Rhone-Poulenc Surfactants And Specialties, L.P. v. Commissioner Of Internal Revenue

249 F.3d 175, 46 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 93, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 7969
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMay 1, 2001
Docket00-3636
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 249 F.3d 175 (Rhone-Poulenc Surfactants And Specialties, L.P. v. Commissioner Of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rhone-Poulenc Surfactants And Specialties, L.P. v. Commissioner Of Internal Revenue, 249 F.3d 175, 46 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 93, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 7969 (3d Cir. 2001).

Opinion

249 F.3d 175 (3rd Cir. 2001)

RHONE-POULENC SURFACTANTS AND SPECIALTIES, L.P., GAF CHEMICALS CORPORATION, A PARTNER OTHER THAN THE TAX MATTERS PARTNER, Appellant,
v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Appellee

No. 00-3636

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT

Argued January 19, 2001
Opinion Filed May 1, 2001

William F. Nelson, Esq. (argued), Gerald A. Kafka, Esq., J. Bradford Anwyll, Esq., McKee Nelson Ernst & Young, LLP, Washington, DC, Attorneys for Appellant.

Charles F. Marshall, Esq. (argued), Paula M. Junghans, Esq., Richard Farber, Esq., Tax Division, Department of Justice, Washington, DC, Attorneys for Appellee.

Before: ROTH and BARRY, Circuit Judges, SHADUR,1 District Judge.

OPINION OF THE COURT

SHADUR, District Judge:

Taxpayer GAF Chemicals Corporation ("GAF"), a subsidiary of GAF Corporation and a purported partner in the putative partnership Rhone-Poulenc Surfactants and Specialties, L.P. ("Rhone-Poulenc"), filed a petition for readjustment of partnership items in the United States Tax Court under 26 U.S.C. 6226(b).2 GAF filed its petition in response to a notice of final partnership administrative adjustment ("FPAA") issued by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue ("Commissioner") to Rhone-Poulenc pursuant to Section 6223(a)--an FPAA that treated a transfer of assets from GAF to Rhone-Poulenc as a taxable sale rather than as a nontaxable contribution in exchange for an interest in the partnership.

This appeal stems from the Tax Court's denial of GAF's motion for summary judgment on the ground that the Commissioner's assessment is time-barred. Although that order was not final, the Tax Court certified it for interlocutory appeal under Section 7482(a)(2)(A), and this Court granted GAF's petition for permission to appeal.

For the reasons stated in this opinion, we find that GAF's petition for permission to appeal was improvidently granted. Upon our further consideration of the issues presented for decision, we hold that Tax Court rulings on certain unresolved issues that Court has reserved for the future constitute a precondition to the ripeness of the issues certified by that Court, so that we have essentially been presented with a request for an advisory opinion forbidden by Article III of the Constitution.

Background

In 1990 GAF and Alkaril Chemicals, Inc. ("Alkaril"), another subsidiary of GAF Corporation, transferred certain business assets to Rhone-Poulenc. About September 17, 1991 Rhone-Poulenc filed a federal partnership information return that characterized GAF's transfer to it as a contribution of property to the partnership in exchange for an interest in the partnership. Almost simultaneously (the record-indicated date is September 16, 1991) GAF Corporation filed a consolidated corporate federal income tax return for itself and all of its affiliated subsidiary corporations (including GAF).

On September 12, 1997 the Commissioner issued Rhone-Poulenc an FPAA notice that treated the transfer as a taxable sale rather than as an exchange for a partnership interest entitled to non-recognition treatment under Section 721(a). It followed from the FPAA's treatment of the transfer as a taxable sale that GAF Corporation's consolidated return had understated its gross income by 25%. In response to the FPAA, GAF filed a petition in the Tax Court for a readjustment of partnership items.

GAF brought that petition pursuant to the unified partnership audit and litigation procedures of the Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982 ("TEFRA"). As Boyd v. Comm'r, 101 T.C. 365, 368-69 (1993) (internal citations and quotation marks omitted) explains:

The TEFRA partnership provisions were enacted in 1982 in response to the mushrooming administrative problems experienced by the Internal Revenue Service in auditing returns of partnerships, particularly tax shelter partnerships with numerous partners. Under these procedures, the tax treatment of partnership items is determined at the partnership level in a unified partnership proceeding rather than in separate proceedings for each partner. As we stated in an earlier case interpreting the TEFRA partnership provisions:

By enacting the partnership audit and litigation procedures, Congress provided a method for uniformly adjusting items of partnership income, loss, deduction, or credit that affect each partner. Congress decided that no longer would a partner's tax liability be determined uniquely but the tax treatment of any partnership item would be determined at the partnership level.

Although it is the tax matters partner that most often files a petition for readjustment under TEFRA, if it does not do so within 90 days any notice partner may file a petition within 60 days thereafter (Section 6226(b)(1)).

Before the Tax Court the Commissioner argued on several alternative grounds that the transfer did not qualify for non-recognition treatment:

1. There was no partnership.

2. If instead there were a partnership, the transfer was not to it but to a related party.

3. If there were indeed a partnership and the transfer were in fact made to it, the transfer was not in exchange for an interest in the partnership but was rather a sale to the partnership.

In those terms GAF would have had to surmount all three hurdles to prevail.

On September 9, 1998 GAF moved for summary judgment on the separate ground that the assessment is time-barred. Its motion asserted:

1. Section 6501(a)'s general limitations period is inapplicable to partnership items because Section 6629(a) sets forth a separate and exclusive three-year statute of limitations on assessments attributable to partnership items. Because more than three years had elapsed since GAF Corporation had filed its consolidated return, the assessment was untimely.

2. Even if Section 6501(a) were held to provide the applicable limitations period, the issuance of the FPAA did not suspend the running of that period, and it too has expired. Again that would render the assessment untimely.

3. Section 6501(e), which provides a six-year statute of limitations where items in excess of 25% of a taxpayer's gross income are omitted from the face of a return, is inapplicable because the items at issue were disclosed on the consolidated return.

In response the Commissioner urged that the general limitation on assessments set out in Section 6501(a) governs all taxes assessed under the Code.

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Bluebook (online)
249 F.3d 175, 46 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 93, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 7969, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rhone-poulenc-surfactants-and-specialties-lp-v-commissioner-of-internal-ca3-2001.