Coldwater Seafood Corp. v. Commissioner

69 T.C. 966, 1978 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 152
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1978
DocketDocket No. 8244-74
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 69 T.C. 966 (Coldwater Seafood Corp. v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coldwater Seafood Corp. v. Commissioner, 69 T.C. 966, 1978 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 152 (tax 1978).

Opinion

Featherston, Judge:

Respondent determined the following deficiencies in petitioner’s withholding tax and additions to tax under section 6651(a):1

Addition
Year Deficiency (sec. 6651(a))
1963 .$65,641 $16,410
1964 . 69,096 17,274
1965 . 55,579 13,894
1966 . 60,839 15,209
1967 . 72,744 18,186
1968 . 70,324 17,581
1969 . 21,546 0^
Total .415,769 98,554

The issues for decision are as follows:

1. Whether certain quarterly payments made by petitioner to the Association of Icelandic Freezing Plants during 1963 through 1969 were interest paid to a foreign corporation and thus subject to income tax withholding at a rate of 30 percent pursuant to sections 1441 and 1442.

2. Whether petitioner’s failure to file United States Annual Returns for Income Tax to be Paid at Source, Forms 1042, for 1963 through 1968, was due to its willful neglect and not due to reasonable cause within the meaning of section 6651(a).

FINDINGS OF FACT

Coldwater Seafood Corp. (hereinafter referred to as petitioner) was a corporation organized under the laws of the State of New York. When it filed its petition, its principal offices were in Scarsdale, N. Y. Petitioner filed its Federal income tax returns for 1963 through 1968 with the District Director of Internal Revenue, Manhattan District, N. Y., and for 1969 with the Internal Revenue Service Center, Andover, Mass. For 1963 through 1968, petitioner failed to file Form 1042, United States Annual Return of Income Tax to be Paid at Source. Petitioner filed a Form 1042 for 1969, but did not report as interest the payments here in dispute.

Petitioner is a wholly owned subsidiary of Solumidstod Hradfrystihusanna (Association of Icelandic Freezing Plants, hereinafter Icelandic), a cooperative association organized under the laws of Iceland. Icelandic’s members are freezing plant operators which catch, fillet, and freeze fish. Icelandic sells its members’ frozen food products, mainly in the international market, and purchases essential supplies for them. All of Icelandic’s sales in the United States are made to petitioner.

Prior to January 1,1963, petitioner sold seafood as Icelandic’s commission agent. During the years in issue, however, petitioner bought seafood from Icelandic and resold it. Icelandic was not directly engaged in a United States trade or business.

The pre-1963 arrangement between Icelandic and petitioner became unacceptable to Icelandic and its members because there was a long delay, sometimes as much as 12 months, between Icelandic’s shipments to the United States and its receipt of payment therefor. Yet the freezing plant operators needed to be paid promptly for their fish. In contrast, Icelandic was usually able to collect accounts from unrelated importers in other countries through such arrangements as letters of credit or cash against documents within 10 days of the shipment.

In order to remedy this situation, Icelandic advised petitioner’s management that, after January 1, 1963, it would be necessary for petitioner to make arrangements to pay for the seafood it received on terms and conditions similar to those on which Icelandic dealt with unrelated importers in other countries. Petitioner’s management was advised further that if arrangements could not be made for Icelandic to be paid more promptly, petitioner would be sold or dissolved. Petitioner, however, did not have enough operating capital to make immediate payment for Icelandic’s seafood, either by letters of credit or cash against documents. Moreover, petitioner, alone, did not have sufficient capital to support credit arrangements to the extent needed to cover the purchases.

In 1963, Icelandic entered into a financial arrangement with Landsbanki Islands (also known as the National Bank of Iceland, hereinafter NBI), the Export-Import Bank of Washington, D. C., and the First National City Bank of New York (Citibank). Under this arrangement, NBI established a line of credit with Citibank, and Citibank honored drafts drawn on it by NBI based on shipping documents. The Export-Import Bank agreed to guarantee payment of 50 percent of each draft issued to NBI and accepted by Citibank under the credit line in a total amount not to exceed $4 million at any one time. All drafts drawn by NBI on Citibank under this arrangement were to mature within 180 days.

Pursuant to this arrangement, most of Icelandic’s sales to petitioner were structured as follows:

1. On shipment of the seafood to petitioner, Icelandic would present the shipping documents to NBI, and NBI would draw upon Citibank a draft payable to itself in an amount not exceeding 85 percent of the invoice price of the shipment. Such invoice price reflected the prevailing price of the seafood at the point of delivery.

2. Upon acceptance of the draft, Citibank would credit NBI’s account with the amount thereof less certain discounts and commissions as follows:

(a)Citibank would discount the draft at the prevailing rate for bankers’ acceptances, based on the number of days until maturity. The average unregulated prorated discount rates on 180-day bankers’ acceptances for New York City and regional banks, including Citibank, were as follows:

Average rate Year (percent)
1968 .3.688
1964 . 4.042
1965 .4.531
Average rate Year (percent)
1966.5.521
1967. 4.948
1968.5.885

The discount rates for bankers’ acceptances with maturities less than 180 days each year was less than these percentages.

(b) Citibank would deduct, for transmittal to Export-Import Bank, a fee of 1 percent per annum of the portion of each accepted draft covered by the guaranty.

(c) Citibank would deduct for itself an acceptance commission of 1 percent per annum on the Export-Import Bank guaranteed portion and 1% percent per annum on the remaining portion not covered by the guaranty and carried at Citibank’s own risk.

3. Upon receipt of the proceeds of the draft, NBI would deduct its commission charge and remit the balance to Icelandic for use in paying the freezing plant operators a part of the invoice price for their seafood.

4. The shipping documents covering the seafood were transmitted directly to petitioner but on the understanding that Citibank had acquired a security interest in them and the goods evidenced thereby.

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Coldwater Seafood Corp. v. Commissioner
69 T.C. 966 (U.S. Tax Court, 1978)

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Bluebook (online)
69 T.C. 966, 1978 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coldwater-seafood-corp-v-commissioner-tax-1978.