United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
____________________
No. 01-2251
MEDCHEM (P.R.), INC.,
Petitioner, Appellant,
v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE,
Respondent, Appellee.
____________________
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES TAX COURT
[Hon. David Laro, U.S. Tax Court Judge]
____________________
Before
Selya, Circuit Judge,
Stahl, Senior Circuit Judge,
and Lynch, Circuit Judge.
____________________
David A. Hickerson with whom Lisa R. Fine and Weil, Gotshal &
Manges, LLP were on brief for appellant.
A. Duane Webber and Baker & McKenzie on brief for Electronic
Arts Puerto Rico, Inc., amicus curiae.
David English Carmack, Attorney, Tax Division, Department of
Justice, with whom Eileen J. O'Connor, Assistant Attorney General,
and Kenneth W. Rosenberg, Attorney, Tax Division, Department of
Justice, were on brief for appellee.
____________________
July 10, 2002
____________________
LYNCH, Circuit Judge. This tax case requires
interpretation of the Internal Revenue Code's Puerto Rico and
Possession Tax Credit provision, 26 U.S.C. § 936 (2000), which
permits a domestic corporation to elect a possession tax credit if
it meets certain conditions, id. § 936(a). The condition on which
this case turns is that 75% or more of the gross income of the
corporation for the three preceding years must be "derived from the
active conduct of a trade or business within a possession of the
United States." Id. § 936(a)(2)(B).1
The taxpayer, MedChem (P.R.), Inc. ("M-PR"), contends
that it meets this "active conduct of a trade or business"
requirement; the Tax Court and the Commissioner of Internal Revenue
disagree. This issue appears to be one of first impression at the
circuit level.
The particular tax credit codified at § 936 was added by
the Tax Reform Act of 1976, Pub. L. No. 94-455, 90 Stat. 1520
(1976) (codified in scattered sections of 26 U.S.C.), although it
has its roots in legislation from the 1920s, see Revenue Act of
1921, Pub. L. No. 67-98, § 262, 42 Stat. 227, 271 (1921). The
government tells us that the tax credit is in the process of being
phased out. See 26 U.S.C. § 936(j). This case has, in the
interim, consequences for domestic corporations involved in
1
Section 936(a)(2)'s other condition is that at least 80%
of the corporation's gross income for the three-year period
immediately preceding the close of the tax year must be "derived
from sources within a possession of the United States." 26 U.S.C.
§ 936(a)(2)(A). The parties agree that MedChem (P.R.) meets this
requirement.
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business activity in Puerto Rico2 and certain other possessions.
Unfortunately, there are no promulgated regulations under § 936(a)
and domestic corporations have been forced to make business
arrangements in U.S. possessions without the prior guidance such
regulations might provide.
Based primarily on § 936's text, understood in the
context of the legislative history, we conclude that M-PR has
failed to meet the "active conduct of a trade or business"
requirement and, accordingly, we affirm the Tax Court's judgment.
We do so without adopting the Tax Court's proposed test for what
constitutes the active conduct of a trade or business in a U.S.
possession for purposes of § 936(a).
I.
The facts in this case are not in dispute, MedChem
(P.R.), Inc. v. Comm'r, 116 T.C. 308, 310 (2001); see generally Tax
Ct. R. 122, although M-PR contests the inferences the Tax Court
drew from the stipulated record. M-PR is the taxpayer claiming to
qualify for the possessions tax credit.
M-PR's identity has gone through several transformations.
M-PR was incorporated in Delaware on December 8, 1987, as MedChem
Puerto Rico, Inc. A couple of weeks later, on December 22, MedChem
Puerto Rico, Inc. changed its name to BioChem Products, Inc. Then,
on March 1, 1992, BioChem Products, Inc. changed its state of
2
Puerto Rico is a Commonwealth; it is explicitly within
the term "possession" for purposes of § 936. 26 U.S.C. § 936(d)(1)
("The term 'possession of the United States' includes the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico . . . .").
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incorporation to Massachusetts and, on November 25, 1992, changed
its name to MedChem P.R., Inc. M-PR and all of its predecessors --
all of which we will refer to as M-PR -- were at all times wholly
owned subsidiaries of MedChem Products, Inc. ("M-USA"). M-USA is
a Massachusetts corporation with its principal place of business in
Woburn, Massachusetts. Following the tax years at issue in this
case,3 M-USA succeeded M-PR through a merger of M-PR into M-USA.
The IRS found a deficiency of $815,1964 in M-PR's federal
income tax paid for the tax year ending August 31, 1992, and a
deficiency of $1,705,019 in M-USA's tax payments for the same
period. In consolidated cases in the Tax Court, M-USA, as
successor by merger to M-PR, contested both of these claims of
deficiency. MedChem, 116 T.C. at 309. It is the $815,196
liability that is at issue here.
During the relevant three-year period -- that is, during
each of M-PR's taxable years ending on August 31, 1990-92 -- all of
M-PR's reported income was "intangible property income," see 26
U.S.C. § 936(h)(3), attributable to the sale of Avitene, a blood-
3
When we refer to the "tax years at issue" or the "subject
years of this case," we mean the three-year period made relevant by
§ 936(a)(2). That is, the three-year period "immediately preceding
the close of the taxable year." Here, because the alleged
deficiency occurred for the tax year ending August 31, 1992, the
three-year period runs from September 1, 1989, through August 31,
1992.
4
The Tax Court states that the deficiency was $815,196.
MedChem, 116 T.C. at 309. In contrast, both parties, at various
points in their briefs, state that the sum is $815,916. The Notice
of Deficiency uses both figures. We assume that $815,196 is the
correct figure.
-4-
clotting drug manufactured by Alcon Puerto Rico, Inc. ("A-PR"), an
unrelated company.
On December 18, 1987, ten days after M-PR was
incorporated, A-PR along with Alcon Pharmaceuticals, Ltd. and Alcon
Laboratories, Inc. (collectively "Alcon entities") sold the Avitene
portion of their business to M-PR and M-USA. The Alcon entities
sold the equipment, raw materials, technology, and other assets
associated with Avitene's manufacturing. M-USA acquired the
receivables, non-competition agreements, goodwill, contract rights,
records, patents and related know-how, trademarks, and Food and
Drug Administration approvals. M-PR acquired receivables,
inventory, and title to the machinery and equipment located within
A-PR's manufacturing facility in Humacao, Puerto Rico. Those
assets did not include A-PR's Avitene manufacturing facility in
Humacao.
Before the acquisition, A-PR had been the manufacturer of
Avitene. M-USA had nothing to do with the drug. Until ten days
prior to the acquisition, M-PR did not exist. As part of the sale,
A-PR agreed to continue manufacturing Avitene for M-PR using A-PR's
own facility and labor and M-PR's recently-acquired raw materials
and equipment. A-PR also used the technology acquired by M-USA.
M-PR held title to the in-process and finished Avitene. A-PR
shipped finished Avitene from its facility to M-USA, and title
passed to M-USA, the purchaser. A-PR was solely responsible for
any issues that arose until the finished product was delivered to
a carrier for shipment to M-USA. In return, A-PR sent its invoices
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for its manufacturing services directly to M-USA, which paid, from
M-PR's account, a price equal to the manufacturing cost plus 10%.
