Anderson, Clayton & Co., Plaintiff-Appellee-Cross-Appellant v. United States of America, Defendant-Appellant-Cross-Appellee

562 F.2d 972
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 20, 1977
Docket75-2573
StatusPublished
Cited by123 cases

This text of 562 F.2d 972 (Anderson, Clayton & Co., Plaintiff-Appellee-Cross-Appellant v. United States of America, Defendant-Appellant-Cross-Appellee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson, Clayton & Co., Plaintiff-Appellee-Cross-Appellant v. United States of America, Defendant-Appellant-Cross-Appellee, 562 F.2d 972 (5th Cir. 1977).

Opinion

GOLDBERG, Circuit Judge:

Anderson, Clayton Co. (taxpayer) brought this refund action to recover federal income taxes paid for Í964* Two discrete tax matters are involved. The first matter involves determining the geographic source of a minimum distribution to taxpayer of a foreign subsidiary’s “subpart F income” for the purpose of computing the per-eountry limitation on the foreign tax credit allowed taxpayer under I.R.C. § 904(a)(1). 1 The second matter concerns promissory notes distributed to taxpayer as dividends by a foreign subsidiary. The question is whether the taxpayer realized a deductible loss from the decline in exchange value of the notes, which were payable in a foreign currency.

The first matter will turn initially on the applicability, retroactivity, and validity of a treasury regulation governing • the “sourcing” of dividends that was promulgated after the district court’s 'decision in this case. 2 We find the regulation, applicable, retroactive, and valid and r'everse the district court’s judgment for the taxpayer on this issue. The second matter will turn on the putative collateral estoppel effect of a Court of Claims decision that, contrary to accepted tax practice, allowed the taxpayer a loss deduction for the wartime decline in exchange value of foreign currency holdings that had not been converted into dollars. 3 We hold that the government was not collaterally estopped and affirm the district court’s judgment for the government on this issue.

SOURCE OF A MINIMUM DISTRIBUTION OF SUBPART F INCOME

I.

Taxpayer is a large, widely-held corporation engaged along with its subsidiaries in activities including the merchandising of cotton, coffee, and other commodities, financing various crops, and manufacturing and selling food products. In its income tax return for fiscal 1964, 4 taxpayer, as *975 authorized by § 963 of the Code, elected to report as income a minimum distribution of earnings and profits in the amount of $4,684,233.96 from its Swiss subsidiary, Anderson, Clayton & Co., S. A. (hereinafter Lausanne). By electing to report the minimum distribution as income in 1964, the taxpayer avoided the necessity of reporting as its own income all of Lausanne’s subpart F income, as otherwise required by § 951(a)(1)(A) of the Code.

The bulk of Lausanne’s subpart F income for 1964 was foreign base company sales income derived from sales of commodities grown or produced within the countries of Argentina, Brazil, and Peru. Subsidiary corporations of the taxpayer domiciled in those countries sold the commodities to Lausanne, which then resold the goods in the countries of their origin to unaffiliated customers in arms-length transactions.

Lausanne paid no tax on its earnings from these sales to any of the South American countries in which it transferred title to the merchandise. It paid tax on the accrued profits only to Switzerland.

When taxpayer computed its fo.reign tax credits under the per-country limitation of § 904(a)(1) of the Code, it treated $13,659 of the minimum distribution as income sourced in Argentina, $3,233,293 of the minimum distribution as income sourced in Brazil, and $15,517.49 of the minimum distribution as income sourced in Peru. That Lausanne earned those amounts in those countries is undisputed. The Commissioner determined, however, that for the purpose of computing the per-country limitation on foreign tax credits, all of the distribution from Lausanne had its source in Switzerland, the country of Lausanne’s incorporation. On February 14, 1972, the taxpayer filed a refund action in district court.

The sole issue is the source for foreign tax credit limitation purposes of those portions of the minimum distribution from Lausanne that Lausanne earned in Argentina, Brazil, and Peru, respectively. The taxpayer asserted below that the distribution should be sourced where the profits comprising it were earned. The government asserted that the distribution should be sourced where the subsidiary that earned the profits was incorporated.

The district court determined that because the Secretary of the Treasury had withdrawn and not formally reenacted a regulation supporting the Commissioner’s position, the taxpayer was entitled to prevail. The lower court thus failed to decide whether the sourcing rule proposed by the taxpayer or that proposed by the government more faithfully carried out Congress’s purpose regarding the interplay between subpart F, which governs the tax treatment of the foreign source income of a controlled foreign corporation, and the Code provisions governing the computation of the foreign tax credit. Rather, the trial court appears to have taken the position that the government’s failure to issue a treasury regulation embodying its view left the field open for taxpayer’s proposed sourcing rule, the merits of which it left entirely unexamined.

On October 2,1975, the Treasury adopted Treas.Reg. § 1.902-3(d)(l) (1975), which provides that for purposes of the per-country limitation of the foreign tax credit, the dividend received by a domestic shareholder from a first-tier subsidiary corporation shall be deemed to be derived from sources within the country in which the first-tier corporation is incorporated. 5

*976 If Treas.Reg. § 1.902-3(d)(l) does in fact speak to the point at issue, if it is retroactively applicable to the case at bar, and if the regulation is valid, then we would no longer be faced with the question whether as an original matter the taxpayer’s proposed sourcing rule or the government’s rule more faithfully carries out Congress’s purpose with respect to the interplay between subpart F and the foreign tax credit provisions. Insofar as the regulation may be characterized as a legislative rule, it is as binding on a court as a statute. See Kramertown, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 488 F.2d 728 (5th Cir. 1974); K. Davis, Administrative Law § 5.03 (3d ed. 1972). 6

Before addressing the questions whether Treas.Reg. § 1.902-3(d)(l) is valid and whether it is retroactively applicable to the case at bar, we need to place the regulation in the context of the complex statutory scheme regarding the tax treatment of sub-part F income. 7 After attempting to gain an overview of that scheme and how it relates to the Code’s provisions regarding the foreign tax credit, we shall consider whether the regulation applies to the case at bar.

II.

Prior to 1962, the foreign source income of a foreign corporation was not subject to United States income tax until distributed as dividends to its United States shareholders. 8 If the domestic shareholder was a corporation, it was eligible for foreign tax credit.

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Bluebook (online)
562 F.2d 972, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-clayton-co-plaintiff-appellee-cross-appellant-v-united-ca5-1977.