $1,202,841 and $2,375,612 in taxes on the income received from the sale. In June 2016, the trustee filed amended 2014 tax returns on behalf of the trusts, seeking refunds of the amounts paid. The FTB issued proposed denials of the requests in May 2017. The trusts then appealed the denials to the now Office of Tax Appeals. Following a hearing on the matter, the Office of Tax Appeals issued a decision upholding the FTB’s decision to deny the refunds. (Appeals of Metropoulos Family Trust (Cal. OTA, Nov. 7, 2019, Nos. 18010012, 180100013) 2019 WL 7565283.) Two of the three administrative law judges reasoned that regulation 17951-4 contained “an explicit set of instructions” requiring business income be apportioned at the S corporation level, then geographically sourced to California under regulation 17951-4(d) for multistate unitary S corporations. In March 2020, the trustee and trusts filed this action against the FTB

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