The primary change effected by the 1987 sale was that certain
assets were held in the name of either M-PR or its parent, M-USA.
The reason M-PR entered into the processing agreement
with A-PR, in which A-PR manufactured Avitene for M-PR using M-PR's
raw materials and equipment, was that M-PR needed to ensure a
steady supply of Avitene until it built its own manufacturing
facility in Puerto Rico. As it turns out, M-PR later abandoned its
plan to construct its own Avitene facility in Puerto Rico.
During much of the relevant three-year period, M-PR had
no employees. Its one employee, Mr. Perez, was a former A-PR
employee. He worked for M-PR from March 1988 to June 1990 out of
a one-room office that M-PR maintained. Mr. Perez spent much of
his time planning M-PR's transition to its own Avitene
manufacturing facility. M-PR also paid three independent
contractors to assist Mr. Perez. M-PR treated the independent
contractors as nonemployees for payroll and tax purposes. M-USA
and A-PR employed the individuals, other than Mr. Perez and the
independent contractors, associated with the Avitene manufacturing
and sales business.
At the time of the 1987 processing agreement, M-PR and M-
USA had hoped to establish their own manufacturing facility in
Puerto Rico. M-PR purchased land in Puerto Rico, on which it
planned to build its own Avitene manufacturing facility. In early
1990 M-USA suffered financial reverses causing it to lay off a
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third of its workforce and to default on $10 million in debt. As
a result, M-PR suspended its plans to construct a manufacturing
facility in Puerto Rico. M-PR then wrote off its capital
expenditures that had been made on the new facility and closed its
Puerto Rico office. When the office closed, Perez transferred M-
PR's business records to A-PR and M-USA. As of July 1, 1990, all
M-PR checks were issued by M-USA from M-USA's Woburn, Massachusetts
office.
In early 1990 M-USA decided to move the manufacturing
equipment and processes from A-PR's Humacao facility to M-USA's
facility in Woburn. Significant elements of the equipment were
moved from Humacao to Woburn by June 1990 and, by January 1991, all
of the manufacturing equipment necessary to perform the first phase
of the manufacturing process had been moved to Woburn. In October
1992, first-phase Avitene production commenced in Woburn. By April
1994, M-USA had substantially completed the construction, in
Woburn, of its Avitene finished goods manufacturing facility.
II.
For its tax year ending August 31, 1992, M-PR claimed a
tax credit under § 936. The Commissioner determined that M-PR's
Avitene income was not "derived from the active conduct of a trade
or business" within a possession as § 936(a)(2)(B) requires.
Accordingly, the Commissioner issued a notice of deficiency in the
amount of $815,196.
M-USA, as successor by merger to M-PR, contested the
asserted deficiency. On June 27, 2001, the Tax Court entered its
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final decision, finding that M-PR was deficient, in the sum of
$815,196, in its federal income tax payments. The Tax Court
concluded that M-PR did not meet § 936(a)(2)(B)'s "active conduct
of a trade or business within a possession" requirement. MedChem,
116 T.C. at 309, 328-29. The Tax Court held that
for purposes of section 936(a), a taxpayer actively
conducts a trade or business in a U.S. possession only if
it participates regularly, continually, extensively, and
actively in the management and operation of its profit-
motivated activity in that possession. . . . [F]or the
purpose of this participation requirement, the services
underlying a manufacturing contract may be imputed to a
taxpayer only to the extent that the performance of those
services is adequately supervised by the taxpayers's own
employees.
Id. at 336-37.
The Tax Court concluded that M-PR did not meet this test.
Id. at 337. It concluded that A-PR and M-USA (located in a
mainland U.S. facility) performed, directed, and controlled all of
the business activities related to the manufacture of Avitene. Id.
at 339. The Tax Court found that, under the processing agreement,
A-PR used its own personnel to manufacture, test, and package the
Avitene at its Humacao facility. Id. at 317. A-PR employees
performed all of the tasks required in the manufacturing process,
including the supervision of that manufacturing. Id. at 317, 339.
It was M-USA which distributed, marketed, and sold the drug in the
United States. Id. at 339. Indeed, the processing agreement
prohibited M-PR from taking a managerial role in the manufacturing
process. Id. at 346. Any risks associated with M-PR's activities
appear to be minimal, as M-USA had guaranteed payment of any debt,
and performance of any of M-PR's obligations, arising from the
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asset purchase agreements. Id. at 316. M-USA consistently
reported, including to the FDA and to the SEC, that the unrelated
entity, A-PR, was the drug's manufacturer. Id. This information
was also contained on the labels of the drugs. Id. at 315-16.
M-PR appeals the Tax Court's decision.
III.
A. Standard of Review
This court reviews the Tax Court's decisions "in the same
manner and to the same extent as decisions of the district courts
in civil actions tried without a jury." 26 U.S.C. § 7482(a)(1)
(2000); see also Silverman v. Comm'r, 86 F.3d 260, 261 (1st Cir.
1996). Our standard of review is two-fold. We review de novo the
Tax Court's statutory and other legal interpretations. Alexander
v. IRS, 72 F.3d 938, 941 (1st Cir. 1995). We review its factual
findings, including those based on inferences from stipulated
facts, for clear error. Manzoli v. Comm'r, 904 F.2d 101, 103 (1st
Cir. 1990). To the extent that M-PR is making a clear error
argument with respect to the Tax Court's factual findings, we
reject the argument.
There are no Treasury Department regulations interpreting
§ 936(a),5 nor is the term "active conduct of a trade or business"
defined for purposes of § 936. There are, however, some guides to
5
Had the Treasury Department promulgated a regulation
interpreting § 936(a), we would have been required, absent
contradictory statutory language, to defer to a reasonable
interpretation. Kikalos v. Comm'r, 190 F.3d 791, 795-96 (7th Cir.
1999); Snowa v. Comm'r, 123 F.3d 190, 195-96 (4th Cir. 1997).
-9-
statutory interpretation, which assist us. "It is well established
in the tax law that an [IRS determination that a taxpayer owes the
Federal Government a certain amount of unpaid taxes] is entitled to
a legal presumption of correctness -- a presumption that can help
the Government prove its case against a taxpayer in court." United
States v. Fior D'Italia, Inc., No. 01-463, 2002 U.S. LEXIS 4418, at
*9-10 (U.S. June 17, 2002). Furthermore, income tax deductions and
credits are matters of legislative grace; the taxpayer bears the
burden of proving entitlement to any deduction or credit claimed.
Indopco, Inc. v. Comm'r, 503 U.S. 79, 84 (1992); New Colonial Ice
Co. v. Helvering, 292 U.S. 435, 440 (1934); Norfolk S. Corp. v.
Comm'r, 104 T.C. 13, 36 (investment tax credit), supplemented by
104 T.C. 417 (1995), aff'd, 140 F.3d 240 (4th Cir. 1998).
Moreover, a deduction or credit should be allowed only where there
is "clear provision therefor." New Colonial Ice Co., 292 U.S. at
440; see also Helvering v. Inter-Mountain Life Ins. Co., 294 U.S.
