Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corp. v. Commissioner

76 T.C. 325, 1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 170
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1981
DocketDocket No. 3162-78T
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 76 T.C. 325 (Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical 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
Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corp. v. Commissioner, 76 T.C. 325, 1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 170 (tax 1981).

Opinion

OPINION

Wilbur, Judge:

Respondent determined that petitioners’ transfer of property to Comalco, an Australian corporation, is in pursuance of a plan having as one of its principal purposes the avoidance of income tax, within the meaning of section 367,1 and that the gain from the transfer must be considered as gross income. Petitioners challege respondent’s determination and have invoked the jurisdiction of this Court for a declaratory judgment pursuant to section 7477. The issue presented for our decision is whether respondent’s determination was reasonable.

Jurisdiction

The statutory prerequisites for jurisdiction have been satisfied: petitioners have exhausted their administrative remedies (sec. 7477(b)(2)); the petition was filed by a petitioner who is a transferor or transferee of stock, securities, or other property transferred in an exchange described in section 367(a)(1) (sec. 7477(b)(1)); the transaction herein “began” before the filing of the petition (sec. 7477(b)(3)); and petitioners mailed their petition before the 91st day after respondent mailed notice of his determination in this matter (sec. 7477(b)(4)).

The case was submitted for decision on the stipulated administrative record under Rule 122, Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. The administrative record is incorporated herein by this reference. Any evidentiary facts or representations contained therein are assumed to be true for purposes of this proceeding. The following facts are disclosed in the administrative record.

The Participants

Petitioner Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corp. (hereafter Kaiser) is a Delaware corporation with its principal office in Oakland, Calif. Kaiser, a publicly held corporation, is a fully integrated aluminum producer with substantial interests, directly and through affiliates, in various aspects of the aluminum business in the United States, Australia, Jamaica, Europe, Africa, Asia, and Canada. Petitioner Kaiser Alumina Australia Corp. (hereafter KAAC) is also a Delaware corporation with its principal office in Oakland, Calif. KAAC is a wholly owned subsidiary of Kaiser, with whom it files consolidated returns.

Kaiser, Comalco, Ltd. (Comalco), and Conzinc Riotinto of Australia, Ltd. (CRA), after negotiations of approximately iy2 years, entered into a “memorandum of agreement” on September 29,1976, pursuant to which they agreed, in part, that KAAC would transfer a 4-percent interest in an Australian alumina processing company, Queensland Australia, Ltd. (hereafter QAL), to Comalco. In addition, CRA owned a 12.5-percent interest in QAL through a wholly owned subsidiary, and CRA agreed to transfer its entire 12.5-percent interest in QAL to Comalco.

Comalco, the transferee of the QAL interests from KAAC and CRA, was incorporated under the laws of the State of Victoria, Australia. Comalco and its subsidiaries are a major producer of bauxite, an aluminum bearing ore that is the raw material of the aluminum industry,2 as well as an integrated producer of aluminum and aluminum products in Australia. Kaiser and CRA each own a 45-percent interest in Comalco, with the remaining 10-percent interest held by the public of Australia and New Zealand.

The QAL alumina processing company, interests in which were transferred to Comalco, is incorporated under the laws of the State of Queensland, Australia. As of December 31, 1976, 32.3 percent of the stock of QAL was owned by KAAC, Kaiser’s subsidiary, 13.8 percent by Comalco, and 12.5 percent by a wholly owned subsidiary of CRA, Pacific Aluminum Pty., Ltd. (PAL). In addition, 21.4 percent of QAL’s stock was owned by a subsidiary of Alcan Aluminum, Ltd. (ALCAN), and 20 percent by a subsidiary of Pechiney Ugine Kuhlman (PUK).

QAL was established in 1963 by Kaiser, CRA, Alcan, and PUK solely to provide a facility to process bauxite (to be purchased from Comalco) into alumina for QAL “shareholders,” or participants. These four participants organized QAL as a consortium company that charges its participants for alumina-processing services at approximately the cost of those services. The interests in QAL which Kaiser and CRA agreed to sell to Comalco were thus a portion of their participation rights.3

As a part of routine business operations, Kaiser’s subsidiary, KAAC, purchases bauxite from Comalco and ships it to QAL to be processed into alumina. Then, KAAC normally sells a substantial amount of such alumina to Kaiser, whereupon Kaiser ships the alumina to the United States where it is reduced to aluminum at Kaiser’s west coast smelters.4

The Transaction

The following diagram shows the essential elements of the transactions which were prescribed by the terms of the memorandum of agreement:

Kaiser and/or KAAC ('petitioners) would receive:
Stock issued by Comalco having a value of A$24.5 million5
Comalco would receive:
A 4-percent interest in QAL formerly owned by Kaiser A$5.7 million
CRA and/or its subsidiary PAL would receive (in part):
Stock issued by Comalco having a value of A$24.5 million
Comalco would receive:
All of CRA’s 12.5-percent interest in QAL A$3 million

The complete transaction is as follows: KAAC would transfer to Comalco a 4-percent interest in QAL (representing an entitlement to rated capacity of 80,000 long tons of alumina annually), including all related rights and obligations, and certain shares of two QAL-related financing companies. Kaiser would transfer to Comalco approximately Australian dollars A$5.7 million in cash (subject to adjustment as of a “valuation date”). In exchange, Comalco would issue stock of Comalco to Kaiser and KAAC having a total value of A$24.5 million (subject to later adjustment).

PAL (CRA’s wholly owned subsidiary), would transfer to Comalco its entire 12.5-percent interest in QAL (representing an entitlement to rated capacity of 250,000 long tons of alumina annually), including all rights and obligations, and its shares of two QAL-related financing companies, and CRA would transfer approximately A$3 million in cash to Comalco (subject to adjustment as of the valuation date). In exchange, Comalco would transfer its 50-percent interest in Dampier Salt, Ltd., to PAL, issue stock of Comalco to PAL and CRA having a total value of A$24.5 million (subject to adjustment as of the valuation date), assume PAL’s liability to repay credit extensions to QAL, and purchase and assume PAL’s contracts to sell alumina to third parties.

Comalco would then offer to its public shareholders rights to subscribe for additional Comalco shares at the same price per share as that established for the Comalco shares issued to Kaiser and KAAC, and CRA and PAL, in a number sufficient for the public shareholders to maintain their 10-percent interest in Comalco.

Purpose of Transaction: Alumina Imbalance

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Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corp. v. Commissioner
76 T.C. 325 (U.S. Tax Court, 1981)

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Bluebook (online)
76 T.C. 325, 1981 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaiser-aluminum-chemical-corp-v-commissioner-tax-1981.