Xilinx Inc. and Subsidiaries v. Commissioner

125 T.C. No. 4
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedAugust 30, 2005
Docket4142-01, 702-03
StatusUnknown

This text of 125 T.C. No. 4 (Xilinx Inc. and Subsidiaries v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Xilinx Inc. and Subsidiaries v. Commissioner, 125 T.C. No. 4 (tax 2005).

Opinion

125 T.C. No. 4

UNITED STATES TAX COURT

XILINX INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES, Petitioners v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent

XILINX INC. AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES, Petitioners v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent

Docket Nos. 4142-01, 702-03. Filed August 30, 2005.

P entered into a cost-sharing agreement to develop intangibles with S, its foreign subsidiary. Each party was required to pay a percentage of the total research and development costs based on its respective anticipated benefits from the intangibles. P issued stock options to its employees performing research and development. In determining the allocation of costs pursuant to the agreement, P did not include in research and development costs any amount related to the issuance of stock options to, or exercise of stock options by, its employees. R, in his notices of deficiency, determined that for cost-sharing purposes, pursuant to sec. 1.482-7(d), Income Tax Regs., the spread (i.e., the stock’s market price on the exercise date over the exercise price) or, in the alternative, the grant date value, relating to compensatory stock options, should have been included as a research and development cost. -2-

1. Held: R’s allocation is contrary to the arm’s-length standard mandated by sec. 1.482-1(b), Income Tax Regs., because uncontrolled parties would not allocate the spread or the grant date value relating to employee stock options.

2. Held, further, P’s allocation satisfies the arm’s- length standard mandated by sec. 1.482-1, Income Tax Regs.

Kenneth B. Clark, Ronald B. Schrotenboer, William F. Colgin, Tyler A. Baker, Jaclyn J. Pampel, Anthony D. Cipriano, and Allen Madison, for petitioners.

David P. Fuller, Jeffrey A. Hatfield, Bryce A. Kranzthor, Lloyd T. Silberzweig, Kendall Williams, David N. Bowen, John E. Hinding, and Paul K. Webb, for respondent.

OPINION

FOLEY, Judge: Respondent determined deficiencies in the

amounts of $24,653,660, $25,930,531, $27,857,516, and $27,243,975

and section 6662(a) accuracy-related penalties in the amounts of

$4,935,813, $5,189,389, $5,573,412, and $5,448,795 relating to

petitioners’ 1996,1 1997, 1998, and 1999 Federal income taxes,

respectively. The issues for decision are whether: (1)

Petitioner and its foreign subsidiary must share the cost, if

any, of stock options petitioner issued to research and

development employees, (2) respondent’s allocations meet the

arm’s-length requirement set forth in section 1.482-1(b), Income

Tax Regs., and (3) petitioners are liable for section 6662(a)

accuracy-related penalties.

1 Pursuant to the parties’ Apr. 4, 2002, stipulation of settled issues, the 1996 taxable year is no longer in issue. -3-

Background

I. Xilinx’s Line of Business and Corporate Structure

Xilinx Inc.,2 is in the business of researching, developing,

manufacturing, marketing, and selling field programmable logic

devices,3 integrated circuit devices, and other development

software systems. Petitioner uses unrelated producers to

fabricate and assemble its wafers into integrated circuit

devices.

During the years in issue, petitioner was the parent of a

group of affiliated subsidiaries including, but not limited to

Xilinx Holding One Ltd., Xilinx Holding Two Ltd., Xilinx

Development Corporation (XDC), NeoCAD Inc.,4 Xilinx Ireland (XI),

and Xilinx International Corporation. XI was established in 1994

as an unlimited liability company under the laws of Ireland and

was owned by Xilinx Holding One Ltd., and Xilinx Holding Two Ltd.

(i.e., Irish subsidiaries of petitioner). XI was created to

manufacture field programmable logic devices and to increase

petitioner’s European market share. It manufactured, marketed,

and sold field programmable logic devices, primarily to customers

2 All references to “petitioner” are to Xilinx Inc. All references to “petitioners” are to Xilinx Inc. and its consolidated subsidiaries. 3 Field programmable logic devices are integrated circuits that can be programmed, using development software, to perform complex functions. 4 NeoCAD Inc., was liquidated in 1998. -4-

in Europe, and conducted research and development.

II. The Cost-Sharing Agreement

On April 2, 1995, petitioner and XI entered into a

Technology Cost and Risk Sharing Agreement (cost-sharing

agreement). The cost-sharing agreement provided that all “New

Technology” developed by either petitioner or XI would be jointly

owned. New Technology was defined as technology developed by

petitioner, XI, or petitioner’s consolidated subsidiaries, on or

after the execution date of the cost-sharing agreement. Each

party was required to pay a percentage of the total research and

development costs based on the respective anticipated benefits

from New Technology. The cost-sharing agreement further provided

that each year the parties would review and, when appropriate,

adjust such percentages to ensure that costs continued to be

based on the anticipated benefits to each party.

Petitioner and XI were required to share direct costs,

indirect costs, and acquired intellectual property rights costs.

Direct costs were defined in the agreement as those costs

directly related to the research and development of New

Technology including, but not limited to, salaries, bonuses, and

other payroll costs and benefits. Indirect costs were defined as

those costs, incurred by other departments, that generally

benefit all research and development including, but not limited

to, administrative, legal, accounting, and insurance costs. -5-

Acquired intellectual property rights costs were defined as costs

incurred in connection with the acquisition of products or

intellectual property rights. In determining the allocation of

costs pursuant to the cost-sharing agreement, petitioner did not

include in research and development costs any amount related to

the issuance of employee stock options (ESOs).

Cost-sharing percentages for petitioner and XI relating to

1997, 1998, and 1999 were as follows:

Year Petitioner XI

1997 73.61% 26.39% 1998 73.35 26.65 1999 65.09 34.91

In 1997, 1998, and 1999, the following number of petitioner’s and

XI’s employees engaged in research and development:

1997 338 6 1998 343 10 1999 394 16

III. Petitioner’s Stock Option Plans

ESOs are offers to sell stock at a stated price (i.e., the

exercise price) for a stated period of time. They are used by

many companies to attract, retain, and motivate employees and

align employee and employer goals. There are basically three

types of ESOs: statutory or incentive stock options (ISOs),

nonstatutory stock options (NSOs), and purchase rights issued

pursuant to an employee stock purchase plan (ESPP purchase -6-

rights). ISOs and NSOs allow employees to purchase stock at a

fixed price for a specified period of time. ESPP purchase rights

allow employees to purchase stock at a discount through the use

of payroll deductions. ISOs and ESPP purchase rights receive

special tax treatment and are typically not subject to tax when

they are granted or exercised, but the stock acquired pursuant to

the exercise of these options is subject to tax when such stock

is sold.5 NSOs, however, are, pursuant to section 83,6 Property

Transferred in Connection with the Performance of Services,

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