REVISED - March 10, 1998
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
_____________________
No. 97-60135
_____________________
Estate of GORDON B. McLENDON, Deceased;
GORDON B. McLENDON, JR., Independent Executor,
Petitioners-Appellants,
versus
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE,
Respondent-Appellee.
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Estate of GORDON B. McLENDON, Deceased, Donor;
GORDON B. McLENDON, JR., Independent Executor,
Petitioners-Appellants
versus
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE,
Respondent-Appellee.
_________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Decision of the United States Tax Court
_________________________________________________________________
March 9, 1998
Before JOLLY, DUHÉ, and PARKER, Circuit Judges.
E. GRADY JOLLY, Circuit Judge:
The only question remaining in this appeal1 is whether
Gordon B. McLendon was sufficiently close to death on March 5,
1986, to require him to depart from the actuarial tables published
1
Earlier, another panel of this court decided all of the other
issues and remanded as to this question. See Estate of McLendon v.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue, No. 94-40584 (5th Cir. Dec. 28,
1995)(unpublished).
by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue (the “Commissioner”) in
valuing a remainder interest and related annuity. The Tax Court
determined that he was, from which final decision McLendon’s Estate
appeals. We reverse.
I
Although this case raises several contentious legal questions,
the underlying facts are not in serious dispute. Through various
partnership interests, McLendon was the principal owner and
director of a vast broadcasting and entertainment empire. His
interests ranged from the 458-station Liberty Broadcasting System
to numerous individual radio stations, television stations, and
movie theaters. Over his life time, McLendon became a very wealthy
man.
Mortality hovers over the castle as well as the cottage,
however, and in May 1985 McLendon was diagnosed with esophageal
cancer. Although his condition initially improved following
radiation therapy, the cancer recurred in September. At this
point, McLendon’s cancer was categorized as “systemic”--the most
severe of three types of cancer growth. There is no dispute that
the cancer was very likely terminal from this point forward, with
a 2-3% overall survival rate. In particular, any remissions
achieved after this point were generally expected by McLendon’s
doctors to be temporary.
Nonetheless, from October 1985 through March 1986, McLendon
received six courses of chemotherapy at M.D. Anderson’s world-
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renowned cancer treatment facility in Houston, Texas. On
December 3, 1985, after three courses of chemotherapy, McLendon’s
doctor wrote on his discharge summary:
The patient had an esophagogastroduodenoscopy
on November 26, 1985, and it showed complete
endoscopic remission confirmed by multiple
biopsies of the affected area.
Despite this upbeat news, on December 5, 1985, McLendon
attempted suicide by shooting himself in the head with a handgun.
A suicide note reflected his belief that he would eventually
succumb to the cancer and his desire not to prolong the suffering
of his family. After being hospitalized for over a month for
treatment of injuries from the failed suicide, McLendon began a
fourth course of chemotherapy. He returned home in late January
1986 and began to receive periodic in-home examinations and
treatment from a Dr. Gruebel. Her impression at the time was that
he was doing well.
In early February, McLendon fell at home and was admitted to
the hospital for treatment of his injuries. On February 14, while
hospitalized, McLendon purportedly dictated2 a letter to Dr.
Freireich, his oncologist, which evidenced a renewed sense of
confidence. McLendon stated that he was feeling much better even
though the chemotherapy was “very, very debilitating.” Stating
that he was “beginning to make plans for the rest of [his] life,”
2
This letter was not signed by McLendon, but did carry the
initials of Billie P. Odom, his personal secretary.
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McLendon inquired specifically about his “total remission” and
prognosis for the future, and asked whether he could “make long
term plans.” Dr. Freireich responded on February 19. Advising
against further surgical procedures, he noted:
The objective evidence that we have has failed
to demonstrate any residual disease. This
includes endoscopy with biopsies of the
esophagus which have proven to be negative on
several occasions and the repeated x-ray
examinations by CT scan which fail to reveal
any evidence of residual malignancy. [By]
clinical and laboratory objective criteria,
the present condition of your illness must be
characterized as “complete remission.” The
word remission is used advisedly, because the
risk of recurrence is still much in the
picture. On the other hand patients who are
cured of their disease are exclusively drawn
from the population of patients who have a
“complete remission.” To state that
positively, you are certainly a candidate for
long term control which fulfills medical and
lay criteria for curability. Unfortunately
the maturity and quantity of our clinical data
does not permit good estimates of the risk of
recurrence in your specific instance. It is
therefore necessary for me as a physician, to
advise you of the risk that the disease might
recur, but to state frankly and without
hesitation that the possibility that your
disease has been permanently eradicated is
definite and significant and in my
professional opinion, should form the basis
for your planning for the future.
