111 T.C. No. 4
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
INTEL CORPORATION AND CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES, Petitioner v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent*
Docket No. 23010-89. Filed July 30, 1998.
P had deficiencies in its Federal income tax for
the taxable years 1979 and 1980. From the taxable year
1981, P carried back an amount of foreign tax to 1979
and 1980. From 1982, P carried back additional foreign
tax to 1980. R computed interest under sec. 6601,
I.R.C. 1954, from the respective due dates of the
returns for 1979 and 1980 until the end of 1981 for the
deficiency amounts for 1979 and 1980, respectively,
eliminated by the carryback from 1981. For the
deficiency amount in 1980 eliminated by the carryback
from 1982, R computed interest from the due date of the
return for 1980 until the due date of the return for
1982. P filed a motion under sec. 7481(c), I.R.C.
1986, to redetermine interest. Held, for the years at
issue, sec. 904(c), I.R.C. 1954, does not prevent
*
This supplements Intel Corp. v. Commissioner, 100 T.C. 616
(1993), affd. 67 F.3d 1445 (9th Cir. 1995), amended and
superseded 76 F.3d 976 (9th Cir. 1996).
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interest from being imposed on the deficiency without
reduction by a foreign tax carryback from a subsequent
year. Held, further, the interest on the deficiency
amounts eliminated by the carryback from 1981 stops
accruing as of the end of 1981, and the interest on the
deficiency amount eliminated by the carryback from 1982
stops accruing as of the due date of the 1982 return.
Cf. sec. 6611(g) (now sec. 6611(f)(2)), I.R.C. 1954,
prior to and after the Tax Equity and Fiscal
Responsibility Act of 1982, Pub. L. 97-248, sec.
346(c), 96 Stat. 637.
Joel V. Williamson, Wayne S. Kaplan, Thomas L. Kittle-Kamp,
Marjorie M. Margolies, and Robert H. Perlman, for petitioner.
Beth L. Williams and Ewan D. Purkiss, for respondent.
SUPPLEMENTAL OPINION
TANNENWALD, Judge: A decision was entered in this case on
December 9, 1993, pursuant to a stipulated computation, in
accordance with this Court's opinion, Intel Corp. v.
Commissioner, 100 T.C. 616 (1993), affd. 67 F.3d 1445 (9th Cir.
1995), amended and superseded 76 F.3d 976 (9th Cir. 1996). On
May 9, 1997, petitioner filed a motion under section 7481(c)1 and
Rule 261 to redetermine interest on the deficiencies for the 1979
and 1980 taxable years.
1
We refer to sec. 7481(c) of the Internal Revenue Code as in
effect at the time petitioner's motion was filed. Unless
otherwise indicated, all other section references are to the
Internal Revenue Code in effect for the taxable years in issue,
and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice
and Procedure.
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The parties agree that, for the taxable years 1979 and 1980,
petitioner had foreign tax carrybacks from 1981 and 1982 as
follows:
Year
Year Used Amount Originated
1979 $5,015,830 1981
1980 753,462 1981
4,574,958 1982
The parties disagree as to the effect, if any, of these
carrybacks on the calculation of interest on the deficiencies for
1979 and 1980. The principal issue for decision is whether
interest accrues on the portion of a deficiency that is
eliminated by such carrybacks. If it does accrue, when does it
end, i.e., at the close of the taxable year of the carryback or
on the due date for the filing of the tax return for that year?
We direct our attention, in the first instance, to the principal
issue.
Section 6601(a) provides that interest shall be paid on the
amount of tax not paid on or before the last date prescribed for
payment for the period from such last date to the date paid. The
last date prescribed for payment of income tax is generally the
due date for filing the return without regard to any extension of
time for filing. Sec. 6601(b)(1).
"In general, interest liability is determined under section
6601 synchronically, looking at the period during which interest
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accrues, without reference to future events, such as loss or
credit carrybacks." BankAmerica Corp. v. Commissioner, 109 T.C.
1, 14 (1997). Section 6601 reflects the "use of money"
principle; "That is, the party who has the use of the money pays
interest up until the event which causes the party no longer to
have use of that money." Id. at 14. "In the absence of a clear
legislative expression to the contrary, the question of who
properly should possess the right of use of the money owed the
Government for the period it is owed must be answered in favor of
the Government." Manning v. Seeley Tube & Box Co., 338 U.S. 561,
566 (1950).