686, 689 (1935) (stating that "[d]eductions are allowed only when
plainly authorized").6
6
We are not persuaded by M-PR's contention that, if § 936
is ambiguous, then this court should strictly construe it against
the government. Here, we are interpreting a provision permitting
a tax credit, not a provision levying a tax. The Supreme Court has
stated that in the context of a tax deduction, it is "not impressed
by the argument that . . . all doubts should be resolved in favor
of the taxpayer." White v. United States, 305 U.S. 281, 292
(1938); see also United States v. Stewart, 311 U.S. 60, 71 (1940)
(stating that "those who seek an exemption from a tax must rest it
on more than a doubt or ambiguity"); Inter-Mountain Life Ins. Co.,
294 U.S. at 689-90 (holding that deductions must be plainly
authorized, not derived from ambiguities). Rather, it is the duty
of a court to determine "what [the] construction [of a statute]
fairly should be." White, 305 U.S. at 292. M-PR's argument would
be more appropriate were this a case involving a statute imposing
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B. Positions of the Parties
The parties have presented the court with different
interpretations of the meaning of § 936(a). The Tax Court has, in
its ruling, left each side dissatisfied. Both sides'
interpretations diverge from the Tax Court's, although the
government's position is much closer to the Tax Court's conclusion.
The Tax Court rejected M-PR's statutory plain meaning
argument. MedChem, 116 T.C. at 328-29. Instead, it crafted a test
that, in the absence of a statutory or regulatory definition of
"active conduct of a trade or business" for purposes of § 936(a),
looks to regulations defining the phrase as it is used elsewhere in
the code, bearing in mind the section's legislative intent, id. at
330-33. Applying this test, the Tax Court rejected interpretations
more helpful to the taxpayer, provided in other regulations, see,
e.g., 26 C.F.R. § 1.936-5(c) (2001). The applicable test, the Tax
Court held, was whether the taxpayer "participates regularly,
continually, extensively, and actively in the management and
operation of its profit-motivated activity in that possession."
MedChem, 116 T.C. at 336. It held that to impute a contractor's
activities to the taxpayer, the taxpayer had to "adequately
supervise[]" the provision of these services with its own
employees. Id. at 337. The Tax Court found the facts about M-PR's
relationship with the contract manufacturer inadequate under its
a tax, rather than a statute permitting a tax credit.
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newly crafted test, and thus found that M-PR is not entitled to the
credit. Id. at 337-43.
The Commissioner rejects M-PR's "plain meaning" reading
of the statute and generally rejects the proposition that use of
contract manufacturers in possessions is ever sufficient to qualify
for the § 936(a) tax credit, but allows for rare exceptions where
the taxpayer corporation is very heavily involved in the operation
and management of the contract manufacturer. The Commissioner
seeks affirmance of the Tax Court's result, but at oral argument
protested the Tax Court's test, which is more beneficial to
taxpayers than the IRS's proposed test for what constitutes the
active conduct of a trade of business. The IRS proposes that
outsourced manufacturing may never (well, hardly ever) qualify for
the tax credit. Only in rare instances, when the taxpayer is
heavily involved in the management and control of operations of a
contract manufacturer, says the IRS, might it qualify.
The taxpayer, M-PR, on the other hand, argues that the
statute's plain meaning does not preclude tax credits to taxpayers
who use contract manufacturers located in the possessions and that,
if more were required, it has, on the facts, provided the requisite
more. M-PR says the Tax Court is wrong in its statutory
interpretation and in its choice of test. M-PR asserts that the
Tax Court's test is inconsistent with regulations applicable to
other parts of § 936.
We affirm the denial of the credit and the finding of
deficiency. In doing so, we assess and reject the taxpayer's plain
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meaning arguments, look to the Act's legislative history for
further guidance regarding congressional intent in enacting § 936,
and compare the section at issue with the now-repealed Western
Hemisphere Trade Corporation provisions of the Internal Revenue
Code of 1954. We conclude that, on the facts presented, M-PR does
not fall within the language of the statute or Congress's intent.
We do so without adopting the Tax Court's proposed test.
C. The Statute and Plain Meaning
Before analyzing the statute, we think it helpful to
understand the context in which the statutory interpretation
question arises. "Possessions corporations . . . are U.S.-
chartered companies that are effectively exempt under section 936
of the Internal Revenue Code from Federal tax on business income
and qualified passive investment income from Puerto Rico and
certain other U.S. possessions." Dep't of the Treasury, The
Operation and Effect of the Possessions Corporation System of
Taxation, Sixth Report 1 (1989) (footnotes omitted).
The Treasury Department has described the general
operation of the possessions corporation tax system:
The possessions corporation system of taxation is a set
of rules under which a U.S. corporation deriving
qualifying income from possessions and Puerto Rico pays
no income tax to the United States. As a U.S.
corporation, a possessions corporation is subject to
federal tax on its worldwide income. However, a special
credit available under section 936 fully offsets the
federal tax on income from a trade or business in Puerto
Rico and from qualified possession source investment
income (QPSII). A U.S. parent corporation can, in turn,
offset dividends received from a wholly owned 936
subsidiary with a 100 percent dividends-received
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deduction, which frees the dividend income from federal
tax.
Id. at 5.
With this context, we turn to the statutory language.
The code section at issue provides, in relevant part:
§ 936. Puerto Rico and possession tax credit
(a) Allowance of credit
(1) In general
Except as otherwise provided in this section, if a
domestic corporation elects the application of this
section and if the conditions of both subparagraph (A)
and subparagraph (B) of paragraph (2) are satisfied,
there shall be allowed as a credit against the tax
imposed by this chapter an amount equal to the portion of
the tax which is attributable to the sum of --
(A) the taxable income, from sources without the
United States, from --
(i) the active conduct of a trade or
business within a possession of the United
States, or
(ii) the sale or exchange of substantially
all of the assets used by the taxpayer in
the active conduct of such trade or
business, and
(B) the qualified possession source investment
income.
(2) Conditions which must be satisfied
The conditions referred to in paragraph (1) are:
(A) 3-year period
If 80 percent or more of the gross income of
such domestic corporation for the 3-year period
immediately preceding the close of the taxable
year (or for such part of such period immediately
preceding the close of such taxable year as may
be applicable) was derived from sources within a
possession of the United States (determined
without regard to section 904(f)); and
(B) Trade or business
If 75 percent or more of the gross income of
such domestic corporation for such period or such
part thereof was derived from the active conduct
of a trade or business within a possession of the
United States.
26 U.S.C. § 936(a)(1)-(2). A separate subsection of § 936 governs
the tax treatment of possessions corporations' intangible property
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income. 26 U.S.C. § 936(h). The Treasury Department has issued
regulations under § 936(h), see 26 C.F.R. §§ 1.936-4 to -7 (2001),
although not under § 936(a). It is the § 936(a) "derived from the
active conduct of a trade or business" language that is at issue
here. 26 U.S.C. § 936(a)(2)(B).
