Crestek, Inc. & Subsidiaries v. Comm'r
This text of 149 T.C. No. 5 (Crestek, Inc. & Subsidiaries v. Comm'r) 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.
Opinion
An order will be issued granting in part and denying in part respondent's motion for partial summary judgment.
P is the parent of a group of companies that includes a number of controlled foreign corporations (CFCs). Before FY 2008 one of P's domestic subsidiaries (S1) borrowed money from the CFCs, and those loans remained outstanding throughout FY 2008 and 2009. S1 before FY 2008 also borrowed money from a Malaysian bank. CFC-1, P's Malaysian subsidiary, guaranteed this loan.
Before mid-2005 CFC-1 sold completed products to another domestic subsidiary (S2), for which S2 incurred payment obligations in the form of trade receivables. CFC-1 ceased manufacturing operations in mid-2005. The net trade receivable balance owed by S2 to CFC-1 remained constant at $7.92 million from mid-2005 through the end of FY 2009.
After mid-2005 CFC-2 assumed the manufacturing activities of CFC-1 and sold completed products to S2. The net trade receivable balance owed by S2 to CFC-2 rose from $8.87 million in the first quarter of FY 2007 to $18.41 million in the last quarter of FY 2009.
R determined that all of these transactions gave rise to investments in "United States property" under
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LAUBER,
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An order will be issued granting in part and denying in part respondent's motion for partial summary judgment.
P is the parent of a group of companies that includes a number of controlled foreign corporations (CFCs). Before FY 2008 one of P's domestic subsidiaries (S1) borrowed money from the CFCs, and those loans remained outstanding throughout FY 2008 and 2009. S1 before FY 2008 also borrowed money from a Malaysian bank. CFC-1, P's Malaysian subsidiary, guaranteed this loan.
Before mid-2005 CFC-1 sold completed products to another domestic subsidiary (S2), for which S2 incurred payment obligations in the form of trade receivables. CFC-1 ceased manufacturing operations in mid-2005. The net trade receivable balance owed by S2 to CFC-1 remained constant at $7.92 million from mid-2005 through the end of FY 2009.
After mid-2005 CFC-2 assumed the manufacturing activities of CFC-1 and sold completed products to S2. The net trade receivable balance owed by S2 to CFC-2 rose from $8.87 million in the first quarter of FY 2007 to $18.41 million in the last quarter of FY 2009.
R determined that all of these transactions gave rise to investments in "United States property" under
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LAUBER,
| FYE 2008 | $10,056,605 | $2,011,321 |
| FYE 2009 | 2,156,699 | 431,340 |
This case is currently before the Court on respondent's motion for partial summary judgment filed under
We conclude that the first and second issues may appropriately be adjudicated summarily and that respondent is entitled to summary judgment that the intercompany loans and the loan guaranty constituted investments in "United States property" within the meaning of
The following facts are derived from the parties' pleadings and motion papers, including the declarations and the exhibits attached thereto. Crestek, Inc. (petitioner), is a C corporation incorporated in Delaware.*40 It had its principal place of business in New Jersey at the time it filed its petition.
Petitioner is the parent of a group of more than 40 companies that manufacture and sell ultrasonic equipment, industrial cleaning tanks, cleaning systems, ceramics, subassemblies, and wire bonding equipment. The primary markets for petitioner's products are semiconductor manufacturing companies and companies that engage in industrial testing. Petitioner and its domestic subsidiaries file a consolidated Federal income tax return. Petitioner's foreign subsidiaries during the tax periods at issue conducted operations primarily in Europe and Asia, with substantial manufacturing facilities in Malaysia.
Petitioner is the sole shareholder of the Crest Group Inc. (CGI), a Delaware corporation. CGI is the sole shareholder of one domestic subsidiary and four foreign subsidiaries. CGI's domestic subsidiary is Crest Ultrasonics Corp. (Ultrasonics). CGI's foreign subsidiaries are Crest Ultrasonics Malaysia (CUM), a Malaysian corporation; Advanced Ceramics Technology Malaysia (ACTM), a Malaysian corporation; KLN Mecasonic BV (Mecasonic), a Dutch limited liability company; and Crest Europe ApS (Crest Europe), a*41 Danish corporation. Crest Europe was the sole shareholder of Crest Europe GmbH (CrestGermany), a German corporation. All five foreign subsidiaries were CFCs within the meaning of
At various times before FYE 2008 CUM, Mecasonic, Crest Europe, and CrestGermany had made loans to CGI. Substantial balances on these loans remained outstanding throughout the tax periods at issue. The CFCs, apart from Crest Germany, extended no additional credit to CGI during FYE 2008 or 2009.
