Garvey, Inc. v. The United States

726 F.2d 1569, 53 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 776, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 14839
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedFebruary 7, 1984
DocketAppeal 83-780
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 726 F.2d 1569 (Garvey, Inc. v. The United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garvey, Inc. v. The United States, 726 F.2d 1569, 53 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 776, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 14839 (Fed. Cir. 1984).

Opinion

EDWARD S. SMITH, Circuit Judge.

In this corporate/individual tax case appellants (Garvey, et al.) appeal from a judgment of the United States Claims Court dismissing their petitions for recovery of certain corporate taxes paid as a result of filing consolidated returns; certain individual taxes paid on income received under an unsecured private annuity contract; and corporate taxes paid on the computed interest portion of the annuity payments. We affirm on all substantive issues.

Issues

The major corporate tax issue is whether the investment account adjustment provision 1 of the consolidated return regulations was valid as applied to the Garvey 2 affiliated corporations which had a low carryover basis resulting from a pre-affiliation stock-for-stock (“B”) reorganization. 3 Subsidiary issues concern: whether, assuming the Commissioner of Internal Revenue (Commissioner) did correctly apply the regulation, he is nevertheless estopped from enforcing it against Garvey; and whether a variance 4 exists in the corporate tax issue. The major individual tax question is whether the annuitant-Garveys may recover their respective bases before recognizing gain resulting from the transfer of appreciated property as consideration for an unsecured private annuity contract, as contended by taxpayers, or whether, as the Government asserts, the Garveys must report the gain ratably with their bases. 5 A further issue is whether the corporate obligor on the annuity contract is entitled to deduct the computed interest portion of the annuity payments. 6

Background

The facts material to this appeal are as follows: 7 from 1966 to 1972 the Garvey group of affiliated corporations filed consolidated tax returns. During this time one of the affiliated corporations twice distributed stock as dividends to other affiliated corporations in an amount totaling over $4.9 million. Because these distributions were made from earnings and profits accumulated prior to affiliation, the investment adjustment provisions of the consolidated return regulations 8 required Garvey to reduce the distributing corporation’s stock basis by the same amount. The stock basis in this case was the original shareholders’ low $0.25 million carried over as a result of the corporation’s having been brought into the Garvey group in a stock-for-stock (“B”) reorganization. Subtracting the $4.9 million *1571 in distributions from a basis of only $0.25 million resulted in a sizable negative adjusted figure. When the Garvey group disaffiliated in 1972, the Commissioner claimed the resultant figure as an “excess loss account” 9 which produced a deficiency of nearly $1.4 million in corporate income tax. Garvey, however, protested the negative adjustment and resulting tax liability for the reasons summarized below, paid the tax, filed a timely claim for refund, and sued for recovery.

Meanwhile, in 1969, the Garvey individuals transferred appreciated property to one or another of the Garvey corporations in exchange for the corporation’s unsecured promise to pay the transferor a stated sum annually for the remainder of the transfer- or/annuitant’s life. The amount of the annual payment was determined by dividing the independently appraised value of the property by the appropriate life expectancy factor, including an assumed interest rate of 3.5 percent. The Commissioner asserts that each annual annuity payment consists of three parts: return of basis, capital gain, and ordinary income, to be taxed accordingly. The Garveys claim that they should not have to recognize and pay tax on the property’s gain until they first shall have recovered their bases. Hence an issue of when, not whether, to recognize the gain in the appreciated property arose, i.e., before or after recovery of basis. The corporate obligors on the annuities also claimed the right to deduct on their returns the 3.5 percent assumed interest element included in each annuity payment. All Garvey individual taxpayers paid the deficiencies attributed to the annuity payments, filed timely claims for refund, and sued for recovery.

Discussion

The parties stipulated below all facts regarding these issues; this court therefore faces questions of law which it has analyzed independently.

The Affiliated Corporations

Garvey contends that the Government’s strict and literal interpretation of Treas.Reg. § 1.1502-32(b)(2)(iii)(b) unfairly penalizes Garvey by creating “phantom” income which would not have been taxed had the Garvey group filed separate returns. The tax-avoidance objective of the consolidated return adjustment rules makes sense where the bases of affiliated corporations include pre-affiliation earnings and profits, Garvey contends, but not where such bases exclude such earlier gain, as has occurred in Garvey’s case because of its prior “B” reorganization. While Garvey legitimately points out an incongruity in the across-the-board application of this regulation, in asking for an exception Garvey is in effect asking the Commissioner to ignore his statutory mandate to require carryover basis in stock-for-stock reorganizations. This the Commissioner cannot do, and Garvey is caught between the rock and hard spot of electing the benefits of consolidated returns, with the concomitant disadvantage of paying tax upon an excess loss account at disaffiliation, or opting for continued separate return status. As Judge Philip Miller has succinctly noted, “the affiliated group that voluntarily elects to file a consolidated return ‘must now take the bitter with the sweet.’ ” Garvey, Inc. v. United States, 1 Cl.Ct. 108, 116 (Cl.Ct.1983), citing Georgia-Pacific Corp. v. Commissioner, 63 T.C. 790, 802 (1975). For the reasons correctly and more fully set forth in the opinion below, we affirm the Claims Court on this issue.

Garvey also argues that the Commissioner is estopped from literal application of Treas.Reg. § l-1502.32(b)(2)(iii)(b) because in 1968 and 1971 the Treasury Department published proposals to amend the regulation to create an exception in the Garvey-type situation. Diming this period the existing investment adjustment regulations, which had been published in final form in 1966, were in effect. We agree with the lower court that Garvey’s estoppel *1572 argument cannot prevail over existing regulations, and that its distribution of nearly $5 million in dividends in the hope that the proposed regulations would be adopted was nothing more than that — a hope. 10

Finally, the court below found a variance in Garvey’s section 243 dividend taxation argument 11

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726 F.2d 1569, 53 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 776, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 14839, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garvey-inc-v-the-united-states-cafc-1984.