M-PR argues that § 936(a) "requires only that the
taxpayer derive its income from an active business rather than a
passive investment." Its argument is really two-fold: first, that
"active conduct" means all non-passive conduct; second, that the
taxpayer corporation need only derive its income from some non-
passive source, meaning that the taxpayer can qualify by deriving
its income from the active conduct of a third party rather than
from the taxpayer's own active conduct. This interpretation, if
accepted, would mean that a domestic corporation that gets its
income from the sale of a pharmaceutical product manufactured by a
contract manufacturer in Puerto Rico, as here, would qualify for
the tax credit. We deal with each argument in turn, rejecting both
parts as contrary to the text of the statute.
First, M-PR's interpretation, construing income "derived
from the active conduct of a trade or business" to mean income
"derived from an active, rather than passive, business," renders
the statutory term "active" surplusage. The phrase "active conduct
of a trade or business" does not mean that all income derived from
anything that is not a passive investment qualifies for the
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credit.7 We accept the Commissioner's view that the phrase
"conduct of a trade or business" alone, without the term "active,"
distinguishes section 936(a) income from passive investment income.
M-PR's construction renders the term "active" redundant. That is
not a permissible form of interpretation. E.g., New England Power
& Marine, Inc. v. Town of Tyngsborough (In re Middlesex Power
Equip. & Marine, Inc.), No. 01-2314, 2002 WL 1248226, at *4 (1st
Cir. June 11, 2002) (stating that "[w]e assume each term was meant
to have separate content in order to avoid redundancy").
Given that the statutory term "active" is not surplusage,
we must determine what independent meaning it adds to the statutory
phrase "active conduct." Because "active" modifies "conduct," we
conclude that "active conduct" means something more than simply a
minimal level of involvement in the process of conducting a trade
or business. Not all conduct of a trade or business qualifies
under § 936(a)(2)(B); only "active conduct" qualifies. Because the
"conduct of a trade or business" itself requires some level of
activity, the adjective "active" must, in context, signify
something more than a non-zero level of activity.
The Oxford English Dictionary's first definition of the
noun "conduct" is "[t]he action of conducting or leading," and, as
7
M-PR notes that the Commissioner has previously taken the
position that the "active conduct" requirement is meant to
distinguish between investment income and business income. That
proposition is different from the proposition M-PR urges here,
which is that the "active conduct" requirement is met so long as
the taxpayer derives income from any source not wholly passive. To
say that the "active conduct" requirement distinguishes investment
income from business income is not to say that all income other
than investment income meets the requirement.
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the term relates to a business, it is defined as "[t]he action or
manner of conducting, directing, managing, or carrying on (any
business . . . etc.)." Oxford English Dictionary (2d ed. 1989),
http://dictionary.oed.com. Similarly, Webster's defines the noun
"conduct" as "the act, manner, or process of carrying out . . . or
carrying forward (as a business, government, or war)." Webster's
Third New International Dictionary of the English Language
Unabridged 473 (P.B. Gove et al. eds. 1993). "Active," in turn, is
generally defined as "[c]haracterized by action" and is defined in
terms such as "[o]riginating or communicating action," "practical,"
"working, effective, having practical operation or results."
Oxford English Dictionary, supra; see also Webster's Third New
International Dictionary of the English Language Unabridged, supra,
at 22 (defining "active" as "characterized by action rather than by
contemplation or speculation").
The mere act, without more, of purchasing products that
another unrelated entity has taken the action to manufacture, and
reselling the products to others outside the possession, does not
fit within the meaning of "active conduct of a trade or business."
In such a case, it is the unrelated entity controlling and
directing the manufacturing that is actively conducting the trade
or business.
Here, the Tax Court was "not even able to find that M-
P.R. had any meaningful business activity in Puerto Rico."
MedChem, 116 T.C. at 337. It found that M-PR's "involvement in
Puerto Rico during the 3-year period failed even to qualify as a
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trade or business in Puerto Rico," id. at 338, never mind as an
actively conducted trade or business. It concluded that A-PR and
M-USA, but not M-PR, directed and controlled "[a]ll of the business
activities connected to Avitene," id., and that A-PR "performed
every task required in the manufacturing process," without the
ability of M-PR "to manage, direct, or control any part of the
manufacturing process," id. at 339. These findings were not
clearly erroneous. On these facts, we are confident in the
conclusion that M-PR did not itself actively conduct a trade or
business.
The remaining question is whether A-PR's manufacturing
activities may be attributed to M-PR for the purposes of § 936(a).
The answer to this question hinges on M-PR's second claim, that the
statutory phrase requires only that the income "derived" by the
taxpayer be from some third party engaged in the active conduct of
a trade or business. We reject this claim as well. Both the Tax
Court and the Commissioner interpret § 936(a) as requiring that the
taxpayer, not someone else, be the entity engaged in the active
conduct of a trade or business. We agree.
First, this reading is the most natural reading of the
statutory requirement that at least 75% of the taxpayer's gross
income during the relevant period be "derived from the active
conduct of a trade or business within a possession of the United
States." 26 U.S.C. § 936(a)(2)(B). M-PR correctly notes that
Congress could have more explicitly said, "the active conduct by
the taxpayer of a trade or business" and it did not. But Congress
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might have concluded that the addition of the phrase would be
redundant, given the preceding discussion and especially given that
the taxpayer corporation is the only actor referenced in §
936(a)(1)-(2). Congress could also have said "the active conduct
by the taxpayer or any contract manufacturer of a trade or
business," which is M-PR's reading, and it did not. Viewed
myopically, the statutory phrase is silent on whose "active conduct
of a trade or business" it refers to, but, viewed in context, the
best reading is that it means the taxpayer's own active conduct.
Ambiguity in this instance does not assist M-PR because a deduction
or credit should be allowed only where there is "clear provision
therefor." New Colonial Ice Co., 292 U.S. at 440. M-PR has simply
not met its burden of proving entitlement to the § 936 credit
claimed.
To read the statute as requiring only that the income be
derived from a third party's active conduct would eliminate the
distinction between active conduct income and all other income,
including passive investment income. Virtually all passive
investment income, for example, is derived, somewhere down the
chain, by some entity's active conduct of a trade or business.
Finally, as discussed below, the legislative history
confirms Congress's intent to require the taxpayer claiming the
credit to itself be engaged in the active conduct of a trade or
business. If M-PR's interpretation were correct, then upon the
1976 enactment of § 936, see Tax Reform Act of 1976, Pub. L. No.
94-455, § 1051, 90 Stat. 1520, 1643-47 (1976) (current version at
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26 U.S.C. § 936 (2000)), all domestic corporations that had
contract manufacturers in Puerto Rico (and otherwise met the
numerical requirements) would automatically have become eligible
for the tax credit. This is, in our view, highly improbable on its
face. It is particularly improbable given the legislative history
discussed below.
D. Legislative History and Western Hemisphere Trading
Corporations
1. Legislative history.
As stated above, at issue in this case is the proper
interpretation of § 936's "active conduct of a trade or business"
language. Section 936 in general, and the "active conduct of a
trade or business" language in particular, have their roots in much
older legislation. Before analyzing the legislative history as it
pertains to the meaning of the relevant statutory phrase, we
describe § 936's predecessors.