At the end of February, McLendon returned home under
twenty-four hour care from a staff of private duty nurses. Notes
taken by these nurses show that during the period from March 2
through March 5, McLendon was able to take short walks and perform
minor tasks, but was at times sick to his stomach, was in constant
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need of pain medication, and was receiving artificial sustenance to
ensure proper caloric intake. McLendon was examined at home on
March 5 by the optimistic Dr. Gruebel. It was her impression at
that time that McLendon was “markedly improved” and in the best
condition since he had come into her care in January. The
Commissioner subsequently presented undisputed expert testimony,
however, that McLendon’s chances of surviving for more than one
year from this date were approximately 10 percent. This estimate
was based principally on the likelihood of recurrence in a case
like McLendon’s.
On March 5, McLendon entered into a private annuity
transaction with his son and the newly minted McLendon Family
Trust. This transaction involved the transfer of remainder
interests in McLendon’s partnership holdings to his son and the
Trust in exchange for $250,000 and an annuity to be paid to
McLendon for life. The amount of the annuity was set such that its
aggregate present value would equal the present value of the
remainder interests. In valuing the remainder interests and the
annuity, the parties referred to the Commissioner’s actuarial
tables for life expectancy then contained in Treas. Reg.
§ 25.2512-5(f). McLendon was sixty-five years old on March 5,
1986, resulting in an actuarial life expectancy of fifteen years
from that date. Based on this figure, the parties ultimately
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determined that the remainder interests had a value of $5,881,695,3
and that the annuity would need to be $865,332 in order to match.
In late March, McLendon completed his final course of
chemotherapy. In May, tests revealed a major recurrence of the
cancer. Treatments were discontinued within a few weeks, and
McLendon died at home on September 14. From the time that he was
first admitted to M.D. Anderson in October 1985 until his death,
McLendon survived longer than 75% of patients diagnosed with
esophageal cancer.
II
McLendon’s estate tax return relied on a presumption that he
had received an adequate and full consideration for the assets
transferred in the private annuity transaction. The Commissioner
disagreed with this presumption, taking issue with both the use of
the actuarial tables and certain substantive aspects of the
valuation of the partnership interests.
With regard to the actuarial tables, the Commissioner took the
position that McLendon’s life expectancy was sufficiently
predictable on March 5, 1986, to make their use unnecessary and
erroneous. Based on the medical evidence, the Commissioner further
found that McLendon’s actual life expectancy on this date was less
than one year. Because this was significantly less than the
fifteen-year figure used by the parties, the Commissioner concluded
3
Based on a value of $18,363,970 for the partnership interests
themselves.
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that the remainder interests had been so undervalued, and the
annuity so overvalued, that the March 5 transfer had not been for
an adequate and full consideration. As such, the Commissioner
declared several million dollars in gift and estate tax
deficiencies based on McLendon’s erroneous use of the actuarial
tables. Additional deficiencies were declared based on the
substantive valuation issues.
McLendon’s Estate took this dispute to the Tax Court, where
the issues were reduced by joint stipulation to six discrete
questions. One of these questions was whether it was proper for
McLendon to apply the actuarial tables to determine his life
expectancy in valuing the remainder interests and annuity. The
rest of the questions concerned the substantive aspects of the
valuation of the partnership interests. On September 30, 1993, the
Tax Court issued its first opinion in this case, generally agreeing
with the Commissioner and imposing $12.5 million in additional gift
and estate taxes. Of significance to the instant appeal, the Tax
Court held that use of the actuarial tables was improper because
McLendon’s life expectancy was reasonably predictable at the time
the private annuity transaction occurred, being approximately one
year.
