Celia Mazzei v. Cir

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJune 2, 2021
Docket18-72451
StatusPublished

This text of Celia Mazzei v. Cir (Celia Mazzei v. Cir) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Celia Mazzei v. Cir, (9th Cir. 2021).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

CELIA MAZZEI; ANGELO L. MAZZEI; No. 18-72451 MARY E. MAZZEI, Petitioners-Appellants, Tax Ct. Nos. 16702-09 v. 16779-09

COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, OPINION Respondent-Appellee.

Appeal from a Decision of the United States Tax Court

Argued and Submitted February 14, 2020 Pasadena, California

Filed June 2, 2021

Before: Jay S. Bybee and Daniel P. Collins, Circuit Judges, and Barry Ted Moskowitz, * District Judge.

Opinion by Judge Collins

* The Honorable Barry Ted Moskowitz, United States District Judge for the Southern District of California, sitting by designation. 2 MAZZEI V. CIR

SUMMARY **

Tax

The panel reversed a decision by the full Tax Court in favor of the Commissioner on a petition for redetermination of federal excise tax deficiency, in a case involving the use of a Foreign Sales Corporation to reduce the tax paid on income that was then distributed as dividends to Roth Individual Retirement Accounts.

Appellants established a FSC under since-repealed provisions of Internal Revenue Code §§ 921–927 (the FSC statute). Under the FSC statute, a corporation with foreign trade income could establish a related FSC as a shell corporation and then effectively cycle a portion of that income through the FSC where it would be taxed at lower rates. As a result, the FSC’s taxable income was generated through related-party transactions that lacked meaningful economic substance. The FSC taxation rules thus reflected a departure from the normal principle that taxation is based on economic substance rather than on legal form.

Appellants made their Roth IRAs formal shareholders of their FSC. Appellants’ export corporation paid commissions into the FSC, and the FSC’s after-tax income was returned as dividends and distributed to appellants’ IRAs rather than to their export corporation. As a result, no tax was paid when the money was received into the Roth IRAs, and no tax would be paid on qualified withdrawals from the Roth IRAs.

** This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader. MAZZEI V. CIR 3

The Commissioner challenged this scheme, asking the Tax Court to recharacterize the entire scheme under the doctrine of substance over form. The Tax Court held that, under substance-over-form principles, appellants—not the Roth IRAs—were the real owners of the FSC. This meant that appellants should be deemed to have received the dividends, their contributions to the Roth IRAs exceeded the statutory limits for such contributions, and appellants were consequently liable for excise taxes on the excess contributions.

The panel concluded that, due to the unusual statutory provisions at issue here, the Tax Court erred by invoking substance-over-form principles to effectively reverse congressional judgment and to disallow what the statute plainly allowed. The panel joined three other circuits that have similarly disallowed the invocation of substance-over- form principles to undo the congressionally authorized separation of substance and form that is involved in an entity similar to the FSC at issue here.

COUNSEL

Lewis R. Walton Jr. (argued) and Lewis R. Walton, Walton & Walton LLP, Marina Del Ray, California, for Petitioners- Appellants.

Judith A. Hagley (argued), Gilbert S. Rothenberg, and Teresa E. McLaughlin, Attorneys, Tax Division; Richard E. Zuckerman, Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General; United States Department of Justice, Washington, D.C.; for Respondent-Appellee. 4 MAZZEI V. CIR

OPINION

COLLINS, Circuit Judge:

Angelo, Mary, and Celia Mazzei appeal the Tax Court’s ruling that they are liable for excise taxes for having made excess contributions to their Roth Individual Retirement Accounts (“IRAs”). Invoking substance-over-form principles, the Commissioner insists that the dividends that the Mazzeis’ Roth IRAs received from a specific corporation were actually contributions from the Mazzeis, because the Commissioner deemed the Mazzeis, rather than the IRAs, to be the real owners of that corporation. Over the vigorous dissent of four judges, the full Tax Court sided with the Commissioner. Because we conclude that the unusual statutory provisions at issue here expressly elevated form over substance in the relevant respects, the Tax Court erred by invoking substance-over-form principles to effectively reverse that congressional judgment and to disallow what the statute plainly allowed.

The underlying dispute arises from the Mazzeis’ establishment of a Foreign Sales Corporation (“FSC”) under the since-repealed provisions of Internal Revenue Code §§ 921–927 (“the FSC statute”). As we explain in detail below, FSCs were an unusual type of corporation that Congress first authorized in 1984 to promote exports and that the World Trade Organization held in 2000 constituted an impermissible trade subsidy. Under the FSC statute, a corporation with foreign trade income could establish a related FSC as a shell corporation and then effectively cycle a portion of that income through the FSC where it would be taxed at lower rates. Specifically, the export corporation could pay tax-deductible “commissions” to the FSC that did not correspond to any actual services provided by the FSC but that were instead determined according to complex MAZZEI V. CIR 5

statutory formulas. The FSC would pay a modest tax on the resulting income, and the FSC would then return the remaining income back to the export corporation (or a related entity) as dividends, usually tax-free. As a result, the FSC’s taxable income was largely generated through related-party transactions that lacked meaningful economic substance, and the FSC taxation rules thus reflected a sharp departure from the normal principle that taxation is based on economic substance rather than on legal form.

The Mazzeis (and many others) took this one step further by having their Roth IRAs be the formal shareholders of the FSC. This meant that, when the FSC’s after-tax income was being returned as dividends, it was distributed to the IRAs rather than to the export corporation that had paid the commissions into the FSC. As a result, no tax was paid when the money was received into the Roth IRAs, no tax would be paid on the growth of those funds over time, and no tax would be paid if and when the Mazzeis made qualified withdrawals from the Roth IRAs. The Commissioner thought that this arrangement was too good to be true, and he challenged what the Mazzeis had done here, as well as similar arrangements involving other taxpayers invoking related strategies. The Tax Court declined to adopt the Commissioner’s broad effort to recharacterize the relevant transactions as a whole, and the court instead held only that, under substance-over-form principles, the Mazzeis rather than the Roth IRAs were the real owners of the FSC. That meant that the Mazzeis should be deemed to have received the dividends. And that meant, in turn, that the Roth IRAs received those funds as contributions from the Mazzeis, and these were well in excess of the statutory limits on such contributions. As a result, the Tax Court concluded, the Mazzeis were liable for excise taxes on the excess contributions. 6 MAZZEI V. CIR

Three circuits have addressed comparable questions in the context of a similar type of corporation allowed by the Internal Revenue Code, namely, a Domestic International Sales Corporation (“DISC”). All three courts reversed the Tax Court and disallowed the invocation of substance-over- form principles to undo the congressionally authorized separation of substance and form that is involved in a DISC. We reach a similar conclusion as to FSCs here, and we therefore reverse the judgment of the Tax Court.

I

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