Whirlpool Int'l Holdings v. CIR

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 6, 2021
Docket20-1900
StatusPublished

This text of Whirlpool Int'l Holdings v. CIR (Whirlpool Int'l Holdings v. CIR) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whirlpool Int'l Holdings v. CIR, (6th Cir. 2021).

Opinion

RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b) File Name: 21a0280p.06

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

┐ WHIRLPOOL FINANCIAL CORPORATION; CONSOLIDATED │ SUBSIDIARIES, │ Petitioners-Appellants, > Nos. 20-1899/1900 │ │ v. │ │ COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, │ Respondent-Appellee. │ ┘

On Appeal from the United States Tax Court; No. 13986-17—Albert G. Lauber, Judge.

Argued: June 9, 2021

Decided and Filed: December 6, 2021

Before: NORRIS, KETHLEDGE, and NALBANDIAN, Circuit Judges. _________________

COUNSEL

ARGUED: Gregory G. Garre, LATHAM & WATKINS LLP, Washington, D.C., for Appellants. Judith A. Hagley, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Mark A. Oates, Robert H. Albaral, A. Duane Webber, Summer M. Austin, Joseph B. Judkins, Meerah Kim, Cameron C. Reilly, BAKER & MCKENZIE LLP, Chicago, Illinois, Rodney H. Standage, WHIRLPOOL CORPORATION, Chicago, Illinois, for Appellants. Judith A. Hagley, Francesca Ugolini, Arthur T. Catterall, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Appellee.

KETHLEDGE, J., delivered the opinion of the court in which NORRIS, J., joined. NALBANDIAN, J. (pp. 17–29), delivered a separate dissenting opinion. Nos. 20-1899/1900 Whirlpool Fin. Corp. v. CIR Page 2

_________________

OPINION _________________

KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judge. A subsidiary of Whirlpool Corporation with a single part- time employee in Luxembourg sold refrigerators and washing machines to Whirlpool in a series of complicated transactions. By means of a 2007 corporate restructuring, neither the Luxembourgian subsidiary nor Whirlpool itself paid any taxes on the profits (more than $45 million) earned from those transactions. The IRS later determined that Whirlpool should have paid taxes on those profits. Whirlpool appealed that determination to the Tax Court, which granted summary judgment to the Commissioner. We affirm.

I.

A.

Before 1962, the income of a foreign subsidiary of an American corporation generally was not subject to taxation in the United States until that income was distributed to the American parent. See Ashland Oil, Inc. v. Comm’r of Internal Revenue, 95 T.C. 348, 354 (1990). This regime encouraged American companies to structure their operations so as to shift their income to foreign subsidiaries, whose income would not be subject to taxation in the United States. The American parent could thereby defer indefinitely any taxation in the United States of the income shifted to the foreign subsidiary.

By 1961, the practice of shifting income to foreign subsidiaries for purposes of tax deferral had become widespread among multinational corporations. That year President Kennedy described the problem as follows:

The undesirability of continuing deferral is underscored where deferral has served as a shelter for tax escape through the unjustifiable use of tax havens such as Switzerland. Recently more and more enterprises organized abroad by American firms have arranged their corporate structures—aided by artificial arrangements between parent and subsidiary regarding intercompany pricing, the transfer of patent licensing rights, the shifting of management fees, and similar practices which maximize the accumulation of profits in the tax haven—so as to exploit the Nos. 20-1899/1900 Whirlpool Fin. Corp. v. CIR Page 3

multiplicity of foreign tax systems and international agreements in order to reduce sharply or eliminate completely their tax liabilities both at home and abroad.

Message from the President of the United States Relative To Our Federal Tax System, April 20, 1961, reprinted in H.R. Doc. No. 87-140, at 6 (1961).

As an example of this practice, suppose that, in 1961, an American company created a subsidiary in a foreign country—say, Mexico—which then manufactured goods for the American parent. If the Mexican subsidiary sold the finished goods directly to the American parent at a price reflecting the cost of manufacturing them, the American parent would pay tax on whatever profit—say, $10 million—that it earned from sales of those goods to third-party vendors. But suppose instead that the American parent created a second subsidiary in a country—say, Switzerland—that did not tax income from sales of goods manufactured elsewhere. The Mexican subsidiary could then sell the goods at a low price to the Swiss subsidiary, which could then sell them to the American parent at a relatively high price. Suppose the Swiss subsidiary’s profit on those sales was $6 million. That would shift $6 million of profit from the American parent—whose income was subject to taxation in the United States—to the Swiss subsidiary, whose income (prior to the enactment of the provisions at issue here) was not subject to taxation in its home country or in the United States. The American parent could thereby defer, indefinitely, paying any tax on the $6 million.

Congress sought to prevent this kind of tax avoidance when, in 1962, it enacted Subpart F of the Internal Revenue Code. See Revenue Act of 1962, Pub. L. No. 87-834, 76 Stat. 960 (1962), codified at 26 U.S.C. §§ 951-965. Subpart F taxes an American corporation directly on certain kinds of income held by its foreign subsidiaries—which Congress referred to as “controlled foreign corporations” (“CFCs”). 26 U.S.C. §§ 954(d)(1), 957. As relevant here, income subject to taxation under Subpart F includes a CFC’s foreign base company sales income (“FBCSI”—the acronym is unavoidable here). See id. § 954(a)(2).

Under Subpart F of the Code, two provisions determine whether a CFC has generated FBCSI. Section 954(d)(1) treats as FBCSI any income that a CFC derives from certain transactions with a “related person,” which the Code defines basically to include entities related to the CFC (either as a parent, subsidiary, or entity controlled by the same entity that controls the Nos. 20-1899/1900 Whirlpool Fin. Corp. v. CIR Page 4

CFC). See id. § 954(d)(3). The transactions described in § 954(d)(1) are the kinds of transactions within a corporate structure—like the sale of products from the Swiss subsidiary to its American parent in the example described above—that American corporations often used (before the enactment of Subpart F) to defer taxation on income. See Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation, Tax Effects of Conducting Foreign Business Through Foreign Corporations, JCS-5-61 (1961) (“hereinafter Joint Committee on Taxation”).

But under the tax laws of some countries—particularly those that employed a “territorial” system of taxation, under which income generated elsewhere typically is not taxed in the corporation’s home country—a corporation could avoid taxation of income by conducting certain activities (e.g., selling or manufacturing) through a foreign branch or division, rather than through a separate subsidiary. Congress therefore enacted § 954(d)(2), which is a failsafe provision that applies (to paraphrase a very complex provision) when a CFC uses a foreign branch to achieve “substantially the same” tax effect—meaning the same tax-deferral effect— that American corporations had been able to achieve (before 1962) by parking income with a foreign subsidiary. 26 U.S.C. § 954(d)(2); see also Vetco Inc. v. Comm’r of Internal Revenue, 95 T.C. 579, 593 (1990). And when the requirements of § 954(d)(2) are met, the income “attributable to” the branch’s activities “shall constitute foreign base company sales income of the controlled foreign corporation[,]” 26 U.S.C.

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Whirlpool Int'l Holdings v. CIR, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whirlpool-intl-holdings-v-cir-ca6-2021.