McLendon’s Estate appealed the Tax Court’s ruling to this
court. Estate of McLendon v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, No.
94-40584 (5th. Cir. December 28, 1995). In an unpublished opinion,
the panel reversed the Tax Court on the substantive valuation
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questions, but remanded as to use of the actuarial tables. Writing
for the court, Judge Jones stated that:
[W]e are unable to discern whether the Tax Court followed
Revenue Ruling 80-80 or found reason to depart from it
[in resolving the actuarial table question]. The Tax
Court’s opinion is both ambiguous and ambivalent
regarding the revenue ruling, as it holds that Gordon had
a life expectancy of one year, a finding that would
suggest to us under the express language of the revenue
ruling that death was not clearly imminent. We must
remand for the court to clarify its position with regard
to the applicability of Revenue Ruling 80-80 so that we
will have a sounder basis for appellate review.
On July 8, 1996, the Tax Court issued its second opinion. It
held that, although neither party had argued a position
inconsistent with Rev. Rul. 80-80, the court had not felt obliged
to follow that ruling, and had instead applied a standard gleaned
from prior case law. It noted, however, that the result would have
been the same under the ruling anyway. In the light of this
clarification, McLendon’s Estate now continues its appeal of the
Tax Court’s determination that use of the actuarial tables was
improper.
III
We review a decision of the Tax Court applying the same
standards used in reviewing a decision of the district court:
Questions of law are reviewed de novo; findings of fact are
reviewed for clear error. Estate of Hudgins v. Commissioner of
Internal Revenue, 57 F.3d 1393, 1396 (5th Cir. 1995).
IV
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As the prior panel foresaw, the remainder of this case turns
on the applicability of Rev. Rul. 80-80. Because we hold that the
ruling provides the legal test applicable to McLendon’s situation,
we find that his use of the actuarial tables was proper.
A
The controversy in this case ultimately stems from 26 U.S.C.
§§ 2036(a) and 2512(b). Under § 2036(a), a decedent’s gross estate
for estate tax purposes is defined to include any property
transferred by him in which he retained a life estate, “except in
case of a bona fide sale for an adequate and full consideration in
money or money’s worth.” Similarly, under § 2512(b), a taxable
gift is defined as a transfer of property “for less than an
adequate and full consideration.” Here, the transfer in question
was the March 5 exchange of the partnership remainder interests for
the cash and annuity. As the parties concede, the question whether
that transfer was for “an adequate and full consideration” turns on
the proper valuation of the remainder interests and the annuity.
At the time of the events in this case, Treas. Reg.
§ 25.2512-5 provided that “the fair market value of annuities, life
estates, terms for years, remainders, and reversions transferred
after November 30, 1983, is their present value determined in this
section.” Because the economic present value of these assets is
dependent upon the predicted length of a measuring life, the
regulation goes on to provide actuarial tables for life expectancy
and instructions for using them to arrive at valuations of the
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assets in question. There is no dispute in this case over the
valuation formulas contained in the regulation. The parties
concede that the only question is whether the circumstances of
McLendon’s case allowed him to use a life expectancy figure derived
from the tables of § 25.2512-5, or instead required him to use some
other method to determine his “actual” life expectancy. If use of
the actuarial tables was proper, then the parties agree that the
values calculated by McLendon were correct, and that the cash and
annuity were adequate consideration for the remainder interests.
If, on the other hand, use of the actuarial tables was improper,
then the parties agree that the remainder interests had a much
higher value, and the annuity a much smaller value, such that the
cash and annuity were not adequate consideration. The sole
question before this court, then, is whether McLendon was allowed
to follow the express language of Treas. Reg. § 25.2512-5 and use
its actuarial tables in valuing the remainder interests and
annuity.
B
This question is less straightforward than it might seem.
Despite their apparently clear command, Treas. Reg. § 25.2512-5 and
its predecessors have not always been vigorously enforced by the
courts. In particular, in Miami Beach First National Bank v.
