Benenson v. Comm'r

910 F.3d 690
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedDecember 14, 2018
Docket16-2953-ag; August Term 2017
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 910 F.3d 690 (Benenson v. Comm'r) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Benenson v. Comm'r, 910 F.3d 690 (2d Cir. 2018).

Opinion

Reena Raggi, Circuit Judge:

At issue on this appeal is a decision of the United States Tax Court (Kathleen Kerrigan, Judge ), upholding tax deficiencies noticed by respondent Commissioner for tax year 2008 against (1) petitioners, James Benenson, Jr. ("Benenson, Jr.") and his wife Sharen Benenson; (2) petitioners' adult sons, James Benenson III and Clement Benenson ("Benenson sons" or "sons"); and (3) Summa Holdings, Inc. ("Summa"), a C corporation founded and, in 2008, still controlled by Benenson, Jr. See Summa Holdings, Inc. v. Comm'r, 109 T.C.M. (CCH) 1612 (2015). The Commissioner identified these deficiencies by applying the substance-over-form doctrine to recharacterize a series of concededly lawful tax-avoiding transactions as tax-generating events.

These transactions included (1) Summa's payments, totaling $2.2 million, in genuine export income as tax-deductible commissions to a qualified domestic international sales corporation ("DISC"); (2) the DISC's payment of $2.2 million in taxable dividends to its sole shareholder, a *693 holding company owned by the Benenson sons' individual retirement accounts ("IRA"); (3) the holding company's after-tax payment of $1.477 million in non-taxable dividends to the Benenson sons' IRAs. There is no question that the "sole reason" for the taxpayers to enter into these aforementioned transactions "was to transfer money into the [sons'] IRAs so that income on assets in the Roth IRAs could accumulate and be distributed on a tax-free basis." App'x 102. They stipulated as much in the Tax Court. The Commissioner concedes that, in form, the money transfers present as lawful, non-taxable returns on IRA investments. Nevertheless, he maintains that, in substance, the transfers effect excess IRA contributions subject to excise taxes. Accordingly, he noticed deficiencies against the sons for such taxes. Further, concluding that the excess contributions derived from the $2.2 million that Summa had treated as deductible DISC commissions, the Commissioner recharacterized those commissions as non-deductible constructive dividends to Summa shareholders, specifically, Benenson, Jr. and a Benenson family trust, thereby triggering income tax deficiencies for Summa, petitioners, and the trust. 1

Consistent with their diverse residences in Massachusetts (Benenson sons), New York (petitioners), and Ohio (Summa), the taxpayers appealed the Tax Court's judgment to the First, Second, and Sixth Circuits respectively. See 26 U.S.C. § 7482 (b) (establishing taxpayer residence as appropriate venue for appeals from Tax Court). The First and Sixth Circuits have now reversed the judgment as it pertains to the Benenson sons and Summa, concluding that the substance-over-form doctrine does not support the Commissioner's recharacterization either of Summa's deductible DISC commission payments as non-deductible constructive dividends to its shareholders, see Summa Holdings, Inc. v. Comm'r (" Summa v. Comm'r "), 848 F.3d 779 (6th Cir. 2017) ; or of the holding company's dividend payments to the sons' IRAs as excess contributions, see Benenson v. Comm'r , 887 F.3d 511 (1st Cir. 2018). On this appeal, we consider petitioners' challenge to the same Tax Court decision as it pertains to them and also reverse.

BACKGROUND

We assume readers' familiarity with the First and Sixth Circuits' opinions, particularly their detailed discussions of the transactions at issue and the tax code provisions relevant to those transactions. We, therefore, only briefly summarize these matters as pertinent to petitioners' appeal.

I. DISCs and IRAs

The transactions at issue sought to take advantage of the tax-minimizing features of two creatures of federal law, DISCs and IRAs.

Congress created DISCs to provide domestic companies with tax incentives to increase exports. See LeCroy Research Sys. Corp. v. Comm'r , 751 F.2d 123 , 124 (2d Cir. 1984) ; see also Benenson v. Comm'r , 887 F.3d at 514 ; Summa v. Comm'r , 848 F.3d at 782 . Toward that end, the tax code allows companies to avoid corporate tax on export income up to 4% of gross export receipts (or 50% of net export income), by paying that amount as tax-deductible *694 "commissions" to a DISC. See 26 U.S.C. §§ 993 (a)(1), (f) ; 994(a). The DISC itself pays no tax on the commission income. See id. § 991. Rather, tax obligations arise only for DISC shareholders when the DISC distributes dividends to them. See id. § 995(a), (b)(1)(E). Thus, tax liability on export income, when channeled through a DISC, can not only be deferred until such distribution, but also can be reduced by application of the dividend tax rate rather than the higher corporate rate that would otherwise apply to export revenues. See Summa v. Comm'r , 848 F.3d at 782 (citing relevant statutory provisions in observing that "net effect" of DISC is "to transfer export revenue to the export company's shareholders as a dividend without taxing it first as corporate income"). These benefits obtain even if, as is frequently the case, the exporter and the DISC are related entities and commission transactions between them are not conducted at arms-length. See

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910 F.3d 690, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benenson-v-commr-ca2-2018.