Both § 936 and the basic structure of today's possessions
corporation tax system have their genesis in a provision of the
Revenue Act of 1921. See Revenue Act of 1921, Pub. L. No. 67-98,
§ 262, 42 Stat. 227, 271 (1921). The phrase we interpret --
"derived from the active conduct of a trade or business" -- first
appeared in the Revenue Act of 1921, though in a slightly different
context. Compare id. with 26 U.S.C. § 936(a)(2)(B). The 1921 Act
exempted a domestic corporation from federal taxes on foreign-
source income if, for the three years preceding the close of the
taxable year, it derived at least 80% of its gross income from
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sources within a possession and 50% or more of its gross income
"from the active conduct of a trade or business" within the
possessions. § 262, 42 Stat. at 271. Congress enacted this
section of the 1921 Act to eliminate the competitive disadvantage
that U.S. corporations were suffering as a result of double
taxation of income earned outside the U.S. and to encourage U.S.
business investments in U.S. possessions. See S. Rep. No. 67-275
(1921), reprinted in 1939-1 C.B. (pt. 2) 181, 187; see generally
Coca-Cola Co. v. Comm'r, 106 T.C. 1, 21 (1996) (describing the 1921
Act and its progeny); N.H. Kaufman, Comment, Puerto Rico's
Possessions Corporations: Do the TEFRA Amendments Go Too Far?, 1984
Wis. L. Rev. 531, 533-37 (same).
Congress carried forward, without material change, the
1921 Act's possessions corporation exemption into section 931 of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1954. See Internal Revenue Code of
1954, Pub. L. No. 83-591, § 931, 68A Stat. 3, 291 (1954). Section
931 used the same language as the 1921 Act's section 262,
requiring, among other things, that 50% or more of the
corporation's gross income be "derived from the active conduct of
a trade or business." § 931(a)(2), 68A Stat. at 291.8 Section 931
8
The 1954 Internal Revenue Code provided, in relevant
part:
Sec. 931. Income From Sources Within Possessions of the
United States.
(a) General Rule. -- In the case of citizens of the
United States or domestic corporations, gross income
means only gross income from sources within the United
States if the conditions of both paragraph (1) and
paragraph (2) are satisfied:
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remained in effect without material change until the mid-1970s,
when Congress enacted legislation approximating the current version
of 26 U.S.C. § 936. See G.D. Searle & Co. v. Comm'r, 88 T.C. 252,
350-52 (1987) (describing the genesis of § 936).
Section 1051 of the 1976 Tax Reform Act added a new U.S.
Code section, 26 U.S.C. § 936. See Tax Reform Act of 1976, Pub. L.
No. 94-455, § 1051, 90 Stat. 1520, 1643-47 (1976) (current version
at 26 U.S.C. § 936 (2000)). Section 936 partially replaced section
931, as it relates to Puerto Rico.9 See id. The 1976 legislation
(1) Three-year period. -- If 80 percent or more of
the gross income of such citizen or domestic
corporation (computed without the benefit of this
section) for the 3-year period immediately
preceding the close of the taxable year . . . was
derived from sources within a possession of the
United States; and
(2) Trade or business. -- If --
(A) in the case of such corporation, 50
percent or more of its gross income (computed
without the benefit of this section) for such
period . . . was derived from the active
conduct of a trade or business within a
possession of the United States . . . .
§ 931, 68A Stat. at 291.
9
Section 936 did not entirely replace section 931. The
then-existing provision -- 26 U.S.C. § 931 -- was retained, but
only for qualifying "individual citizens," as opposed to
corporations. In addition, it was made inapplicable to Puerto Rico
by defining "possession," for purposes of section 931, not to
include Puerto Rico. § 1051(c), 90 Stat. at 1645. In the case of
domestic corporations deriving the requisite income from Puerto
Rico and deriving the requisite income from active conduct of a
trade or business in Puerto Rico, the § 936 credit is available.
See 26 U.S.C. § 936. In the case of qualifying U.S. individual
citizens, the Puerto Rican source income exclusion is now contained
in 26 U.S.C. § 933.
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effected a number of revisions in prior law. To focus on the
revision central to this case, the new § 936 transformed the old
section 931 exemption mechanism into a tax credit. The credit
permits domestic corporations to offset U.S. taxes on income
"derived from the active conduct of a trade or business" in Puerto
Rico, if certain prerequisites are met. § 1051(b), 90 Stat. at
1644.10 We rely on the Treasury Department's 1989 Report, which
described the transition from the 1921 Act to the 1976 Act:
The possessions corporation exemption remained unchanged
until the Tax Reform Act of 1976. Many U.S. firms
established plants in Puerto Rico after 1948, when Puerto
Rico enacted a program of tax exemption for manufacturing
firms. Before the 1976 Act was implemented, proponents
of continued U.S. tax exemption argued that the
possessions corporation system of taxation was needed to
offset the U.S. minimum wage requirement, the requirement
to use U.S. flag vessels in transporting goods to the
United States, and other Federally imposed requirements
that tended to reduce Puerto Rico's ability to compete
with neighboring countries for U.S. investment.
By enacting the Tax Reform Act of 1976, Congress wanted
to leave undisturbed the tax exemption of earnings from
a trade or business in Puerto Rico or from investments
made with those earnings for Puerto Rican use. At the
same time, Congress wished to end the exemption for
passive income from funds invested in foreign capital
markets and to hasten their repatriation if not used in
the possession. . . .
To continue promoting Puerto Rico's industrial
development, the Tax Reform Act of 1976 therefore left
intact the exemption for income derived by U.S.
10
Since 1976, there have been many amendments to the
possessions corporations taxation system in general and to § 936 in
particular, including those imposed by the Tax Equity and Fiscal
Responsibility Act of 1982, Pub. L. No. 97-248, 96 Stat. 324
(1982), and by the Tax Reform Act of 1986, Pub. L. No. 99-514, 100
Stat. 2085 (1986). We do not analyze these changes. The text of
the provision we construe, 26 U.S.C. § 936(a)(2)(B), has remained
unchanged since 1976, except that its 50% "trade or business"
requirement is now a 75% requirement.
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corporations from operations in a possession. It also
exempted from tax the dividends remitted by a possessions
corporation to its U.S. parent. To prevent the avoidance
of tax on income invested in foreign countries by
possessions corporations, however, the Tax Reform Act
eliminated the exemption for income derived outside the
possessions. The changes in the tax treatment of
possessions corporations were effected by removing
possessions corporations from section 931 of the Internal
Revenue Code and placing them into a newly created Code
section 936.
The Operation and Effect of the Possessions Corporation System of
Taxation, supra, at 6.
As to the problem before us, the Treasury Report
described the effect of the change:
Change in the scope of and method of effecting the tax
exemption. Before 1976, a possessions corporation was
exempt from U.S. tax on all income derived from sources
outside the United States. Under the Tax Reform Act of
1976, the exemption was limited to two kinds of income:
-- Income from the active conduct of a trade or
business in a possession, or from the sale or
exchange of substantially all of the assets used
by the corporation in the active conduct of such
trade or business; and
-- QPSII, which is non-business income derived from
the possession in which the corporation has its
trade or business and which is attributable to
the investment of funds derived from such trade
or business for use within the possession.