In this latter connection, we are not persuaded by
petitioner's argument that we should not give any consideration
to the time-value-of-money element because that concept "can be
applied only in the presence of a legislative directive to do
so". City of New York v. Commissioner, 103 T.C. 481, 487 (1994),
affd. 70 F.3d 142 (D.C. Cir. 1995). That language was used in
analyzing the applicability of time-value-of-money substantive
provisions of the Code. Interest per se involves the time value
of money, and, if a directive is needed, it can be found in
section 6601(a).
Section 901 allows a taxpayer who so elects a credit,
subject to the limitation of section 904, for the amounts of
certain "taxes paid or accrued during the taxable year to any
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foreign country or to any possession of the United States", plus
those taxes deemed to have been paid under sections 902 and 960.
Sec. 901(a) and (b)(1). The purpose of section 901 is to provide
relief from U.S. taxation where income already has been taxed by
another country. Perkin-Elmer Corp. & Subs. v. Commissioner, 103
T.C. 464, 470 (1994). Section 904(a) provides that the amount of
the foreign tax credit "shall not exceed the same proportion of
the tax against which such credit is taken which the taxpayer's
taxable income from sources without the United States * * * bears
to his entire taxable income for the same taxable year." This
limitation was enacted to prevent foreign tax credits from
eliminating U.S. tax on U.S.-source income. Perkin-Elmer Corp. &
Subs. v. Commissioner, supra at 470-471. Section 904(c) provides
for carryback and carryover of any excess foreign taxes as
follows:
(c) Carryback and Carryover of Excess Tax Paid.--
Any amount by which all taxes paid or accrued to
foreign countries or possessions of the United States
for any taxable year for which the taxpayer chooses to
have the benefits of this subpart exceed the limitation
under subsection (a) shall be deemed taxes paid or
accrued to foreign countries * * * in the second
preceding taxable year, in the first preceding taxable
year, and in the first, second, third, fourth, or fifth
succeeding taxable years, in that order and to the
extent not deemed taxes paid or accrued in a prior
taxable year, in the amount by which the limitation
under subsection (a) for such preceding or succeeding
taxable year exceeds the sum of the taxes paid or
accrued to foreign countries * * * for such preceding
or succeeding taxable year and the amount of the taxes
for any taxable year earlier than the current taxable
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year which shall be deemed to have been paid or accrued
in such preceding or subsequent taxable year * * *
Petitioner argues that section 904(c) is a clear legislative
expression that interest is not imposed on tax liability "paid"
by foreign tax carrybacks, because such carrybacks are "deemed
taxes paid or accrued to foreign countries * * * in" (emphasis
added) the year to which they are carried back and no statutory
provision exists that contradicts this plain language.
Petitioner describes the various interest provisions in the
Internal Revenue Code as detailed and complex and points to the
absence of a specific interest provision concerning foreign tax
carrybacks in situations involving deficiencies as significant in
light of other provisions dealing with the question of interest
on deficiencies involving other types of carrybacks. Respondent
urges us to preserve symmetry between the treatment of interest
on deficiencies with that of interest on overpayments in the
foreign tax carryback situation, in keeping with Manning v.
Seeley Tube & Box Co., supra; United States v. Koppers Co., 348
U.S. 254 (1955), and the recently decided Fluor Corp. &
Affiliates v. United States, 126 F.3d 1397 (Fed. Cir. 1997).
We begin our analysis of the scope of the language of
section 904(c) mindful of our observations in Hospital Corp. of
Am. v. Commissioner, 107 T.C. 73, 84-85 (1996):
The language of a statute * * * cannot be viewed in
isolation. In construing the meaning of [a] section
* * *, it is necessary to consider all of the words of
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the statute as well as their context, the purposes of
the law, and the circumstances under which the words
were employed. Furthermore, we must view the statute
in context as a whole and with a view to its place in
the overall statutory scheme. [Citations omitted.2]
Prior to 1942, there were no carrybacks of any kind, and
therefore there was no problem in respect of interest on any
overpayment or reduced underpayments attributable to carrybacks.
