Pacificare Health Systems, Inc. v. Dept. of Rev.

19 Or. Tax 460, 2008 WL 2596371, 2008 Ore. Tax LEXIS 109
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedJuly 1, 2008
DocketNo. TC 4762.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 19 Or. Tax 460 (Pacificare Health Systems, Inc. v. Dept. of Rev.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pacificare Health Systems, Inc. v. Dept. of Rev., 19 Or. Tax 460, 2008 WL 2596371, 2008 Ore. Tax LEXIS 109 (Or. Super. Ct. 2008).

Opinion

I. INTRODUCTION
This matter is before the court on Plaintiffs' Motion for Summary Judgment and Plaintiffs' Motion to Strike, and the Cross-Motion for Summary Judgment of Defendant Department of Revenue (the department). Plaintiffs are PacifiCare Health Systems, Inc. (PHS), the common parent corporation in a group of affiliated corporations that includes plaintiffs PacifiCare Life Insurance Company (PLA) and *Page 462 PacifiCare Life and Health Insurance Company (PLHIC). Those and other corporations, wholly owned directly or indirectly by PHS, filed a consolidated federal income tax return. In many cases, such an affiliated group would also file a consolidated return for Oregon income tax purposes. ORS 317.710.1 In such cases, the intercompany transactions that form the basis of this case would produce no net tax consequences, as income to a receiving member would be offset by a deduction to the related paying member. Most of Plaintiffs' affiliated group members are health maintenance organizations or engaged in management of such programs; however, PLA and PLHIC engage in the insurance business and, under ORS 317.710(7), must file separate Oregon returns. Only PHS and its noninsurance subsidiaries together filed an Oregon consolidated return and unless otherwise indicated, references to taxpayer in this order are references to PHS and such subsidiaries. Because PHS and PLHIC did not file a consolidated Oregon return, intercompany transactions were not offset and were separately reported.

The factors used to apportion income among Oregon and other states differ for the Oregon consolidated group and PLHIC (the Insurance Subsidiary).2 Of income reported by the Insurance Subsidiary, less was apportioned to Oregon under the apportionment rule for insurance companies for the years in question (1999 and 2000) than would have been apportioned to Oregon if reported in taxpayer's Oregon consolidated return. The proper accounting for income from certain licenses of intangible property and related deductions is the issue in this case.3 *Page 463

II. FACTS
PHS owned, directly or indirectly, all of the stock in all of the corporations comprising the affiliated group that filed a consolidated federal income tax return. That group included the Insurance Subsidiary and PLA. PHS was a holding company whose wholly owned first-tier subsidiary, PacifiCare Health Plan Administrators, Inc. (PHPA), owned all or substantially all of the stock in the second tier members of the group.4

As of October 1, 1998, PHS and PHPA (then known as PacifiCare Operations, Inc.) entered into a Contribution and Assignment Agreement (the Contribution Agreement) with the Insurance Subsidiary. Pursuant to the Contribution Agreement, PHS and PHPA collectively contributed to the capital of the Insurance Subsidiary names, service marks, trademarks, logos, slogans, tag lines, and other intellectual properties used by the members of the corporate family and then owned by PHS or PHPA or both (the Intellectual Properties). The contributors also agreed to make further capital contributions of any additional such property that the contributors might in the future develop, create, or purchase. Specific terms of the Contribution Agreement and other documents will be more fully described below.

At the same time, the Insurance Subsidiary entered into and began collecting royalty fee income from PHS and its subsidiaries under agreements by which the Insurance Subsidiary licensed to PHS and its subsidiaries the use of the Intellectual Properties it had acquired from PHS and PHPA. The licenses were generally uniform in their provisions, some of which will be more specifically discussed below. Prior to the contribution of the Intellectual Properties to the Insurance Subsidiary, the licensee corporations had enjoyed use of the Intellectual Properties without charge.

As licensees from the Insurance Subsidiary of the Intellectual Properties they had contributed, PHS and its *Page 464 first-tier subsidiary, PHPA, were not required to make royalty payments in cash. They instead agreed to furnish the Insurance Subsidiary with administrative services, consultations, personnel, and other appropriate resources to assist the Insurance Subsidiary with the development, usage, management, display, and protection of the Intellectual Properties.

Other corporations in the PacifiCare family who were licensees of the Intellectual Properties agreed to pay cash royalties to the Insurance Subsidiary computed as a percentage (1.75 percent) of adjusted gross revenue of the licensee. All such payments were deducted by the payor corporations in computing their income tax liability, and the aggregate of such deductions was reflected in the Oregon consolidated income tax return for PHS and its noninsurance subsidiaries, thus creating a significant tax benefit for those companies. The revenue from those royalty payments was included in the separate income tax return of the Insurance Subsidiary.

For the 1999 and 2000 tax years, the department disallowed royalty expense deductions of PHS and its subsidiaries. This action treated the royalty transactions as if they had not occurred or, if they did occur, had been engaged in by PHS and PHPA as licensors and the payor subsidiaries as licensees. The effect of this action was to eliminate the tax benefit that PHS had hoped to enjoy by reason of separate treatment of royalty deductions in the relatively higher tax environment of the consolidated return of the payors and inclusion of the associated royalty income in the relatively lower tax environment of the statutorily required separate company return of the Insurance Subsidiary.

III. ISSUE
As stated above, the issue in this case is the proper accounting for the set of transactions generated by taxpayer within a legal environment created by the State of Oregon. For the reason discussed below, the issue resolves to which company should, in the years in question, be treated as the owner of the Intellectual Properties. *Page 465

IV. ANALYSIS
Taxpayer has premised its position on the view that the only transactions that should concern the department or this court are the licensing arrangements pursuant to which the Insurance Subsidiary purported to license use by other group members of the Intellectual Properties. Taxpayer then asserts that evaluation of the licensing transactions may only occur under the arm's-length transaction standard of Internal Revenue Code (IRC), section 482, 5 made applicable in Oregon through ORS314.295. ORS 314.295 provides:

"Apportionment or allocation of net income where two or more organizations, trades or businesses are owned or controlled by the same interests.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Or. Tax 460, 2008 WL 2596371, 2008 Ore. Tax LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacificare-health-systems-inc-v-dept-of-rev-ortc-2008.