Sinclair Oil Corporation v. The United States

392 F.2d 249, 183 Ct. Cl. 92, 21 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 926, 1968 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 31
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedMarch 15, 1968
Docket160-66
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 392 F.2d 249 (Sinclair Oil Corporation v. The 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
Sinclair Oil Corporation v. The United States, 392 F.2d 249, 183 Ct. Cl. 92, 21 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 926, 1968 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 31 (cc 1968).

Opinion

ON PLAINTIFFS’ AND DEFENDANT’S MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

LARAMORE, Judge.

Sinclair Oil Corporation, for itself and as the common parent of a group of affiliated corporations, 1 and each member of the group on its own behalf (hereinafter referred to collectively as either plaintiff or Sinclair), filed consolidated Federal corporation income tax returns for the tax years 1955, 1956 and 1957. The group claims a refund of approximately $237,220.81 2 in taxes which, it alleges, were erroneously assessed. Payments of the deficiency assessments for 1955,1956 and 1957 were made on March 24, 1961, February 16, 1962, and February 28, 1963, respectively. Sinclair’s refund claims were denied, and suit has been timely filed. The parties are before us on their cross-motions for summary judg *251 ment. We find that the assessment of a deficiency was improper.

The District Director of the Internal Revenue Service for Manhattan, after an audit of Sinclair’s 1955 consolidated return, assessed a deficiency based upon his decision that, for the purpose of determining the amount of income exempt from the additional tax imposed upon corporations which file consolidated returns (two percent of consolidated taxable income as provided for in section 1503(a) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954), 3 the net loss incurred by one exempt member of the group, Sinclair Canada Oil Company, a Western Hemisphere trade corporation (as defined in section 921), 4 must be subtracted from the net profits realized by Sinclair Pipe Line Company and Goodall Pipe Line Company, equally exempt regulated public utilities (as defined in section 1503(c)). 5 Deficiencies were also assessed for the years 1956 and 1957. The District Director decided that the Sinclair Canada Oil Company net loss for 1956 must be *252 deducted from the tot;al net income for 1956 realized by Sinclair Pipe Line Company, Pawnee Pipe Line Company (a regulated public utility) and Goodall Pipe Line Company. For 1957, Sinclair Canada Oil Company’s net loss was similarly subtracted from the net income of Sinclair Pipe Line Company for purposes of section 1503(a).

In each year, to determine the base amount of income to which it applied the two percent tax, Sinclair had deducted the full regulated public utility net taxable income from consolidated taxable income, without first subtracting the losses of the Western Hemisphere trade corporation. The net loss of the only Western Hemisphere trade corporation in the affiliated group, the District Director concluded, must be subtracted from the net income realized by any exempt regulated public utility in the group. The result of that calculation, he found, is the only amount exempted from the consolidated taxable income of the group otherwise subject to the two percent tax. To the extent that the loss, when deducted, reduced the exempt net income of the regulated public utilities, a corresponding increased amount of consolidated taxable income was subject to the tax. The two percent tax assessed on that amount of additional consolidated income is the tax for which Sinclair now claims a refund.

Sinclair’s refund claim for each year is based solely upon the ground that section 1503(b) exempts net income earned either by regulated public utilities or by Western Hemisphere trade corporations within the group, but does not limit the exemption to the “net” of regulated public utilities’ income measured against Western Hemisphere trade corporations’ losses. Net losses from one category, plaintiff contends, are not subtracted from net profits of the other category. To determine if there is any net income earned by a class, losses and profits of all corporations within the class are netted, but the results of those intra-class calculations are not netted against each other.

Defendant argues that the statutory use of the word “and” in section 1503(b) (rather than the word “or”), is a clear indication that the only exempt amount is the income, if any, of the combined profits and losses of both classes. In essence, therefore, we must decide if Congress, by adopting the conjunctive word “and” to introduce the regulated public utility class of excludable income into section 1503(b), intended to merge two classes of unrelated exempt income into one exemption; or, on the other hand, if it intended to exempt income earned by one class apart from a profit or loss of the other class. Our examination of the legislative history (of which there is a dearth of pertinent material), of the impelling motivation for the enactment of each exemption, and of the specific wording of section 1503(b) leads us to conclude that Congress intended to create two independent classes of exempt income, each of which is autonomously exempted from the amount of consolidated taxable income of the affiliated group subject to the two percent additional tax.

The policy motivations for enacting each exemption are clearly unrelated. In 1950, Congress enacted the two percent additional tax on affiliated corporations filing consolidated returns. It was thought that this additional tax burden would adversely affect American investments in Latin America. Therefore, an exemption for Western Hemisphere trade corporations was enacted. 6 The exemption for regulated public utilities, however, was first promulgated in 1954, some four years later. In adding this exemp *253 tion Congress sought to relieve the regulated public utilities from a tax burden to which they were often subject only because state regulation made it necessary for them to operate in the form of separately incorporated subsidiaries. This purportedly unfair additional two percent tax burden resulted in the enactment of a second class of exempt income. 7

Each class was granted exempt status after having been separately considered. Defendant's insistence that the word “and” necessarily created one exempt “class of income is not persuasive in the absence of any congressional statement that it intended to provide for only one net amount of exempt income. The implicit objective of these provisions,’ which we attribute to Congress, was to create two separate classes of exempt income.

Neither party disputes the fact that different considerations motivated the enactment of each exemption. Nor do they contest the propriety of the accepted rule that losses and profits of all corporations within each class must be netted to determine if there is any income of a class which might be subject to the exemption. At issue, however, is whether net losses of one class may be ignored, and the full net income of the other class excluded.

The legislative history is inconclusive, but its purport indicates an intent to create two independent classes. When the regulated public utilities exemption was under consideration, Congress was cognizant of the then existing and accepted rule which required the netting of profits and losses to determine if any exempt Western Hemisphere trade corporation net income had been earned.

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392 F.2d 249, 183 Ct. Cl. 92, 21 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 926, 1968 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sinclair-oil-corporation-v-the-united-states-cc-1968.