At the close of the first quarter of FYE 2008, the outstanding intercompany loan balances owed by CGI to CUM, Crest Europe, and Mecasonic were $10,619,585, $3,795,905, and $3,450,000, respectively. These balances remained constant for the seven succeeding calendar quarters. At the close of the first quarter of FYE 2008 the outstanding intercompany loan balance owed by CGI to Crest Germany was $711,467; that balance remained constant for the rest of FYE 2008. At the close of the first quarter*42 of FYE 2009, the outstanding intercompany loan balance owed by CGI to Crest Germany was $754,155; that balance remained constant for the rest of FYE 2009. Neither petitioner nor CGI had previously included in income, for any year before FYE 2008, any portion of these outstanding loan balances.
B. Guaranty Transaction
In February 2001 CGI borrowed $11 million from the Bank of Islam, a Malaysian bank. This loan was structured as a "debenture," a debt instrument used to borrow for medium- to long-term periods. As a condition of extending credit, the Bank of Islam required CGI to secure a guaranty for the loan. CUM, one of petitioner's Malaysian CFCs, supplied the required guaranty.
Although the debenture recites that a guaranty "executed by * * * [CUM] in favour of the Bank" was attached, petitioner has been unable to produce the document by which CUM supplied its guaranty. Thus, it is not entirely clear what assets CUM pledged directly as security for CGI's loan. However, the debenture required CGI to pledge as security for the Bank of Islam loan "all stocks [and] shares" that CGI then owned or thereafter acquired, as well as "all the rights, titles, and interests" and "the benefits of*43 all rights, securities, and guarantees of any nature whatsoever" that CGI then held or thereafter acquired.
The Bank of Islam loan had an outstanding balance of $10.7 million at the end of the first quarter of FYE 2008, which remained constant for the succeeding seven calendar quarters. CUM's guaranty of this loan remained in place continuously from February 2001 through the end of FYE 2009. Neither petitioner nor CGI had previously included in income, for any year before FYE 2008, any portion of this outstanding loan balance.
Before 2005 CUM purchased raw materials from Ultrasonics to use in manufacturing its products. CUM later sold its completed products to Ultrasonics and others. CUM incurred payment obligations to Ultrasonics for the raw materials and recorded these outstanding obligations as intercompany trade payables. Conversely, Ultrasonics incurred payment obligations to CUM for the completed products, and CUM recorded these outstanding obligations as intercompany trade receivables.
CUM ceased its manufacturing operations sometime before June 30, 2005. During FYE 2008 and 2009 CUM had no trade payables of any kind to Ultrasonics or any other U.S. affiliate. But it had substantial trade receivables from Ultrasonics for completed products it had sold to Ultrasonics before 2006. The net trade receivable balance owed to CUM by Ultrasonics was $7,919,758 at the close of the first quarter of FYE 2008. That balance remained constant for the succeeding seven calendar quarters. Ultrasonics had previously included $2,184,843 of these trade receivables in gross income under
After CUM ceased its manufacturing operations, those operations were transferred to ACTM, which rented manufacturing facilities from CUM. ACTM continued to purchase raw materials from Ultrasonics to use in manufacturing its products and likewise sold its completed products to Ultrasonics and others. ACTM incurred payment obligations to Ultrasonics for the raw materials and recorded these outstanding obligations as intercompany trade payables. Conversely, Ultrasonics incurred payment obligations to ACTM for the completed products, and ACTM recorded these outstanding obligations as intercompany trade*45 receivables.
During FYE 2008 and 2009 ACTM held substantial net trade receivables from Ultrasonics for its completed product sales. The net amounts of trade receivables owed to ACTM by Ultrasonics for these tax periods, no portion of which had previously been included in petitioner's gross income, were as follows:
| 6/30/2007 | $8,865,115 |
| 9/30/2007 | 10,853,581 |
| 12/31/2007 | 13,093,149 |
| 3/31/2008 | 13,958,883 |
| 6/30/2008 | 15,839,753 |
| 9/30/2008 | 16,493,261 |
| 12/31/2008 | 17,692,050 |
| 3/31/2009 | 18,032,413 |
| 6/30/2009 | 18,413,224 |
At the close of FYE 2008 and 2009 petitioner's CFCs had previously untaxed E&P, denominated in euro for the European subsidiaries and in ringgit for the Malaysian subsidiaries, as follows:
| Crest Europe | €2,286,604 | €184,841 |
| Mecasonic | €6,287,221 | €4,942,213 |
| Crest Germany | €7,975,109 | €7,975,109 |
| CUM | RM67,274,466 | RM5,317,186 |
| ACTM | RM45,128,721 | RM11,046,314 |
Petitioner filed timely consolidated Forms 1120, U.S. Corporation Income Tax Return, for FYE 2008 and 2009. The IRS selected petitioner's returns for examination and determined that its CFCs during FYE 2008 and 2009 had held substantial investments in United States property, which petitioner had neglected to include in gross*46 income. As a result the IRS determined deficiencies and accuracy-related penalties as set forth above.