United States, 443 F.2d 116, 119-20 (5th Cir. 1971), this court
held that “where there is sufficient evidence regarding the actual
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life expectancy of a life tenant, the presumptive correctness of
the Treasury tables will be overcome.”4
Based on Miami Beach First National Bank and other cases of
departure,5 the Commissioner issued various revenue rulings over
the years6 that attempted to clarify his position with regard to
4
This tendency of courts to ignore the regulations in certain
cases stems from the somewhat precarious position of the tables in
the statutory framework. In this context, the Internal Revenue
Code seeks only to assign “value” to various things for tax
purposes. As even the Commissioner concedes, the use of actuarial
tables does not result in particularly accurate measurements of
actual value in individual cases. Because of the difficulty of
computing the actual values of future and dependent interests,
however, the Supreme Court recognized long ago that the use of
actuarial tables was a necessary compromise. The Court noted that
inaccuracies would prevail in individual cases, but concluded that
they would cancel out in the aggregate, and that the tables were
simply an administrative necessity. See Ithaca Trust Co. v. United
States, 279 U.S. 151, 155 (1929); Simpson v. United States, 252
U.S. 547, 550 (1920). For this reason, the actuarial tables are
tolerated.
Implicit in this toleration, however, is the idea that the
tables need not be resorted to where the “administrative necessity”
does not exist. In particular, where the facts and circumstances
are such that an actual value can be calculated in a suitably
reliable way, use of the tables would seem to not be required.
This is ultimately the logic underlying Miami Beach First National
Bank and its progeny.
5
Cases, it might be noted, where the courts’ decisions to
allow departure from the harshness of the tables were without
exception favorable to the taxpayers in ultimate result. In
addition to Miami Beach First National Bank, see, e.g., Estate of
Jennings v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 10 T.C. 323 (1948)
(larger deduction allowed for the charitable gift of a remainder
interest because the remainder was properly valued according to the
shorter actual expected length of the measuring life rather than
the longer length derived from the tables). Here, of course, the
Commissioner seeks departure at the taxpayer’s expense. This
distinction is not wholly irrelevant, as we shall see.
6
See, e.g., Rev. Rul. 80-80, 1980-1 C.B. 194; Rev. Rul. 66-
307, 1966-2 C.B. 429. Subsequent to the events in this case, the
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use of the tables. At the time of the events in this case, the
effective ruling was Rev. Rul. 80-80. It provides, in relevant
part:
The actuarial tables in the regulations are provided
as an administrative necessity, and their general use has
been readily approved by the courts.
The actuarial tables are not based on data that
exclusively involve persons of “good” or “normal” health.
They reflect the incidence of death by disease and
illness as well as by accident. The actuarial tables are
properly applicable to the vast majority of individual
life interests, even though the health of a particular
individual is obviously better or worse than that of the
“average” person of the same age and sex. Occasionally,
however, the actual facts of an individual’s condition
are so exceptional as to justify departure from the
actuarial tables.
. . .
In view of recent case law, the resulting principle
is as follows: the current actuarial tables in the
regulations shall be applied if valuation of an
individual’s life interest is required for purposes of
the federal estate or gift taxes unless the individual is
known to have been afflicted, at the time of the
transfer, with an incurable physical condition that is in
such an advanced stage that death is clearly imminent.
Death is not clearly imminent if there is a reasonable
possibility of survival for more than a very brief
period. For example, death is not clearly imminent if
the individual may survive for a year or more and if such
a possibility is not so remote as to be negligible.
Rev. Rul. 80-80, 1980-1 C.B. 194 (emphasis added, citations
omitted).
Commissioner abandoned this effort and created regulations to
govern the applicability of the actuarial tables. See Treas. Reg.
§§ 1.7520-3(b)(3) (income tax), 20.7520-3(b)(3) (estate tax), and
25.7520-3(b)(3) (gift tax). Rev. Rul. 80-80, the last of the old
line, was revoked in favor of the new regulations, but only for tax
years after 1995. See Rev. Rul. 96-3, 1996-1 C.B. 348.
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McLendon’s Estate argues that Rev. Rul. 80-80 clearly allows
his use of the tables. In this regard, the Estate notes that the
undisputed testimony of the Commissioner’s own expert was that
McLendon had a 10 percent chance of surviving for a year or more on
March 5, 1986. As such, the Estate concludes that McLendon’s
possibility of surviving for a year or more from that date was not
so remote as to be negligible, and that he therefore was permitted
and required to use the tables under the clear terms of the ruling.
