Dresser Industries, Inc. v. United States

238 F.3d 603, 2001 WL 28684
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 10, 2001
Docket99-11231
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 238 F.3d 603 (Dresser Industries, Inc. v. United States) 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
Dresser Industries, Inc. v. United States, 238 F.3d 603, 2001 WL 28684 (5th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

MELINDA HARMON, District Judge:

This is an appeal from a suit for tax refund in which the district court ruled against the taxpayer. Plaintiff-Appellant Dresser Industries, Inc. argues that the district court erred when it held on summary judgment that: (a) Treasury Regulation 1.861-8(e) disallows “interest netting”; (b) interest liability exists on deficiencies later eliminated or reduced by foreign tax credit carrybacks; and (c) such interest accrues until the filing date of the return of the tax year in which the foreign tax credit arises. Finding that the district court correctly ruled in favor of the United States in light of express statute and applicable case law, we affirm.

I.

Dresser Industries, Inc. (“Dresser”) is a worldwide supplier of technology, products, and services to industries involved in the development of energy and natural resources. Dresser is subject to the Coordinated Examination Program, and, as a result, is under continuous audit by the Internal Revenue Service.

In 1972, Dresser established Dresser International Sales Corporation (“Dresser International”) as a wholly owned subsidiary. Dresser International qualified as a Domestic International Sales Corporation (“DISC”) to take advantage of Congress’s overall strategy to increase domestic exports by providing tax incentives to companies involved in export trade. 2 A qualified DISC subsidiary is not taxed on income derived from the sale of exports; rather, its shareholders are taxed on a specified percentage of DISC taxable income as if a dividend distribution had been made at the end of the tax year. DISC taxable income, from which this constructive dividend distribution is calculated, is based on a complex statutory framework that establishes a “deemed” transfer price for export goods provided to the DISC by the parent supplier. The taxpayer calculates the deemed transfer price as 50% of the “combined taxable income” of the DISC and its parent.

In 1984, when Congress replaced the DISC provisions of the tax code with the Foreign Sales Corporation (“FSC”), Dresser responded by incorporating Dresser Foreign Sales Corporation. The FSC serves essentially the same purpose as the DISC, except a taxpayer calculates combined taxable income using a 23% standard instead of a 50% one. 3

While the Internal Revenue Code governs transfer prices applicable to DISCs and FSCs, the Treasury Regulations provide rules governing the allocation of expenses, losses, or deductions in computing the combined taxable income from those sources. Allocation of interest expenses in the instant case is governed by the 1977 version Treasury Regulation § 1.861-8(e). *605 That Regulation provides that “the aggregate of deductions for interest shall be considered related to all income producing activities and properties of the taxpayer and, thus, allocable to all the gross income which the income producing activities and properties of the taxpayer generate, have generated, or could reasonably have been expected to generate.” Treas.Reg. 1.861-8(e)(2)(ii) (as amended in 1977).

The issues in this case arise from an audit of Dresser that ended in September 1993. At the conclusion of the audit, Dresser paid additional taxes and interest for taxable years 1980, 1981, 1982, 1984, 1986, and 1987, but subsequently filed formal claims for refund. In these claims, Dresser asserted that, in apportioning interest expenses between its DISC and FSC activities and its non-DISC and non-FSC activities, it had erroneously allocated gross income expense, and that it should have first offset interest expense against interest income, and then allocated only the net interest expense. The purpose of this practice, called “interest netting,” would be to maximize the income treated as included in the combined taxable income of Dresser and its DISC and FSC from exports and foreign trade; the advantage would thus be to increase the amount of income eligible for the favorable tax benefits conferred by Congress on the DISC and FSC.

Dresser also asserted that use of interest netting in its 1983 taxable year gave rise to an additional foreign tax credit carryback to its 1981 taxable year in the amount of $257,236; that use of interest netting in 1985 resulted in an additional net operating loss carryback to its 1982 taxable year; and that use of interest netting in its 1984 taxable year resulted in an overpayment of its tax liability for that year. Accordingly, based on the technique of interest netting, Dresser sought tax refunds for its 1981, 1982, and 1984 taxable years.

In addition to its claims for refunds based on interest netting, Dresser sought refunds of interest it previously had paid on deficiencies in its 1981 and 1984 tax liabilities. Dresser had previously filed a petition in the Tax Court contesting a deficiency in its 1981 tax liability; as a result of Dresser’s execution of a Waiver of Restrictions on Assessment and Collection of Deficiency in Tax and Acceptance of Over-assessment, and in light of the Tax Court’s determination of tax deficiencies for those years, Dresser was allowed to carry back excess foreign taxes from its 1983 taxable year to its 1981 taxable year. Dresser was also allowed to carry back excess foreign taxes from its 1986 taxable year to its 1984 taxable year. These carrybacks effectively reduced or eliminated Dresser’s tax deficiencies for 1981 and 1984. Dresser sought refunds of the interest that it had paid on the deficiencies that existed for those years because the foreign tax carry-backs reduced or eliminated the initial deficiencies.

The Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”), in response, not only rejected Dresser’s argument of using foreign tax credit car-rybacks to eliminate deficiency interest owed, but it also rejected Dresser’s claim of interest netting and the subsequent refunds arising from interest netting. Instead, the IRS maintained that only a ratable share of “gross interest” could be apportioned to the DISC and FSC.

Dresser eventually sued the United States (“Government”) for tax refund in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas, seeking, inter alia, refunds of the federal income taxes and interests that would arise from interest netting and elimination of Dresser’s deficiency interest. Dresser’s desired refunds totaled $2,585,776. On cross motions for partial summary judgment, the district court held in favor of the Government. 4 While the court observed that an *606 earlier version of Treas.Reg. § 1.861-8 allowed for interest netting, the court held that the version of the Regulation applicable to Dresser’s case specifically forbade interest netting. The district court also held that Dresser was not entitled to a refund of the interest it had paid with respect to deficiencies in its 1981 and 1984 tax liabilities that were later reduced or eliminated as a result of the carryback to those years of excess foreign tax credits from Dresser’s 1983 and 1986 taxable years. The district court further held that Dresser’s liability for interest continued to accrue until the due date for filing tax returns for the years in which the excess foreign tax credits arose.

Dresser now appeals the district court’s holding on these three substantive issues.

II.

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Bluebook (online)
238 F.3d 603, 2001 WL 28684, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dresser-industries-inc-v-united-states-ca5-2001.