National Tea Co. v. Commissioner

793 F.2d 864
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 16, 1986
DocketNo. 85-1484
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 793 F.2d 864 (National Tea Co. v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Tea Co. v. Commissioner, 793 F.2d 864 (7th Cir. 1986).

Opinion

CUMMINGS, Chief Judge.

This case comes to us on appeal from the United States Tax Court, 83 T.C. 8, which granted summary judgment in favor of the respondent Commissioner of Internal Revenue (“Commissioner”) against the petitioner National Tea Co. and Consolidated Subsidiaries (“National Tea”). The issue raised is whether an acquiring corporation, which seeks to carryback net operating losses it incurred subsequent to a reorganization (stipulated by the parties to be a reorganization as defined by Section 368(a)(1)(F) of the Internal Revenue Code, i.e., an “F” reorganization) to income earned by the transferor corporation before the reorganization, must meet the loss-tracing requirement adopted by the Commissioner in Rev.Rul. 75-561, 1975-2 C.B. 129, based on the Supreme Court’s decision in Libson Shops, Inc. v. Koehler, 353 U.S. 382, 77 S.Ct. 990, 1 L.Ed.2d 924 For the reasons set forth below, we agree with the well-reasoned decision of the Tax Court that National Tea must follow this so-called Libson Shops loss-tracing rule. National Tea does not satisfy this rule, so that its claimed loss carryback must be denied.

I

Since the facts have been fully stipulated and are well defined by the Tax Court in its opinion, only a brief summary is required. Supermarkets was a Louisiana corporation that operated a chain of retail food stores in and around New Orleans. National Tea is an Illinois corporation, which along with its subsidiaries operates a chain of retail food stores in various areas of the United States. In 1954 National Tea acquired approximately 98% of the outstanding stock of Supermarkets, and continued to acquire stock so that by December 26, 1974, National Tea owned 99.98% of the outstanding stock of Supermarkets. From 1954 until December 26, 1974, Supermarkets operated as part of National Tea’s single integrated retail marketing operation of retail food stores.

[866]*866On December 26, 1974, Supermarkets transferred all of its assets to National Tea, and Supermarkets’ separate corporate existence ceased. This merger was accomplished under the applicable short-form Merger Statutes of Illinois and Louisiana. Supermarkets’ other shareholders received cash in exchange for their aggregate 0.02% interest. For the taxable year ending December 28, 1974, National Tea and its affiliated subsidiaries incurred a substantial loss, which included a net operating loss of $3,304,858 subject to the carryover and carryback1 provisions of Section 172. No part of this $3,304,858 net operating loss was attributable to the New Orleans regional organization, which had been operated by Supermarkets prior to December 26, 1974, and by National Tea thereafter.

National Tea attempted to carryback this net operating loss of $3,304,858 to Supermarkets’ taxable year ending April 1, 1972, and thereby use this post-reorganization net operating loss to offset Supermarkets’ pre-reorganization income. Such a carry-back would result in an income tax refund totalling $1,586,332. National Tea’s argument for being able to carryback this net operating loss is that the 1974 merger of Supermarkets into National Tea was an “F” reorganization, and that the general prohibition of Section 381(b)(3) against the carryback of post-reorganization losses incurred by the acquiring company (National Tea in the instant case) to a pre-reorganization year of the transferor corporation (Supermarkets in the instant case) does not apply. Furthermore, National Tea contends that any judicially created restrictions on loss carrybacks that existed under the 1939 Code were overruled when Congress adopted the 1954 Code, and therefore National Tea does not have to satisfy those restrictions, such as the Libson Shops loss-tracing rule of Libson Shops, Inc. v. Koehler, 353 U.S. 382, 77 S.Ct. 990, 1 L.Ed.2d 924, which are not set out in the later Code. The Internal Revenue Service concedes that the 1974 merger was an “F” reorganization, consistent with its position in Rev. Rul. 75-561, 1975-2 C.B. 129. However, the Commissioner claims that National Tea must satisfy the loss-tracing rule first adopted by the Supreme Court in 1957 in Libson Shops, and subsequently adopted by the Service in Rev.Rul. 75-561, 1975-2 C.B. 129. This loss-tracing rule limits the carryback of a post-reorganization net operating loss incurred by the acquiring corporation to a pre-reorganization year of the transferor corporation to those cases where the net operating loss was generated by “a separate business unit or division [of the acquiring corporation] formerly operated by the transferor corporation.” Rev.Rul. 75-561, 1975-2 C.B. 129.

Thus the issue for us to decide is the validity of the Commissioner’s applying the Libson Shops loss-tracing rule to an attempted carryback of a net operating loss incurred by the acquiring corporation after an “F” reorganization to income realized by the transferor corporation in a taxable year prior to the “F” reorganization.2 To [867]*867answer this difficult statutory question, it is necessary to review the tortuous history of the “F” reorganization concept, so that the meaning and intent behind Congress’ exception of “F” reorganizations from the general prohibition of carrybacks enacted in Section 381(b)(3) can be understood.

II

The “F” reorganization is one of many different types of reorganizations described in Section 368. If an acquisition can be classified as a reorganization (which involves meeting certain judicially created doctrines as well as several different statutory sections of Subchapter C of the Code), then as a general rule no gain is recognized. Significantly for the instant case, another result that flows from the classification of an asset acquisition as a reorganization is that under Sections 381-383, the tax attributes of the transferor corporation are carried over to the acquiring corporation. One such tax attribute is net operating losses, the concern of this case.

Unlike some of the other types of reorganizations in Section 368(a), which feature rather complex definitions, the definition of an “F” reorganization has always been comparatively and indeed deceptively simple: “a mere change in identity, form, or place of organization.” Section 368(a)(1)(F). Two of the three clauses in this definition seem fairly clear. A “mere change in identity” refers to a change in a corporation’s name, and a “mere change in ... place of organization” refers to a decision to reincorporate in another state. However, the meaning of “a mere change in ... form” has proven to be more elusive.

There is a strong case to be made that “a mere change in ... form” was meant to cover only the simplest types of corporate restructurings, such as the “cosmetic” types of changes described above, and was never intended to include a reorganization of two or more operating corporations. The “F” reorganization first appeared in the Revenue Act of 1921, which defined it as a “mere change in identity, form, or place of organization of a corporation ” (emphasis supplied). Although the phrase “of a corporation” was deleted in the Revenue Act of 1924, the House Ways and Means Committee explained the deletion as “minor changes in phraseology,” H.R.Rep. No. 179, 68th Cong., 1st Sess.

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793 F.2d 864, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-tea-co-v-commissioner-ca7-1986.