Although the Commissioner maintains that this court is not
bound to follow Rev. Rul. 80-80, he also purports to take the
position that the ruling does not mandate the result indicated by
the Estate. The Commissioner argues that, although the ruling is
a correct statement of the law, it cannot be taken at face value,
and must be interpreted in the light of Miami Beach First National
Bank. The Commissioner contends that under this reading McLendon’s
use of the tables was inappropriate since there was “sufficient
evidence” of his actual life expectancy on March 5, 1986.
If Rev. Rul. 80-80 does govern this case, we, like the earlier
panel of this court, find it undeniable that it supports the
Estate’s position. The ruling states a clear standard, expressed
in language and example unneedful of further interpretation, and we
are convinced that the 10 percent figure is sufficient to satisfy
it. Whatever “negligible” might mean in a closer case, we are
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certain that it does not refer to a one-in-ten chance.7 As such,
McLendon’s use of the tables was clearly proper under the ruling.
The question, then, is whether Rev. Rul. 80-80 states the
legal test applicable to McLendon’s situation. If it does, then it
is clear that McLendon’s use of the actuarial tables was proper.
The Tax Court ultimately chose not to apply Rev. Rul. 80-80 to this
case.8 This choice was a purely legal decision, and is thus
reviewed de novo.
C
We note at the outset that the Tax Court has long been
fighting a losing battle with the various courts of appeals over
7
Indeed, faced with the clear text of the ruling at oral
argument, the Commissioner was unable to come up with any
definition of “negligible” that would embrace McLendon’s situation.
This silent exclamation underscores the meritless nature of the
Commissioner’s argument under the ruling.
The Commissioner’s silence may have been prompted by the fact
that he has consistently defined the phrase “not so remote as to be
negligible” to mean “less than 5 percent” in other areas of estate
tax. See, e.g., Treas. Reg. §§ 26.2612-1(b)(1)(iii), 26.2612-
1(d)(2)(ii) & 26.2632-1(c)(2)(ii) (generation-skipping transfer
tax); Rev. Rul. 85-23, 1985-1 C.B. 327 (charitable deduction); Rev.
Rul. 78-255, 1978-1 C.B. 294 (same); Rev. Rul. 77-374, 1977-2 C.B.
329 (same); Rev. Rul. 70-452, 1970-2 C.B. 199 (same). Although
this might not be enough to establish that 5 percent is indeed the
correct figure, it would be sufficient to estop the Commissioner
from arguing otherwise in this case, as we shall soon see.
8
The Tax Court’s completely unpersuasive alternative holding
that Rev. Rul. 80-80 also supports its result founders for the same
reasons as the Commissioner’s arguments, and would be reversible
error under any standard of review. For purposes of this opinion,
we need only address the core of the Tax Court’s reasoning, i.e.,
that Miami Beach First National Bank, not Rev. Rul. 80-80, provides
the legal test applicable to McLendon’s case.
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the proper deference to which revenue rulings are due.9 Whereas
virtually every circuit recognizes some form of deference,10 the Tax
Court stands firm in its own position that revenue rulings are
nothing more than the legal contentions of a frequent litigant,
undeserving of any more or less consideration than the conclusory
statements in a party’s brief.11 Although the Supreme Court has not
spoken definitively on the subject, its recent jurisprudence tends
to support the view that the courts owe revenue rulings a bit more
deference than the Tax Court would have us believe.12 Still,
9
See generally Linda Galler, Judicial Deference to Revenue
Rulings: Reconciling Divergent Standards, 56 Ohio St. L. J. 1037,
1059-74 (1995).
10
See, e.g., Amato v. Western Union International, Inc., 773
F.2d 1402, 1411-12 (2d Cir. 1985); Gillis v. Hoechst Celanese
Corp., 4 F.3d 1137, 1145 (3d Cir. 1993); Foil v. Commissioner of
Internal Revenue, 920 F.2d 1196, 1201 (5th Cir. 1990); Threlkeld v.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 848 F.2d 81, 84 (6th Cir. 1988);
Walt Disney Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 4 F.3d 735,
740 (9th Cir. 1993). In this circuit, revenue rulings are
generally “‘given weight as expressing the studied view of the
agency whose duty it is to carry out the statute.’” Foil, 920 F.2d
at 1201 (quoting United States Trust Co. v. Internal Revenue
Service, 803 F.2d 1363, 1370 n.9 (5th Cir. 1986)). Of course, any
deference extended to a revenue ruling evaporates in the face of
clear and contrary statutory language. Foil, 920 F.2d at 1201.
