Stinnes Interoil, Inc. v. Director

7 N.J. Tax 473
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedJuly 16, 1985
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 7 N.J. Tax 473 (Stinnes Interoil, Inc. v. Director) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stinnes Interoil, Inc. v. Director, 7 N.J. Tax 473 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1985).

Opinion

KAHN, J.T.C.

This is an appeal from the determination by the Director, Division of Taxation that taxpayer was not entitled to deduct [475]*475certain interest expenses from its net income or exclude certain loan proceeds from its net worth in determining the amount due under the New Jersey Corporation Business Tax, N.J.S.A. 54:10A-1 et seq. The Director assessed additional taxes for the 1980 tax year of $42,659.47, as well as interest of $20,476.54 and penalties of $4,265.94, all of which were paid by the taxpayer prior to the filing of the complaint.

The pertinent facts are generally undisputed. Taxpayer is a Delaware corporation having its principal place of business in New Jersey. It is engaged in the wholesale marketing and distribution of petroleum products. Taxpayer is the wholly-owned subsidiary of Stinnes Corporation, a Delaware corporation having its principal place of business in New York. Stinnes Corporation acts as a holding company for its subsidiaries and has no business operations other than the administrative functions it performs for these companies.

The transactions which formed the basis of this suit involved the use of a short-term credit facility at European American Bank and Trust Company (EAB), a New York bank. The credit facility was negotiated for by Stinnes Corporation and was utilized for the benefit of its subsidiaries. The procedure for utilizing the credit facility can be described in the following manner.

Taxpayer relied on the testimony of Thomas Mastroeli, the former treasurer of Stinnes Corporation, as well as various exhibits to describe the credit facility. Among the exhibits was a letter from EAB to Stinnes Corporation dated December 29, 1978 in which a revolving credit line for $9,200,000 was established. This letter provided that the facility was “available for borrowings by all subsidiaries of Stinnes Corporation under its guarantee.” The letter also provided that the borrowing subsidiary was to submit a promissory note for each borrowing. The credit facility was also available to the subsidiaries for letters of credit and acceptance financing, for which Stinnes Corporation had to execute documents exhibiting its primary [476]*476liability. Mastroeli described the flow of funds and the necessary bookkeeping for the credit facility.

Stinnes Corporation maintained an account at EAB, known as a concentration account, through which the funds flowed. Each of the subsidiaries, including taxpayer, was empowered to draw directly from Stinnes Corporation’s account. The funds were drawn for the short-term financing of the subsidiaries’ trading activities, in taxpayer’s case, oil shipments and accounts receivable. When the financed deal was completed, generally within 30 days, the subsidiary would return the funds to the credit facility.

The movement of funds to and from the credit facility was recorded through the concentration account and the individual accounts of the subsidiaries, known as zero balance accounts (ZBAs).

A withdrawal by a subsidiary was reflected by a negative entry in the ZBA. A repayment by the subsidiary was reflected by a positive entry in the ZBA. At the end of each day the balance in each ZBA, either positive or negative, was brought to zero. A negative balance in a ZBA was increased to zero by a negative entry in the concentration account, representing, at least theoretically, a flow of funds out of the concentration account and into the ZBA. A positive balance in a ZBA was decreased to zero by a positive entry in the concentration account, representing a repayment. The ZBAs were merely a bookkeeping mechanism used by Stinnes Corporation to determine on a daily basis the extent of the borrowing of each subsidiary. While the bookkeeping method makes it appear that the funds went from the bank to Stinnes Corporation and then to the subsidiary, in actuality the subsidiaries withdrew directly from Stinnes Corporation’s account. Repayments were also made directly to this account.

The concentration account, like the ZBAs, had a daily balance, either positive or negative, representing the net borrowing of the subsidiaries. This account also had to be brought to zero each day. Stinnes Corporation would accomplish this by [477]*477borrowing funds from any one of several banks. Thus, while the credit facility was maintained at EAB, the funds which flowed through it were obtained from whichever bank offered the most favorable rates on a particular day, including EAB. The loan proceeds were placed directly in the concentration account. When the subsidiaries returned the funds to the credit facility, and the concentration account increased to a positive balance, the loans would be repaid, with the interest payments made by Stinnes Corporation with funds from the subsidiaries.

The credit facility and the various loans were handled by Stinnes Corporation. The loans and credit facility were maintained in its name and remained its responsibility. However, none of the funds made available through the credit facility ever flowed directly to Stinnes Corporation. Its only involvement with the facility was administrative. Stinnes Corporation’s justification for using the facility was to minimize the overall interest rates for the operating companies and maximize the utilization of cash by those companies. The testimony demonstrated that this type of lending facility was not available to the individual subsidiaries; the subsidiaries were unable to either borrow such amounts or obtain similar loans at such low rates. There was also testimony that this type of facility was common for trading companies such as taxpayer.

Taxpayer did not include any amount of the withdrawals from the EAB credit facility in its net worth and deducted interest payments on these withdrawals in full for purposes of computing its New Jersey corporation business tax. The Director contended that the funds from EAB were includable in net worth under N.J.S.A. 54:10A-4(d)(5) as indebtedness owed directly or indirectly to holders of 10% or more of the aggregate outstanding shares of capital stock of all classes. Pursuant to N.J.S.A. 54:10A-4(k), the Director likewise denied a deduction for 90% of the interest on that indebtedness. Plaintiff contends that these determinations by the Director were erroneous in that alternatively (1) the statute was not meant to apply to this situation, since Stinnes Corporation was merely a [478]*478conduit for the funds from EAB, (2) the actual borrower from EAB was taxpayer, or (3) the statute was not intended to cover short-term financing.

From the above I can make the following preliminary findings of fact. The technical lender in this instance is Stinnes Corporation, taxpayer’s parent. While the letter of December 28, 1978 described the subsidiaries as “borrowers” and Stinnes Corporation as a “guarantor”, the actual procedure followed was to have the funds flow to Stinnes Corporation’s concentration account, from which taxpayer made withdrawls and to which it later made repayments. Interest payments were made by Stinnes Corporation, which later collected the proportionate shares from the subsidiaries. Taxpayer’s theory is that Stinnes Corporation is a mere conduit and that its role in the transfer of funds should be ignored. In other words, taxpayer seeks to distinguish the case where a parent lends its own funds to a subsidiary from the case where a parent borrows from a bank or other lending institution for the purpose of lending to a subsidiary.

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Bluebook (online)
7 N.J. Tax 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stinnes-interoil-inc-v-director-njtaxct-1985.