Ruddick Corp. v. United States

3 Cl. Ct. 61, 52 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5677, 1983 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1671
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedJuly 22, 1983
DocketNo. 477-77
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 3 Cl. Ct. 61 (Ruddick Corp. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ruddick Corp. v. United States, 3 Cl. Ct. 61, 52 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5677, 1983 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1671 (cc 1983).

Opinion

OPINION

WILLI, Senior Judge:

On the eve of a carefully planned nontaxable reorganization, by which investment banker and securities dealer R.S. Dickson and Company (RSD) joined with textile manufacturer American & Efird Mills, Inc. (A & E) to form the plaintiff, RSD, having a large net operating loss carryover and a poor prognosis for generating sufficient post-reorganization operating income to timely utilize it, caused its wholly owned venture capital subsidiary, Ruddco, to declare a dividend of 52,638 shares of American Credit Corporation (ACC) common stock with unrealized appreciation approximating the amount of the unused loss carryover. This dividend action accorded with the prior suggestions of Haskins & Sells (H & S), retained by RSD to advise it on the tax aspects of the reorganization.

Shortly after the reorganization RSD sold the ACC stock, thereby realizing its appreciated value, and on its tax return absorbed the loss carryover with the resulting capital gain. This tax reporting treatment conformed with Internal Revenue Code Secs. 243, allowing full deductibility of the dividend received by the parent; 301, mandating the parent’s assumption of the subsidiary’s basis in the dividend shares; and 311, providing that the subsidiary is to recognize no gain on the dividend transfer of the appreciated shares.

On audit the Commissioner of Internal Revenue took the position that the dividend transaction was undertaken for tax, rather than business reasons and that, accordingly, the gain realized upon sale of the dividend shares was taxable to Ruddco, not RSD. After assessment and payment of the resulting deficiency the present suit for refund was brought.

After some considerable preliminary skirmishing in the litigation, defendant moved for summary judgment, relying on the reallocation authority of Sec. 482 to clearly reflect the respective incomes of related entities to override the nonrecognition features of Secs. 243, 301 and 311. Plaintiff challenged the Government’s right to first invoke Sec. 482 only after suit had been filed and otherwise cross-moved.

In an opinion of February 25, 1981 a panel of the United States Court of Claims unanimously held that Sec. 482 was properly invoked. Beyond that, however, a majority of the panel held that absent what it called “taint” in the conception and execution of the dividend and subsequent sale transactions the reallocation authority of Sec. 482 could not be permitted to override the nonrecognition treatment that Congress had provided. Ruddick Corp. v. United States, 226 Ct.Cl. 426, 643 F.2d 747. The majority repeatedly emphasized that the defendant assumed, for purposes of its motion, the absence of ulterior tax motivation in the total situation and also conceded the presence of a legitimate business purpose prompting the dividend action and the later sale of the dividend shares.

Explaining that it was “unwilling to decide the sensitive and complex issue of taint (including tax avoidance and evasion) in this substantial tax case on the affidavits and depositions which have been submitted to us,”1 the majority denied both parties’ summary judgment motions and remanded the cause for “ventilation and determination of the facts.”2 Pursuant to that mandate a trial was held and the emergent facts concerning the background, execution and aftermath of'the reorganization and the related dividend action are detailed in the findings of fact accompanying this opinion.

[63]*63Research suggests that the concept of taint, as applied to the interplay between Sec. 482 and the nonrecognition provisions here involved, is original with the panel majority. Although the majority omitted to define the concept that it introduced, it did identify two ingredients relevant to the circumstances presented here that amply suffice to dispose of this case. I refer to the following observation of the majority (226 Ct.Cl. at 434, 643 F.2d at 752):

Assuming as we now must that RSD’s acquisition and later sale of the ACC shares were not tainted by any tax evasion or avoidance purpose and occurred solely because of true business aims *
*We expressly include in this general assumption (a) absence of any plan at the time of the transfer from Ruddco to RSD to sell or attempt to sell the ACC stock to outsiders after the transfer * * *.

Whatever else taint may embrace in the abstract, it is clear from the above that it exists here if (1) the dividend declaration was prompted by tax rather than true business aims, or (2) there existed at the time of the declaration any plan to later sell the dividend shares. I take these pronouncements, together with the holding validating the applicability of Sec. 482, as constituting the law of the case. As such, they govern the determinations to be made at this later stage of the litigation. Northern Helex Co. v. United States, 225 Ct.Cl. 194, 197-198, 200-201, 634 F.2d 557, 560, 561-562 (1980).

As a member of the Midwest Stock Exchange and a securities underwriter subject to the jurisdiction of the Securities and Exchange Commission, RSD was subject to liquidity requirements that obliged it to maintain net capital of not less than six and two-thirds percent of its aggregate indebtedness. Such capital must consist of readily marketable assets valued on a conservative basis requiring, for example, a 30-percent discount of the quoted value of stocks traded on the New York Stock Exchange and a 50-percent discount of the quoted value of stocks traded over-the-counter. Stocks not publicly traded receive a zero value for net capital purposes.

For many years prior to the reorganization RSD owned 110,004 shares of A & E common stock, an issue that was traded over-the-counter. At the time of the reorganization those shares had a market value of $1,705,062. Finding 20, infra. At that value they contributed so substantially to RSD’s ability to meet its net capital obligations that without them it would have fallen far short of doing so.

The form of the reorganization that joined RSD and A & E to create the plaintiff was dictated by a major A & E secured creditor, the Equitable Life Assurance Society. Findings 15, 21, infra. The plan preferred and initially proposed by RSD and A & E was a simple merger, with the resulting entity, plaintiff, to function as an operating company. Equitable refused to approve that format, however, insisting that its collateral remain in the name of A & E. It was for that reason that a holding company approach was adopted whereby A & E and RSD became plaintiff’s wholly owned subsidiaries with the shareholders of those two corporations receiving plaintiff’s stock in exchange for their former holdings in A & E and RSD. As consummated, the reorganization was carried out in that manner with one exception, relating to the 110,004 A & E shares owned by RSD. Instead of RSD receiving plaintiff’s stock in exchange for its A &-E shares, just as all other A & E shareholders did, it received nothing and thereby sustained a net capital contraction for regulatory purposes of $852,531 ($1,705,-062 discounted by 50 percent).

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3 Cl. Ct. 61, 52 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5677, 1983 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1671, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruddick-corp-v-united-states-cc-1983.