Rather than exempting the income from U.S. taxation,
section 936 provides a credit equal to (and, therefore,
fully offsetting) the U.S. tax on the income. The
section 936 credit is not available for other income
earned by a possessions corporation. However, a regular
foreign tax credit may be claimed for foreign (including
possession) taxes paid or accrued with respect to income
that does not qualify for the 936 credit.
Id. at 7 (footnote omitted).
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The House and Senate Reports are virtually identical on
the pertinent provision. See H.R. Rep. No. 94-658, at 253-60
(1975), reprinted in 1976 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2897, 3149-56; S. Rep. No.
94-938, at 277-84 (1976), reprinted in 1976 U.S.C.C.A.N. 3438,
3707-13. The Reports discuss the tax treatment of corporations
conducting trade or business in possessions of the U.S. as well as
issues arising under the now-repealed Western Hemisphere Trade
Corporation provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954,
§§ 921-922, 68A Stat. at 290-91 (repealed in 1976 for taxable years
after 1979). See H.R. Rep. No. 94-658 at 253-60; S. Rep. No. 94-
938 at 277-84.
Describing the law as it existed prior to the enactment
of the Tax Reform Act of 1976, the House and Senate Reports recite
that
[u]nder present law, corporations operating a trade or
business in a possession of the United States are
entitled to exclude from gross income all income from
sources without the United States, including foreign
source income earned outside of the possession in which
they conduct business operations, if they meet two
conditions.
H.R. Rep. No. 94-658 at 253-54 (emphasis added); see also S. Rep.
No. 94-938 at 277. With this in mind, a new provision, 26 U.S.C.
§ 936, was added "for the tax treatment of U.S. corporations
operating in Puerto Rico." H.R. Rep. No. 94-658 at 256 (emphasis
added); see also S. Rep. No. 94-938 at 279. We think this
language supports the Commissioner's view that the taxpayer must be
the one actively conducting the trade or business.
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As to the changes in the possessions tax credit
legislation, Congress stated that it sought to "assist the U.S.
possessions in obtaining employment-producing investments by U.S.
corporations, while at the same time encouraging those corporations
to bring back to the United States the earnings from these
investments to the extent they cannot be reinvested productively in
the possession." H.R. Rep. No. 94-658 at 255; see also S. Rep. No.
94-938 at 279 (using the same language). The congressional history
reflects a dual intention to stimulate investment, both active and
passive, in Puerto Rico and to encourage the growth of new jobs in
Puerto Rico. H.R. Rep. No. 94-658 at 255; S. Rep. No. 94-938 at
279 (same). Those are related but not identical objectives.
Congress's emphasis on the creation of new jobs by operating
companies is also reflected by the fact that Congress mandated that
the Department of the Treasury report to it periodically on the
progress in meeting that goal. See H.R. Rep. No. 94-658 at 259
(stating that the Department of the Treasury's reports are to
include, among other things, "an analysis of . . . the
[provision's] effects on investment and employment in the
possessions"); S. Rep. No. 94-938 at 282 (same).
Although the Department of the Treasury has not
promulgated regulations under § 936(a), its reports provide data
both on how Treasury has interpreted that section and on the
context of the legislation. We look, in particular, to Treasury's
1989 Report. See The Operation and Effect of the Possessions
Corporation System of Taxation, supra. The 1989 Report provides
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insight into Treasury's interpretation of § 936. For example, the
1989 Report says "[b]y enacting section 936, Congress sought to
assist Puerto Rico in obtaining employment-producing investments."
Id. at 3; see also id. at 46 (same). Accordingly, Treasury matched
"possessions corporations' U.S. income tax returns with payroll and
employment data from the companies' federal unemployment insurance
tax returns" to determine "whether this objective has been
attained." Id. at 46. In particular, Treasury sought to measure
the "direct employment associated with section 936 companies." Id.
For example, as of 1989, Puerto Rican business expansion
had "been concentrated in four high-technology industries:
chemicals (including pharmaceuticals), scientific instruments,
electrical and electronic equipment, and machinery." Id. at 27.
From 1970 to 1988, the chemical industry's earned income grew from
11% to 44% of total income originating in Puerto Rican
manufacturing. Id. Nearly all of the investments in those
industries were made by possessions corporations. Id. at 27-29.
Indeed, in 1983, about 62% of the employees in the Puerto Rican
manufacturing sector were employed by possessions corporations;
this represents about 12% of Puerto Rico's total employment. Id.
at 3. As the 1989 Treasury Department Report makes clear, most of
the corporations that qualified to receive the possessions tax
credit were manufacturing corporations. Id. at 31.
On the whole, the views on eligibility for the tax credit
expressed both in the legislative history and in the Treasury
Department's Report are more consistent with those of the
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Commissioner and the Tax Court than those of M-PR. Those views are
not binding on us, but they have some weight. Both sources tend to
support the Commissioner's view that § 936(a) requires that the
taxpayer itself actively conduct a trade or business, with the
expectation being that this active conduct by the taxpayer would
increase employment and investment in Puerto Rico. Both sources
contemplate that the taxpayer be the party employing workers in the
Puerto Rican economy.
Here, the Tax Court's conclusion, which was not clearly
erroneous, was that M-PR's investment in Puerto Rico's economy was
virtually nonexistent. MedChem, 116 T.C. at 337. M-PR's
activities in Puerto Rico "failed even to qualify as a trade or
business in Puerto Rico," id. at 338, much less as an actively
conducted one. A-PR and M-USA directed and controlled "[a]ll of
the business activities connected to Avitene." Id. Furthermore,
during the relevant three-year period, M-PR placed only one
employee in Puerto Rico. That employee, Mr. Perez, worked for M-PR
out of a one-room office for less than one year of the requisite
three-year period.
2. Western Hemisphere Trade Corporations
M-PR urges that we follow the construction that some
courts have given to the phrase "active conduct of a trade or
business" under the Western Hemisphere Trade Corporation ("WHTC")
provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, § 921, 68A Stat.
at 290, that were repealed in 1976. Section 921 defined "Western
Hemisphere trade corporation" to mean "a domestic corporation all
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of whose business . . . is done in any . . . countries in North,
Central, or South America, or in the West Indies, and which
satisfies" two requirements. Id. One requirement was that at
least 95% of the corporation's gross income for the three preceding
years be derived from sources outside of the United States. Id.
The other was that at least 90% of the corporation's gross income
for the three preceding years be "derived from the active conduct
of a trade or business." Id.
Although at first cut the WHTC provision appears to be an
apt point of comparison, ultimately this analogy does not assist M-
PR. This is primarily because of the important differences between
the purposes of the WHTC provision and § 936.
Congress may, particularly in the internal revenue code,
use the same phrase, such as "active conduct of a trade or
business," in attempts to reach different ends. The Supreme Court
made this point in Commissioner v. Groetzinger, 480 U.S. 23 (1987).