Summary judgment is intended to expedite litigation and avoid costly and unnecessary trials.
The moving party bears the burden of proving that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact. For this purpose the Court views all factual materials and inferences in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.
A CFC is a foreign corporation more than 50% of whose stock (in terms of voting*47 power or value) is owned (directly, indirectly, or constructively) by United States shareholders.
(1) the excess (if any) of (A) such shareholder's pro rata share of the average of the amounts of United States property held (directly or indirectly) by the controlled foreign corporation as of the close of each quarter of such taxable year, over (B) the amount of earnings and profits described in (2) such shareholder's pro rata share of the applicable earnings of such controlled foreign corporation.
"United States property" includes (among other things) "an obligation of a United States person."
For purposes of
"United States property" is defined to exclude specified types of property, including certain trade receivables. any obligation of a United States person arising in connection with the sale or processing of property if the amount of such obligation outstanding at no time during the taxable year exceeds the amount which would be ordinary and necessary to carry on the trade or business of both the other party to the sale or processing transaction and the United States person had the sale or processing transaction been made between unrelated persons * * *
The amount of the investment in United States property under
Respondent contends that petitioner's CFCs during FYE 2008 and 2009 held three sets of investments in United States property under
Petitioner first contends that all of respondent's adjustments are barred by the statute of limitations on assessment.
The IRS determined in the notice of deficiency that petitioner had omitted from gross income substantial amounts properly includible therein under
Second, petitioner observes that most of the proposed
Congress provided that the
The only relevant limitation is that a
Petitioner's final threshold argument is that, even if a
This argument, as petitioner articulates it, is misguided. Petitioner's own E&P--that is, the E&P of the U.S. parent corporation--are wholly irrelevant in determining the proper amount of a
With respect to the CFCs, two sets of tax attributes are potentially relevant: their "applicable earnings" and their "previously taxed earnings." See
In sum, we conclude that none of petitioner's threshold arguments precludes us from considering the issues that respondent presents for summary judgment. We therefore proceed to address the three sets of transactions that, in respondent's view, give rise to a
At various times before FYE 2008 CUM, Crest Europe, Mecasonic, and CrestGermany had made loans to CGI, and substantial balances on these loans remained outstanding during the tax periods at issue. At of the close of the first quarter of FYE 2008, the*55 outstanding intercompany loan balances owed by CGI to CUM, Crest Europe, and Mecasonic were $10,619,585, $3,795,905, and $3,450,000, respectively. These balances remained constant for the seven succeeding calendar quarters. At the close of the first quarter of FYE 2008, the outstanding intercompany loan balance owed by CGI to Crest Germany was $711,467; that balance remained constant for the rest of FYE 2008. At the close of the first quarter of FYE 2009, the outstanding intercompany loan balance owed by CGI to Crest Germany had risen to $754,155; that balance remained constant for the rest of FYE 2009.
Petitioner does not dispute that loans in these dollar amounts were outstanding at the times stated or that the loans constituted "obligation[s] of a United States person" within the meaning of
In its response to the motion for partial summary judgment,*56 petitioner asserts that "the trier of fact must determine if or when those loans were discharged." But in opposing a motion for summary judgment, the nonmoving party may not rest upon mere allegations or denials but instead "must set forth
In its declarations and discovery responses petitioner has admitted that "there have been no payments on principal for any of these loans" and that all of the loans listed above "continued to be outstanding throughout the relevant time periods ending * * * June 30, 2009." Loans that remain "outstanding" cannot have been "discharged." Petitioner has provided nothing but vague speculation on this point, unsupported by specific factual allegations of any kind. This is insufficient to withstand a properly supported motion for summary judgment.
Petitioner's alternative argument is equally unpersuasive. To the extent petitioner contends that the IRS*57 was obligated to make any
In sum, we conclude that the intercompany loan balance owed by CGI to each CFC constituted "United States property," within the meaning of
In February 2001 CGI borrowed $11 million from the Bank of Islam, a Malaysian bank. As a condition of extending credit the bank required CGI to secure a guaranty for the loan. CUM, one of petitioner's*58 Malaysian CFCs, supplied the required guaranty.
