Ransburg Corporation and Subsidiaries v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

621 F.2d 264, 207 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 545, 45 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1647, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 17640
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 12, 1980
Docket78-2389
StatusPublished

This text of 621 F.2d 264 (Ransburg Corporation and Subsidiaries v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) 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
Ransburg Corporation and Subsidiaries v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 621 F.2d 264, 207 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 545, 45 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1647, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 17640 (7th Cir. 1980).

Opinion

*265 H ARLINGTON WOOD, Jr., Circuit Judge.

In this appeal from the United States Tax Court, 1 the issue is whether the Tax Court correctly held that interest was properly imputed under Section 483 of the Internal Revenue Code 2 to deferred payments received during taxable years ending on November 30 for the years 1966 through 1972 by the taxpayer corporation in accordance with a contract for the sale of its patents, patent and utility model applications and trademarks to a Japanese corporation. The Tax Court found income tax deficiencies resulting from the imputed interest to exist for the six years in excess of $340,000.

The facts were fully stipulated and will only be summarized here. Ransburg Corporation, the taxpayer, is an Indiana corporation with both United States and Japanese patents for electrostatic coating processes and equipment. After earlier unsuccessful efforts to market its products in Japan from 1952 to 1963 the taxpayer entered into a joint venture with a Japanese corporation to promote its business in Japan. For this purpose, Ransburg Japan, a Japanese corporation, was organized in 1963 in which ultimately the taxpayer had a forty-nine percent interest. In that same year taxpayer entered into an agreement with Ransburg Japan and sold to it all its Japanese patents, patent and utility model applications and trademarks. At that time all those items qualified for tax purposes as capital assets. The original purchase price was reduced by a subsequent agreement in 1965. 3 During the years in question under the sale agreement, taxpayer received from Ransburg Japan annual payments ranging from about $200,000 to $1,202,000, all of which were reported by taxpayer as long-term capital gain for federal income tax purposes. The sale agreement provided for no interest to be due or payable on the deferred payments. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue has recharacterized a portion of those *266 annual payments as interest under Section 483 in spite of the Section 483(f)(4) exception applicable to sales of patents made pursuant to a transfer described in Section 1235(a). 4

The specific issue which evolves is whether a corporate patent owner can satisfy the requirements of the Section 483(f)(4) patent exemption provision which embraces only transfers described in Section 1235(a). The focus of the controversy is on the phrase in Section 1235(a), “by any holder,” which is defined in Section 1235(b), the following subsection, as being any “individual” whose efforts created the property. If the phrase “any holder” as defined in Section 1235 is applicable, then the taxpayer, being a corporation, concededly cannot qualify as an “individual.”

Taxpayer argues that the clear statutory language of Sections 483(f)(4) and 1235(a) indicates that the cross-reference in Section 483(f)(4) to Section 1235(a) without mentioning Section 1235(b) should be interpreted to mean that the definition of the term “holder” in Section 1235(b) is not applicable. In examining Section 483(f)(4), taxpayer argues that use of the word “described” in referring to Section 1235(a) evidences a congressional intent to broadly include all patent capital gain transfers within the scope of the Section 483(f)(4) exemption, and not to limit it to a limited category of patent transfers which qualify under Section 1235 as a whole. Taxpayer also argues that the bracketed phrase “relating to sale or exchange of patents” in Section 483(f)(4) evidences a congressional intent as borne out by the legislative history that the exception should be construed broadly enough to include all patent payments treated as capital gains under the law as it existed at the time of enactment in 1964. Taxpayer’s contention is that Section 1235(b) “holder” status, although required in order to qualify for and benefit from Section 1235’s capital gain treatment is not required to qualify for and benefit from Section 483(f)(4)’s exception from the imputation of unstated interest. The Tax Court, on the other hand, held that the taxpayer did not qualify for the unstated interest exception as a corporation because Section 483(f)(4) references Section 1235(a), which uses the term “holder,” which in turn is defined in Section 1235(b) so as to exclude corporations. In affirming the Tax Court, we add only a few comments to its decision.

The taxpayer attempts to make the distinction that Section 1235(a) is referenced in Section 483 only for a general description of patent transfers, not to add additional qualifications. It points out that the Section 1235(a) description of a transfer of “property consisting of all substantial rights to a patent ... by any holder” was the same description of patent transfers qualifying for capital gain treatment under Code Sections 1221, 1222 and 1231 at the time of the enactment of Section 483(f)(4); that taxpayer’s patent transfers are entitled to capital gains treatment is not disputed by the Commissioner in this appeal.

Nevertheless, Congress in Section 483(f)(4) chose to reference Section 1235(a), not the other sections. We do not see how we can read Section 1235(a) even for limited descriptive purposes and disregard its use of “holder’ as part of the description. If we are not to disregard the term “holder” entirely, we must either give it our own meaning much broader than Section 1235(b) provides or apply the Section 1235(b) defini *267 tion. We do not believe we can eliminate the term “holder” from the description of a patent transfer, nor interpret “holder” differently for one purpose than for another, particularly when the same Code section, Section 1235, itself defines what the term means as used in that section. That Section 1235(b) states that its “holder” definition is for the purpose of Section 1235 only does not infer that on occasion for some purposes we may give it some other meaning when used in Section 1235(a). Taxpayer correctly points out that Section 1235(a) does not reference Section 1235(b), but that does not mean Section 1235(b) is to be ignored. It is equally true that Congress in Section 483(f)(4) could have referenced not only Section 1235(a) but also Section 1235(b). That would have been helpful, but it is not essential to our interpretation of the statute. If we are to fill-in for less than clear legislative draftsmanship, we do not choose to undertake any more remodeling of the statutory structure than is reasonably needed to divine the meaning of the statute without doing violence to it.

If Congress meant something else, it easily could have said what it meant by describing a patent transfer in an additional line or two within Section 483(f)(4) and thereby avoided the roundabout way with obvious potential for misleading taxpayers and courts. We also believe that the taxpayer reads more into the bracketed phrase, “relating to sale or exchange of patents,” in Section 483(f)(4) in referencing Section 1235(a) than it deserves. Section 1235(a) does relate to the sale or exchange of patents, but “holder” is very much a part of it. The Tax Court considered the language as identifying the nature and purpose of Section 1235(a).

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Bluebook (online)
621 F.2d 264, 207 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 545, 45 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1647, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 17640, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ransburg-corporation-and-subsidiaries-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca7-1980.