11
See, e.g., Pasqualini v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
103 T.C. 1, 8 n.8 (1994); Exxon Corp. v. Commissioner of Internal
Revenue, 102 T.C. 721, 726 n.8 (1994); Spiegelman v. Commissioner
of Internal Revenue, 102 T.C. 394, 405 (1994); Rath v. Commissioner
of Internal Revenue, 101 T.C. 196, 205 n.10 (1993).
12
See, e.g., Davis v. United States, 495 U.S. 472 (1990).
Note, however, that the Court in Davis was conspicuously silent as
to the applicability of Chevron deference to revenue rulings. See
Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.,
467 U.S. 837 (1984). Given the context, this omission cautions
against placing too much reliance on revenue rulings as
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revenue rulings are odd creatures unconducive to precise
categorization in the hierarchy of legal authorities. They are
clearly less binding on the courts than treasury regulations or
Code provisions, but probably (and in this circuit certainly) more
so than the mere legal conclusions of the parties. Apart from
that, little can be said with any certainty, and in the absence of
a definitive statement from on high, the Tax Court continues its
crusade to ignore them in toto.
This bit of background explains a great deal with regard to
the posture of this case. In support of its general position on
deference, the Tax Court went to great lengths to avoid applying
Rev. Rul. 80-80 to McLendon’s situation. The earlier panel of this
court noticed this slight, and asked the Tax Court if it really
wanted an open confrontation on the issue. Sticking to its guns,
the Tax Court replied that it did. The result was the instant
appeal.
As it turns out, however, this case does not require us to
step squarely into the fray. Most questions of deference to a
revenue ruling involve an argument by the taxpayer that a
particular ruling is contrary to law. Here, however, the argument
to ignore or minimize the effect of Rev. Rul. 80-80 comes from the
Commissioner, the very party who issued the ruling in the first
administrative legal interpretations, and the position of the Tax
Court is not without some merit.
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place.13 In such a situation, this circuit has a well established
rule that is sufficient to resolve this case without probing the
penumbrae of the general deference question.
In Silco, Inc. v. United States, 779 F.2d 282, 286 (5th Cir.
1986), we held that a taxpayer was entitled to rely on the legal
standard implied by two revenue rulings extant at the time of his
transaction, even though they had been subsequently abrogated. In
reaching this conclusion, we noted that:
Treas. Reg. § 601.601(e) provides that taxpayers may
generally rely on published revenue rulings in
determining the tax treatment of their own transactions,
if the facts and circumstances of their transactions are
substantially the same as those that prompted the ruling.
Id. at 286.14 Because the statute, regulations, and case law were
less than clear at the time of the taxpayer’s transaction, we found
that the rulings “provide[d] the only insight available to [the]
taxpayer at the time of [his] transaction as to the conceptual
13
The Commissioner’s position is not entirely clear in this
case. He purports to maintain that Rev. Rul. 80-80 is an accurate
statement of the law, yet would prefer the court decide the case
based on the rule of Miami Beach First National Bank. This rule,
he implies, is the same as that of Rev. Rul. 80-80. The
Commissioner cannot eat his cake and have it too. As we explained
above, Rev. Rul. 80-80 is unambiguous in its support for the
Estate’s position. To the extent that he argues for a rule
inconsistent with the ruling’s clear language, we construe the
Commissioner’s position to be that the ruling should not apply.
14
Treas. Reg. § 601.601(e) states: “Taxpayers generally may
rely upon Revenue Rulings published in the Bulletin in determining
the tax treatment of their own transactions . . . .” Although not
cited therein, Silco also finds support in Treas. Reg. §
601.601(d), which provides that revenue rulings “are published to
provide precedents to be used in the disposition of other cases.”