This loan had an outstanding balance of $10.7 million at the end of the first quarter of FYE 2008. The loan balance remained constant for the succeeding seven calendar quarters, and CUM's guarantee of the loan remained in place throughout this period. Neither petitioner nor CGI had previously included in income, for any year before FYE 2008, any portion of this outstanding loan balance.
Respondent contends that CUM, as a guarantor of the Bank of Islam loan, "is considered as holding the obligation of a United States person" under
Although CUM's status as a guarantor would be sufficient to support the grant of partial summary judgment for respondent, CUM also appears to have been a "pledgor" in support of the Bank of Islam loan. the pledge of stock of a controlled foreign corporation will be considered as the indirect pledge of the assets of the corporation if at least 66-2/3 percent of the total combined voting power of all classes of stock entitled to vote is pledged and if the pledge of stock is accompanied by one or more negative covenants or similar restrictions on the shareholder effectively limiting the corporation's discretion with respect to the disposition of assets and the incurrence of liabilities other than in the ordinary course of business.
Because petitioner was unable to produce a copy of the actual guaranty document, we do not know what assets CUM pledged directly to the Bank of Islam. But the debenture required CGI to pledge to the bank "all stocks [and] shares" that it owned, which included its 100% stock ownership interest in CUM. CGI further pledged all "rights, securities, and guarantees," as well as "the benefits of all rights, securities, and guarantees of any nature whatsoever" which it then held or thereafter acquired.*60 To the extent that this latter pledge "effectively limit[ed] * * * [CGI's] discretion with respect to the disposition of * * * [CUM's] assets and the incurrence of liabilities," the debenture contained "negative covenants or similar restrictions,"
Petitioner advances against this conclusion two arguments, the gist of both being that CUM's guaranty had little or no value. Petitioner first notes that CGI had originally pledged 1,500 shares of petitioner's stock as collateral for the Bank of Islam loan. That being so, petitioner asserts that CUM's guaranty was "a meaningless gesture." According to petitioner, CUM's guaranty furnished merely a secondary form of collateral that provided no incremental security for the Bank of Islam.
At the outset we have difficulty seeing the relevance of this argument.
In any event, petitioner offers no "specific facts,"
Alternatively, petitioner asserts that CUM's guaranty was worthless because "other liabilities encumbering CUM's assets exceeded the fair market value of these assets at the*62 time CUM guaranteed the debenture." In contending that CUM was functionally insolvent, petitioner has supplied no balance sheets, income statements, or other documentation concerning CUM's financial position at any point in time. The sole support it advances for this allegation of insolvency is the assertion in a declaration by J. Michael Goodson, its chief executive officer, that "the assets pledged in support of the guarantee had liabilities that exceeded their fair market value."
The regulations provide that a CFC will be considered a guarantor if its assets "serve at any time" as security for the performance of an obligation of a United States person.
The parties agree that CUM during FYE 2008 and 2009 had book assets of at least $18.5 million: $10,619,585 of loan receivables and $7,919,758 of trade receivables from its U.S. affiliates. If CUM had genuine liabilities that put its solvency into serious question, petitioner was required to "set forth*63 specific facts showing that there is a genuine dispute for trial" on this point.
In any event, it is not clear that CUM's precise financial condition is even relevant in determining whether its guaranty gives rise to an investment in United States property.
Neither the regulations nor the examples illustrating them make any reference to the likelihood that the CFC will be called upon (or be able) to make good on its guarantee.
In short, neither the statute nor the regulations provide any support for petitioner's submission. One example in a proposed regulation did refer to the value of the pledging CFC's assets, but that reference was omitted when the regulation was finalized.
For these reasons we conclude that CUM's guarantee of the Bank of Islam loan gave rise to an investment in "United States property" within the meaning of
Petitioner concedes that CUM and ACTM during FYE 2008 and 2009 held substantial trade receivables owed by Ultrasonics. The receivable owed by Ultrasonics to CUM was $7,919,758 throughout this period. The net receivables owed by Ultrasonics to ACTM grew steadily from $8,865,115 in the fourth quarter of FYE 2007 to $18,413,224 in the fourth quarter of FYE 2009.
Petitioner contends that these receivables are excepted from the definition of United States property by
Respondent contends that no receivables held by CUM or ACTM qualify for the
Before 2005 CUM had purchased raw materials from Ultrasonics, manufactured various products, and sold the completed products to Ultrasonics and others. But CUM ceased all manufacturing operations sometime before June 30, 2005, and those operations were transferred to ACTM. From that point forward ACTM replaced CUM as petitioner's contract manufacturer.*67 The parties have stipulated that CUM thereafter remained "in existence and has not been dissolved." As far as the record reveals, however, CUM's sole commercial activity after June 30, 2005, was renting its former manufacturing facilities to ACTM, its Malaysian sister corporation.