After noting that the phrase "trade or business" appeared in over
fifty sections of the Code, the Court stated: "[I]n this opinion
our interpretation of the phrase 'trade or business' is confined to
the specific sections of the Code at issue here. We do not purport
to construe the phrase where it appears in other places." Id. at
27 & n.8. Other circuits construing the phrase "trade or business"
have also concluded that the phrase has different meanings in
different sections of the Internal Revenue Code. In Hughes v.
Commissioner, 38 F.2d 755 (10th Cir. 1930), for example, the Tenth
Circuit, construing the statutory phrase "trade or business" in
-29-
section 204(a) of the Revenue Act of 1921, Pub. L. No. 67-98,
§ 204(a), 42 Stat. 227, 231 (1921), stated that "[w]e are here
concerned only with the meaning of this phrase as used in this
section. The same phrase, in other statutes, or in other sections,
in a different context, and for a different purpose, may or may not
be helpful." Hughes, 38 F.2d at 757. This is not to say that the
WHTC provision is necessarily inapposite, but rather simply to
emphasize, as we have emphasized in other contexts, that "the same
words may play different roles in different contexts." Walker v.
Exeter, 284 F.3d 42, 45 n.4 (1st Cir. 2002). The relevance of the
WHTC provision, then, turns on its similarity to the provision at
issue here.
The Tax Court has described the legislative history of
the WHTC provision as disclosing a congressional "desire to offset
through a tax preference the competitive disadvantage suffered by
certain American corporations abroad on account of the less onerous
taxes to which their non-American competitors were subject."
Kewanee Oil Co. v. Comm'r, 62 T.C. 728, 737 (1974). Accordingly,
[i]t follows that when the "active conduct" requirement
is read in the context from which it arose, namely the
threat of foreign competition, one might well conclude
that in passing the Western Hemisphere provisions
Congress intended to grant relief to United States
business activity in the Americas only to the extent that
the beneficiary corporation conducted active business
operations abroad vulnerable to the competitive threat
posed by the tax-advantaged corporations of other
countries.
Id. at 737-38.
Like the WHTC provision, the possessions tax credit was
meant to offset the competitive disadvantage suffered by American
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companies. The possessions tax credit, however, was meant not only
to offset certain impediments for U.S. corporations investing in
Puerto Rico, but also to increase investment and employment-
producing opportunities in Puerto Rico. This is a difference that
makes a difference. To the extent that the WHTC provision was
meant to increase the foreign competitiveness of domestic
corporations, the geographic location of those corporations'
operations was relevant only to a limited extent -- that is, it was
important only to ensure that the domestic corporation actually
engaged in some foreign commerce. In contrast, the possessions tax
credit was meant, in addition to advancing the competitiveness of
domestic corporations, to stimulate investment in particular
places, including Puerto Rico. On this account, unlike the WHTC
provision, the location of the corporation's trade or business was
critical to advancing this goal. After all, the goal is promoting
investment in the possessions -- a goal the attainment of which is
intrinsically tied to the location of the investments made.
M-PR relies on Frank v. International Canadian Corp., 308
F.2d 520 (9th Cir. 1962), a Ninth Circuit decision applying the
WHTC provision of section 109 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939.
It is far from clear that this court would have viewed Frank's
facts the same way and reached the same outcome as did the Ninth
Circuit, even under the WHTC.
In Frank, the Pennsylvania Salt Manufacturing Corporation
of Washington, a domestic corporation that regularly conducted
business activities in British Columbia, decided to assume new
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shipping responsibilities. Id. at 522-23. For legitimate business
reasons having to do with the most favored nation clauses in its
contracts and the Robinson-Patman Act's prohibitions, Washington
decided to form a new corporation, named International Canadian
Corporation, as a WHTC, in order to perform the shipping. Id.
International, in turn, had one full-time employee and assumed the
parent's sales functions. Id. International did utilize services
of Washington's employees and paid for those services. Id. at 523.
The Ninth Circuit held, on review of a district court decision,
that International, which came into existence for legitimate
business reasons unrelated to the WHTC provision, was not
disqualified from the WHTC credit although it had assumed former
business of Washington, utilized and paid for help from
Washington's employees, and did not have a source of supply or
customers independent of Washington's. Id. at 526-27. The court
found that International clearly was active, earning its income by
performing a variety of services relating to the sale of chemical
products. Id. at 525-27.
The Ninth Circuit's opinion is of limited utility because
of the factual distinctions between it and the case here. For
example, Frank found that International's existence was justified
by a legitimate business purpose. Id. at 526. At least from early
1990, when M-USA had decided not to build a manufacturing plant in
Puerto Rico, it is difficult to view M-PR as anything other than a
corporate shell with little business reason to exist other than to
attempt to secure the § 936 credit. Furthermore, as already
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discussed, the divergent policy goals of the possessions tax credit
and the WHTC provision mean that the analogy is strained from the
start. Nothing in the history of the WHTC leads us to the
taxpayer's interpretation.
E. Analogy to Other Regulatory Definitions
The Tax Court found twenty-two uses of the phrase "active
conduct of a trade or business" in the Internal Revenue Code.
MedChem, 116 T.C. at 330 & n.13. M-PR argues that the Tax Court
erred in looking by analogy to regulations interpreting "active
conduct of a trade or business" as used in 26 U.S.C. §§ 179, 355,
and 367, for purposes of interpreting the phrase as used in § 936.11
11
The sections selected by the Tax Court concern the
following matters:
(1) 26 U.S.C. § 179 (2000). Section 179 deals with the election
to expense certain depreciable business assets. It states, in
part, that "[a] taxpayer may elect to treat the cost of any
section 179 property as an expense which is not chargeable to
capital account." Id. § 179(a). It defines "Section 179
property," for purposes of § 179, as "any tangible property
(to which section 168 applies) which is section 1245 property
(as defined in section 1245(a)(3)) and which is acquired by
purchase for use in the active conduct of a trade or
business." Id. § 179(d)(1) (emphasis added).
(2) 26 U.S.C. § 355 (2000). Section 355 deals with the
distribution of stock and securities of a controlled
corporation. Section 355(a)'s provisions apply
only if either -- (A) the distributing corporation, and
the controlled corporation . . . is engaged immediately
after the distribution in the active conduct of a trade
or business, or (B) immediately before the distribution,
the distributing corporation had no assets other than
stock or securities in the controlled corporations and
each of the controlled corporations is engaged
immediately after the distribution in the active conduct
of a trade or business.
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The argument is that the purposes of those sections are so
different from the purpose of § 936 that their selection was
arbitrary.
We do not think the selection was arbitrary. We analyze
one example to demonstrate our point. M-PR says the regulation
under § 179 is not analogous because that regulation is explicit:
it refers to a trade or business "actively conducted by the
taxpayer." 26 C.F.R. § 1.179-2(c)(6) (2001) (emphasis added). It
states, in part, that "a taxpayer generally is considered to
actively conduct a trade or business if the taxpayer meaningfully
participates in the management or operations of the trade or
business. A mere passive investor in a trade or business does not
actively conduct the trade or business." Id. As stated earlier,
our view is that the "by the taxpayer" requirement is implicit in
§ 936, and so the analogy to 26 C.F.R. § 1.179-2(c)(6) is not
strained.