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approach the [Commissioner] would use,” and that the Commissioner
acted improperly in subsequently applying a different test to that
taxpayer. Id. at 287.
Silco stands for the proposition that the Commissioner will be
held to his published rulings in areas where the law is unclear,
and may not depart from them in individual cases. Furthermore,
under Silco the Commissioner may not retroactively abrogate a
ruling in an unclear area with respect to any taxpayer who has
relied on it.15
15
This latter portion of Silco might be read to be in conflict
with the Supreme Court’s well established rule that the
Commissioner may retroactively revoke certain revenue rulings, even
where taxpayers may have relied on them to their detriment. See
Automobile Club of Michigan v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
353 U.S. 180, 183-84 (1957) (Brennan, J.); Dixon v. United States,
381 U.S. 68, 72-73 (1965) (Brennan, J.). For a number of reasons,
however, we perceive no conflict.
First, the Automobile Club rule applies only where the
Commissioner revokes a prior ruling that is contrary to the
Internal Revenue Code. This was not the case in Silco, nor is it
the case here. The Silco rule is expressly limited to areas where
the Code does not provide a clear answer. Second, Silco is
grounded on the Commissioner’s invitation to taxpayers to rely on
his revenue rulings as set out in Treas. Reg. § 601.601(e), a
factor not present in the Automobile Club or Dixon cases. The
essence of the Silco rule is that traditional notions of equity and
fair play prevent the Commissioner from changing his position after
inviting reliance with his own regulations. Finally, even if there
were some tension between Silco and Automobile Club, we would be
bound in this case by our past circuit precedent. “One panel of
this Court may not overrule another (absent an intervening decision
to the contrary by the Supreme Court or the en banc court . . .).”
Hogue v. Johnson, 131 F.3d 466, 491 (5th Cir. 1997) (Garwood, J.)
(emphasis added). See also United States v. McPhail, 119 F.3d 326,
327 (5th Cir. 1997)(Smith, J., dissenting), and cases cited
therein. Supposed conflicts with prior Supreme Court precedent are
grist for the en banc mill, but not for ad hoc panel revision. See
5th Cir. IOP to Fed. R. App. P. 35. For all of these reasons, we
are content that Silco continues to be good law.
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Applying Silco to this case, it quickly becomes clear that
Rev. Rul. 80-80 must govern our decision. McLendon went to great
lengths to structure his transaction to comply with applicable
law,16 and the Commissioner does not dispute that in so doing
McLendon expressly relied on Rev. Rul. 80-80’s clarification of the
admittedly murky area of future and dependent interest valuation.
The Commissioner ignored the clear language of his own ruling in
declaring deficiencies, and it is precisely this kind of tactic
that Silco declares to be intolerable. Because McLendon was
entitled to rely on Rev. Rul. 80-80, the Tax Court was not at
liberty to disregard it. Its decision to do so was error, and we
reverse on that basis. Furthermore, because the application of
Rev. Rul. 80-80 clearly sustains the Estate’s position, we need not
remand yet again for further proceedings. Consistent with our
discussion of the application of the ruling above, we render for
McLendon’s Estate.
V
Where the Commissioner has specifically approved a valuation
methodology, like the actuarial tables, in his own revenue ruling,
16
As indeed he should have. “‘Over and over again courts have
said that there is nothing sinister in so arranging one’s affairs
as to keep taxes as low as possible. Everybody does so, rich or
poor; and all do right, for nobody owes any public duty to pay more
than the law demands: taxes are enforced exactions, not voluntary
contributions. To demand more in the name of morals is mere
cant.’” Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. First Security Bank of
Utah, 405 U.S. 394, 398 n.4 (1972) (quoting Learned Hand’s
celebrated dissent in Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Newman,
159 F.2d 848, 850-51 (2d Cir. 1947)).
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he will not be heard to fault a taxpayer for taking advantage of
the tax minimization opportunities inherent therein. Here, the
Commissioner had no right to ignore Rev. Rul. 80-80 and the Tax
Court was bound to apply it consistent with McLendon’s right of
reliance. The Tax Court’s manifest failure to apply the ruling was
clearly wrong, and, accordingly, we REVERSE its judgment and RENDER
for the Estate.
REVERSED and RENDERED.
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