For a variety of reasons, we conclude that the $7,919,758 receivable held by CUM during FYE 2008 and 2009 does not qualify for the
This $7,919,758 receivable was a legacy of a business activity that CUM had terminated two years previously. While it was an obligation that originally arose "in connection with the sale or processing of property," by FYE 2008 it was simply an open account owed to CUM by its U.S. affiliates. Having lost any connection to*68 ongoing commercial transactions, the receivable was not "ordinary and necessary" because CUM and Ultrasonics were no longer engaged in a trade or business with each other.
To qualify for the statutory exception, the taxpayer must establish that the amount of the obligation does not exceed the amount that would be "ordinary and necessary to carry on the trade or business" of both parties to the transaction, if the sales or processing transaction had "been made between unrelated persons."
To overcome a well-supported motion for summary judgment, a party must set forth "specific facts showing*69 that there is a genuine dispute for trial."
On the other hand, we agree with petitioner that material disputes of fact do exist as to whether the volume of trade receivables held by ACTM was "ordinary and necessary." Petitioner has supplied documents showing extensive account payable and account receivable activity between Ultrasonics and ACTM during FYE 2008 and 2009. It seems likely that the volume of ACTM's net receivables was excessive: It showed no trade payables at the end of either year, while the volume of its trade receivables steadily increased from $8,865,115 to $18,413,224. But determining the exact volume that qualified as "ordinary and necessary" depends on "all the facts and circumstances in each case" and will thus require trial.
In sum, we conclude*70 that, subject to any applicable E&P limitations, and subject to a PTI reduction of $2,184,843 on account of trade receivables previously included in petitioner's gross income, petitioner is required by
To implement the foregoing,
Footnotes
1. All statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the tax periods at issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. We round all dollar amounts to the nearest dollar.↩
2.
Section 6501(e)(1)(B) was redesignated assection 6501(e)(1)(C) in 2010 by the Hiring Incentives to Restore Employment Act,Pub. L. No. 111-147, sec. 513(a)(1), 124 Stat. at 111 (2010) . For ease of reference, we will refer tosection 6501(e)(1)(B)↩ for all relevant tax periods.3. To the extent that there is any uncertainty about the dollar amounts of the CFCs' previously untaxed E&P (owing to currency conversion or otherwise), that uncertainty will be resolved in later proceedings in this Court.↩
4. If the CFCs truly discharged CGI from its obligation on one or more loans, that would give rise to income from discharge of indebtedness under
section 108↩ unless some exclusion applied.5. Given possible uncertainty as to the dollar amounts of the CFCs' applicable E&P (owing to currency conversion or otherwise), the precise amounts of the
section 956↩ inclusions will be resolved in later proceedings in this Court.6. The exception is provided for certain conduit financing arrangements.
See sec. 1.956-2(c)(1), Income Tax Regs. (cross-referencingsubpara. (4)↩ ).7.
See, e.g., (holding that two essential elements are required for a valid guaranty: "(1) an undertaking or promise on the part of the guarantor and (2) a liability of the guarantor to make payment if the primary obligor fails to do so");Ludwig v. Commissioner , 68 T.C. 979, 985 (1977) (defining a guaranty as "an undertaking or promise on the part of one person which is collateral to a primary or principal obligation on the part of another, and which binds the obligor to performance in the event of nonperformance by such other"),Perry v. Commissioner , 47 T.C. 159, 163 (1966)aff'd ,392 F.2d 458↩ (8th Cir. 1968) .8. In August 2015 the Secretary issued proposed regulations providing guidance concerning the calculation of
section 956 inclusions attributable to pledges and guaranties.See sec. 1.956-1(e)(2), Proposed Income Tax Regs. ,80 Fed. Reg. 53062 (Sept. 2, 2015) . One concern prompting this proposal was the possibility of multiplesection 956 inclusions attributable to multiple guarantors, which could result in an aggregate inclusion exceeding the unpaid principal amount of the guarantied obligation.See ibid.↩ The Secretary sought comments on a proposal to allocate the unpaid principal amount of the guarantied obligation among multiple CFCs in accordance with their "credit capacities," as measured (for example) by the relative net values of their assets. Ibid. The Secretary ultimately chose not to implement this approach. This series of events is consistent with the conclusion that the financial capacity of the CFC-guarantor is not a factor under the regulations that currently exist.
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149 T.C. No. 5, 114 T.C.M. 4147, 2017 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crestek-inc-subsidiaries-v-commr-tax-2017.