M-PR argues that the more appropriate analogy is to 26
U.S.C. § 936(h)(5), and guidance provided thereunder, which, M-PR
Id. § 355(b)(1) (emphases added).
(3) 26 U.S.C. § 367 (2000). Section 367 deals with foreign
corporations. It provides that, if in connection with certain
defined exchanges, United States persons transfer property to
foreign corporations, "such foreign corporation shall not, for
purposes of determining the extent to which gain shall be
recognized on such transfer, be considered to be a
corporation." Id. § 367(a)(1). But, in general, § 367(a)(1)
does "not apply to any property transferred to a foreign
corporation for use by such foreign corporation in the active
conduct of a trade or business outside of the United States."
Id. § 367(a)(3)(A) (emphasis added).
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says, contemplates the use of contract manufacturers. That section
states, in relevant part, that
an electing corporation shall not be treated as having a
significant business presence in a possession with
respect to a product produced in whole or in part by the
electing corporation in the possession . . . unless such
product is manufactured or produced in the possession by
the electing corporation within the meaning of subsection
(d)(1)(A) of section 954.
26 U.S.C. § 936(h)(5). Section 954(d)(1)(A) states that
the term "foreign base company sales income" means income
. . . derived in connection with the purchase of personal
property from a related person and its sale to any
person, the sale of personal property to any person on
behalf of a related person, the purchase of personal
property from any person and its sale to a related
person, or the purchase of personal property from any
person on behalf of a related person where -- (A) the
property which is purchased (or in the case of property
sold on behalf of a related person, the property which is
sold) is manufactured, produced, grown, or extracted
outside the country under the laws of which the
controlled foreign corporation is created or organized.
26 U.S.C. § 954(d)(1) (2000). M-PR says that it relied on a
Revenue Ruling concluding that, under § 954, when a "controlled
foreign corporation" contracts out a manufacturing process to
another manufacturer, the contract manufacturer's performance is
considered to be performance by the controlled foreign corporation.
See Rev. Rul. 75-7, 1975-1 C.B. 244. M-PR says § 936(a)(2) must be
read, in light of Revenue Ruling 75-7, not to require the taxpayer
actually to supervise the contract manufacturer's activities.
The two sections, however, measure different things. As
the Commissioner points out, the Revenue Ruling allows contract
manufacturing to be taken into account in narrow situations, not
present here. Section 936(h)(1) taxes "intangible property income"
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to the U.S. shareholder of the § 936 corporation unless the § 936
corporation elects either the cost sharing or profit split method.
See 26 U.S.C. § 936(h)(5)(C). To make that election, the § 936
corporation must have a "significant business presence" ("SBP") in
the possession as to that product or service. In order to show a
"significant business presence" certain numerical tests must be met
and, in addition, the product must be manufactured or produced in
the possession within the meaning of § 954(d)(1)(A). For these
stated purposes, contract manufacturing costs may be attributed to
the taxpayer as allowed by the regulations. Those regulations, for
purposes of the SBP requirement, permit a possessions corporation
to treat the cost of contract manufacturing as a cost of direct
labor. See 26 C.F.R. § 1.936-5(c). The purpose appears to be to
permit a taxpayer who has already satisfied the 75% "active conduct
of a trade or business" requirement then to obtain § 936 credit for
the contract manufactured product. We reject the argument that the
section 936(h)(5) provisions govern by analogy the initial question
of what is meant by the active conduct of a trade or business.12
F. Application of Section 936(a) to the Facts
Under our understanding of the statutory term, the
requisite gross income of M-PR, over the relevant three-year time
12
The taxpayer relies on cases arising under other
provisions of the Internal Revenue Code, which hold that a taxpayer
need not manufacture its own product but may be a manufacturer by
use of a contract manufacturer. See Suzy's Zoo v. Comm'r, 273 F.3d
875, 879 (9th Cir. 2001); Polaroid Corp. v. United States, 235 F.2d
276, 278 (1st Cir. 1956). Those cases address different problems.
One size does not fit all.
-36-
period, was not "derived from the active conduct of a trade or
business within a possession of the United States." 26 U.S.C. §
936(a)(2)(B). This is because M-PR was not engaged in the active
conduct of a trade or business in Puerto Rico for the three
preceding years. The Tax Court was "not even able to find that
MedChem P.R. had any meaningful business activity in Puerto Rico."
MedChem, 116 T.C. at 337. We agree that, whatever M-PR's presence
in Puerto Rico, over the relevant time-period, it did not actively
conduct a trade or business there. A-PR and M-USA, but not M-PR,
directed and controlled all of the Avitene business activities. A-
PR performed the tasks required in the manufacturing process,
without the ability of M-PR to control any part of that process.
During much of the relevant three-year period, M-PR had
no employees. Its one employee, Mr. Perez, was a former A-PR
employee who worked out of a one-room office maintained by M-PR.
He worked for M-PR from March 1988 to June 1990, though only about
ten months of his employment occurred during the relevant three-
year period. M-PR argues that, for other reasons, A-PR activities
must be attributed to M-PR, and that A-PR employees are M-PR's
employees. The Tax Court adopted as its definition of an employee
of M-PR the definition used by the IRS to determine if an
individual is an employee for payroll tax and withholding purposes.
See MedChem, 116 T.C. at 341-43 (citing 26 C.F.R. § 31.3401(c)-1(b)
(stating, among other things, that "if an individual is subject to
the control or direction of another merely as to the result to be
accomplished by the work and not as to the means and methods for
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accomplishing the result, he is not an employee")). Under that
approach, neither A-PR nor the contract employees meet the test.
Nor do those M-USA employees who served as M-PR officers but
received no compensation from M-PR. We think the Tax Court's
approach was correct because we agree that none of the purported M-
PR employees were subject to M-PR's control as to the means and
methods of carrying out the production and sale of Avitene. Even
were this not the case, we also think it significant that, until
this litigation, M-PR consistently treated these individuals as
nonemployees for tax purposes.
Finally, M-PR makes a policy argument that it should be
within the scope of the tax credit because it created jobs in the
sense that it could have chosen earlier to move the Avitene
production process out of Puerto Rico. Had it done so, there would
have been a net job loss. But avoiding the destruction of jobs is
not the same as creating new job opportunities, which was part of
Congress's concern. It would seem contrary to congressional intent
to create incentives for American companies to threaten the loss of
contract manufacturing jobs in Puerto Rico unless the American
companies were given the possessions tax credit. More
significantly, M-PR's argument is too broad. All investment, of
whatever nature, in Puerto Rico may be thought to contribute to job
producing opportunities. But Congress did not intend the credit to
apply whatever the nature of the investment. Congress limited the
credit to those involved in the "active conduct of a trade or
business." And that does not describe what the taxpayer here did.
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G. Conclusion
We have no basis, in the statute or on the facts, to
upset the Tax Court's reasonable conclusion that the taxpayers owe
the deficiency assessed. This case has not required us to evaluate
the Tax Court's proposed rule; each case will bring factual
variations, which bring with them legal consequences.
We affirm the judgment of the Tax Court.
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