Alumax Inc. v. Comr. of IRS

165 F.3d 822
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 21, 1999
Docket98-8005
StatusPublished

This text of 165 F.3d 822 (Alumax Inc. v. Comr. of IRS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alumax Inc. v. Comr. of IRS, 165 F.3d 822 (11th Cir. 1999).

Opinion

[ PUBLISH]

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT ________________________ FILED U.S. COURT OF APPEALS No. 98-8005 ELEVENTH CIRCUIT ________________________ 1/21/99 THOMAS K. KAHN U.S. Tax Court No. 7779-95 CLERK

ALUMAX INC. AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES,

Petitioners-Appellants,

versus

COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE,

Respondent-Appellee.

________________________

Appeal from a Decision of the United States Tax Court _________________________

(January 21, 1999)

Before COX, CARNES and HULL, Circuit Judges.

COX, Circuit Judge: Alumax Inc. appeals a tax court decision concluding that Alumax owes about $129,000,000

in taxes for the years 1981-86. The tax court’s decision rested on its ruling that for the years 1984-

86 Alumax could not join the consolidated return of one of its shareholders, AMAX Inc., under

Internal Revenue Code §§ 1501 and 1504(a). We affirm.

I. Background

No one challenges the tax court’s findings of fact, and it is on those that we rely. Alumax

is a Delaware corporation and Atlanta-based manufacturer of aluminum products. Since 1974,

Alumax’s voting stock has belonged to Amax and to a changing group of Japanese interests that has

included at various times Mitsui & Co., Ltd., and Nippon Steel Corporation. From 1974 until 1984,

Amax and the Japanese interests shared power equally: in shareholder matters, board election, and

board voting, each controlled 50% of the votes. Amax and the Japanese interests also shared

dividends equally.

At the beginning of 1984, however, Alumax underwent a significant restructuring. First,

shareholder votes were redistributed. While Alumax and the Japanese interests continued to hold

equal numbers of common shares, Amax held stock of a class that had four votes per share while

the Japanese-interest stock belonged to a class with only one vote per share. Amax thus had a four-

to-one advantage over the Japanese interests in most shareholder matters. But Amax’s voting power

had its limits. A majority of each class of stock had to approve any action touching any of the

following six matters:

• any merger; • purchase or sale of any asset worth at least 5% of Alumax’s net worth (about $36 million between 1984 and 1986); • partial or complete liquidation or dissolution of Alumax; • capital appropriation or asset disposition worth more than $30 million (about 1.8% of Alumax’s total assets);

2 • election or dismissal of Alumax’s chief executive officer; and • loans to affiliated corporations not in the ordinary course of business.

Amax’s voting advantage did, however, extend to the election of Alumax’s board of

directors: the Amax shares were entitled to elect four of the board’s six voting members, while the

Japanese interests could select only two. The Amax-elected directors each held two votes,

moreover, while the Japanese-interest directors had only one each.1 While this arrangement gave

the Amax-elected directors 80% voting power over most matters, the Amax-elected directors

suffered the same limitations on their powers as Amax did as a shareholder: in the same six matters

listed above, any action had to be approved by a majority of the Amax-elected directors and a

majority of the Japanese-interest directors.

There was yet another restriction on the Amax directors’ authority. If any Japanese-interest

director objected to a board action, and that objection was ratified within fourteen days by the

Japanese corporation, then the Alumax board vote would become ineffective. Amax had an out:

upon notice within five days, Amax could challenge the “veto,” and the vote would become effective

if Amax persuaded a panel of arbitrators (who had fourteen days to rule) that the vote would not

have a material and adverse effect on the Japanese interests’ investment. On the other hand, if

Amax challenged the “veto,” but lost before the panel of arbitrators, the vote would remain

ineffective.2 In that situation, furthermore, the Japanese interests could buy all or part of Amax’s

Alumax stock at a discount.3

1 The directors selected one nonvoting director, necessarily an Alumax employee, and Alumax’s chief executive officer served ex officio as another nonvoting member. 2 An analogous “veto” provision applied to shareholder votes as well. 3 This call provision was subject to Amax’s right to convert its shares into shares of another class that, unlike the shares Amax owned, had only one vote. The conversion would

3 Besides these limitations on the voting authority of the Amax-elected directors, Alumax’s

board itself suffered a significant limitation on its traditional authority. Absent contrary provision

in corporate documents, under Delaware law the board of directors determines when and in what

amount distributions will be made, subject to priorities awarded to certain classes of stock. See, e.g.,

Del. Code Ann. tit. 8, § 170; see also Model Business Corp. Act § 6.40(a); 11 Timothy P. Bjur &

James Solheim, Fletcher Cyclopedia of the Law of Private Corporations § 5320, at 633 (perm. ed.

1995). Alumax’s certificate of incorporation, however, required Alumax to pay dividends

amounting to 35% of its net income. Those dividends were not divided equally: the Japanese

interests received 80%, Amax only 20%.

During the tax years 1984 through 1986, Alumax was included on Amax’s consolidated tax

return. This consolidation yielded a tax benefit to Alumax, which was able to offset its profits with

losses from other Amax subsidiaries and to carry back general business credits to previous years.

The Internal Revenue Service determined that consolidation was not allowed for the years 1984-86

under I.R.C. §§ 1501 and 1504(a) because Amax did not have 80% of the voting power in Alumax.

Alumax challenged this determination in tax court, lost, and now appeals, arguing that it is entitled

to join the consolidated return of Amax’s family of corporations. Because the issue presented is

solely one of law, our review is de novo. See Blohm v. Commissioner, 994 F.2d 1542, 1548 (11th

Cir. 1993).

II. Discussion

Under I.R.C. § 1501, corporations belonging to an “affiliated group” may file a consolidated

preserve Amax’s interest in Alumax, therefore, but deprive Amax of its supermajority voting power.

4 return. In 1984 (the relevant year for our purposes), I.R.C. § 1504(a)(2) defined “affiliated group”

to mean a member of a chain of corporations in which a parent “owns directly stock possessing at

least 80 percent of the voting power of all classes of stock.” Congress amended § 1504(a) in 1984

to create a two-pronged test for “affiliated group”: loosely stated, a subsidiary may now join the

return of a parent that holds both 80% of the voting power in the subsidiary and 80% of the

subsidiary’s stock, measured by value. Deficit Reduction Act of 1984 § 60(a), Pub. L. No. 98-369,

§ 60(a), 98 Stat. 494, 577-79. This amendment contained a grandfather clause, however, that

extended the pre-1984 test through 1988 for all corporations that met the old test on June 22, 1984.

See id. § 60(b)(2). Alumax completed its 1984 restructuring before that date. Hence, if the

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