H.J. Heinz Co. & Subsidiaries v. United States

76 Fed. Cl. 570, 99 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 2940, 2007 U.S. Claims LEXIS 155, 2007 WL 1536885
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedMay 25, 2007
DocketNo. 03-2847T
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 76 Fed. Cl. 570 (H.J. Heinz Co. & Subsidiaries v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Federal Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
H.J. Heinz Co. & Subsidiaries v. United States, 76 Fed. Cl. 570, 99 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 2940, 2007 U.S. Claims LEXIS 155, 2007 WL 1536885 (uscfc 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

ALLEGRA, Judge.

“A given result at the end of a straight path is not made a different result because reached by following a devious path.”1

All tax students are familiar with the concept of “basis,” which, in the income tax law, is the touchstone for measuring income and loss. Generally speaking, it is basis that prevents the double taxation of income reflected in a property’s cost, by allowing that cost to be recovered, tax-free, upon the' asset’s disposition. And it is basis, again, that measures the loss realized if the seller recovers less than its investment in property. Sometimes, the process for determining basis is straight-forward, with the amount readily traceable, for example, to specific costs incurred by the taxpayer with respect to the asset being sold. Other times, however, the origins of basis are more obscure, particularly, when the tax law attributes costs previously incurred by a taxpayer to the sold asset. Those attribution rules are fairly complicated, providing opportunities both for bona fide tax planning and undue manipulation of the tax system. Sometimes it falls to a court to discern which of these has occurred.

This tax refund ease is before the court following a three-day trial in Washington, D.C. Plaintiffs seek a refund of $42,586,967. At issue is whether H.J. Heinz Credit Company (HCC), a subsidiary of the H.J. Heinz Company (Heinz), may deduct a capital loss of $124,134,189 on a sale of 175,000 shares of Heinz stock in May 1995. In 1994, HCC purchased 3,500,000 shares of Heinz stock, 3,325,000 shares of which were transferred to Heinz in January of 1995 in exchange for a convertible note issued by Heinz. Heinz asserts that this was a redemption which should be taxed as a dividend, and that HCC’s basis in the redeemed stock should be added to its basis in the 175,000 shares it retained. HCC sold the latter stock in May of 1995 and, in plaintiffs view, recognized a capital loss arising from the increase in basis that occurred upon the earlier redemption. That loss, plaintiffs argue, should then be carried back to reduce their taxes in their 1994,1993 and 1992 taxable years.

Not so, defendant argues, asserting that Heinz did not, in fact, effectuate a redemption of stock from HCC. In this regard, it asseverates that a redemption did not occur because HCC’s ownership of the 3,325,000 shares of Heinz stock was transitory and should be disregarded. It further claims that no redemption occurred because Heinz had no business purpose for interposing a subsidiary between itself and the shareholders from whom HCC purchased stock, save to engineer an artificial tax loss. And, finally, it contends that while Heinz structured the second purchase as an exchange for property under section 317(b) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986,2 the steps of the transaction should be collapsed under the so-called “step transaction doctrine,” with Heinz again viewed as having repurchased its stock directly from the outside investors. As such, defendant contends, the basis in the 3,325,000 shares allegedly “redeemed” by Heinz should not be added to the 175,000 shares that HCC retained, with the effect that no capital loss was produced upon the sale of the latter shares.

[573]*573I. FINDINGS OF FACT

Based on the record, including the parties’ joint stipulations, the court finds as follows:

A.

Heinz, a Pennsylvania corporation, is the common parent of the affiliated group of corporations known as the Heinz Consolidated Group (Heinz Consolidated Group), which corporations filed consolidated income tax returns for the years in question. The successor to a food business founded in 1869 by Henry J. Heinz, Heinz manufactures and markets processed food products worldwide, directly and through subsidiaries.

Until the early 1980s, Heinz maintained a corporate policy of directly financing its domestic subsidiaries’ working capital needs because it could borrow at more favorable interest rates than its subsidiaries. This policy, however, had what Heinz perceived as negative state tax implications in certain states—although the subsidiaries could deduct interest payments made to Heinz, the latter was required to treat those payments as taxable income.3 In 1983, Heinz began studying a proposal to establish a Delaware-based financing company that would assume Heinz’s financing activities. Under this plan, all of Heinz’s subsidiaries would obtain financing from, and make all payments (including interest) to, this Delaware-based financing company, with interest income from the financing company being “repatriated” to Heinz by means of intercorporate dividends. Under this scenario, the Delaware subsidiary’s income would be exempt from Delaware tax, see Del.Code Ann. tit. 30, § 1902(b)(8); in most states, the subsidiaries would continue to take deductions for interest payments made to the new financing company; and Heinz would not experience a corresponding increase in its taxable income because many states—including Heinz’s home state of Pennsylvania—did not tax in-tercorporate dividends.

Ultimately deciding to effectuate this plan, on September 15,1983, Heinz established the H.J. Heinz Credit Company (HCC), a wholly-owned Delaware corporation with 1,000 shares of stock. That same year HCC began lending money to the members of the Heinz Consolidated Group, as well as several Heinz foreign subsidiaries. HCC, however, had no office or employees of its own, with Heinz essentially making decisions for its subsidiary at its corporate offices in Pittsburgh. By the mid-1980s, several state taxing authorities, including Pennsylvania, began questioning the use of Delaware investment companies as a tax planning strategy. Concerned with this trend, in a memorandum dated November 29, 1984, Catherine A. Ca-poni, Heinz’s Manager for State Taxes, warned:

While [the establishment of an independent financing company] is an excellent tax planning strategy, in order to insure its viability, the Delaware sub must have sufficient substance and nexus in Delaware. If there is little or no substance and all activities are actually directed from and take place in Pennsylvania, the Delaware entity may not sustain itself under scrutiny by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. The two companies could be collapsed and treated as one company for Pennsylvania tax purposes.

(Emphasis in original). Athough Ms. Capo-ni was optimistic that HCC had established a sufficient nexus with Delaware to create a “ ‘taxable’ situation in the state,” she indicated that Heinz had some exposure on this issue because “the majority, if not all, of [HCC’s] corporate activity/aecounting takes place at [Heinz] World Headquarters in Pennsylvania” and “HCC pays no management fee to World Headquarters for the services provided.” She noted that Heinz’s Pennsylvania tax counsel had suggested that it draft a service agreement “detailing the services to be performed by World Headquarters personnel for HCC,” and stipulate [574]*574an “arm’s length fee” which HCC would pay in return for these services. But, for reasons unexplained, company officials did not heed her advice. Heinz’s legal and tax counsel remained concerned and periodically repeated their warnings regarding HCC’s status.

B.

In late 1985, John C.

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76 Fed. Cl. 570, 99 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 2940, 2007 U.S. Claims LEXIS 155, 2007 WL 1536885, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hj-heinz-co-subsidiaries-v-united-states-uscfc-2007.