Section 153(a) of the Revenue Act of 1942 (1942 Act), ch.
619, 56 Stat. 847, amended section 122(b) of the 1939 Code to
provide for a 2-year carryback of net operating losses. Section
204(b) of the 1942 Act, 56 Stat. 900, amended section 710(c) of
the 1939 Code to provide a 2-year carryback of unused excess
profit tax credit. Section 153(d) of the 1942 Act, 56 Stat. 848,
amended section 3771 by adding subsection (e) to eliminate any
interest on an "overpayment" attributable to either of such
carrybacks for the period prior to the filing of a claim for
refund for such overpayment. There was no comparable provision
dealing with underpayments later reduced or eliminated by any
2
As will subsequently appear, we have included, in our
historical recital of the statutory provisions dealing with
interest and carrybacks, references to legislative actions
subsequent to the time when sec. 904(c) was enacted. In so
doing, we emphasize that we have done so for the sake of
presenting a full history, recognizing that actions of subsequent
Congresses provide a "'hazardous basis for inferring the intent
of an earlier one'". Hawkins v. United States, 30 F.3d 1077,
1082 (9th Cir. 1994) (quoting United States v. Price, 361 U.S.
304, 313 (1961)).
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such carryback, nor was there any comment in the legislative
history adverting to such a situation.
The foregoing action by Congress was the subject of
litigation culminating in Manning v. Seeley Tube & Box Co.,
supra, involving the propriety of charging interest on a
deficiency which was later reduced by a net operating loss
carryback. The Supreme Court held that the taxpayer was liable
for the interest, reasoning that the net operating loss carryback
provision did not alter the taxpayer's duty to pay the full tax
when due. The Supreme Court found support for its conclusion in
section 3771(e) of the 1939 Code (the predecessor of section
6611(f) of the 1954 Code) which, as pointed out above,
specifically prohibited the taxpayer from receiving interest on
"any" overpayment created by the use of a net operating loss
carryback for the period prior to filing a claim for refund of
such overpayment.
The next step in the unfolding history came with the
enactment of section 6601(d) of the 1954 Code, ch. 736, 68A Stat.
817, which codified the holding of Manning v. Seeley Tube & Box
Co., 338 U.S. 561 (1950). At the same time, Congress enacted
section 6611(f) (now section 6611(f)(1)), which contained the
provisions prohibiting interest in respect of an overpayment.
68A Stat. 819. Thus, symmetry was provided in respect of the
obligation for interest resulting from the use of a net operating
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carryback whether an underpayment or overpayment was involved.3
In one respect, the prior provision dealing with an overpayment
and its application to deficiencies by the Supreme Court in
Manning v. Seeley Tube & Box Co., supra, was changed in that the
commencement of the running of interest on an overpayment was
moved to the close of the taxable year of the loss. See infra p.
21.
In 1955, in United States v. Koppers Co., supra, the Supreme
Court held that relief in the form of a reduction in excess
profits tax did not release the taxpayer from the obligation to
pay interest on the original deficiency liability until the time
the reduction in tax occurred. Although the Code contained no
specific provision dealing with interest with respect to
deficiencies abated by the excess profits tax adjustment, the
Supreme Court, as in Manning v. Seeley Tube & Box Co., supra,
relied on the general deficiency interest provision (now section
6601(a)) and a provision prohibiting interest for the similar
period on overpayments created by such adjustment (now section
6611(f)).
When Congress enacted section 904(c) in the Technical
Amendments Act of 1958, Pub. L. 85-866, sec. 42(a), 72 Stat.
3
The 1954 Code provision did not include unused excess profits
tax carrybacks presumably because the excess profits tax had
expired on Jan. 1, 1954.
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1639, it also enacted section 6611(g) (now section 6611(f)(2))
which provided:
if any overpayment of tax results from a carryback of
tax paid or accrued to foreign countries or possessions
of the United States, such overpayment shall be deemed
not to have been paid or accrued prior to the close of
the taxable year under this subtitle in which such
taxes were in fact paid or accrued.[4] [Technical
Amendments Act of 1958, Pub. L. 85-866, sec. 42(b), 72
Stat. 1640.]
The legislative history sheds little light on the question now
before us. Beyond reiterating the above provisions, such history
addresses only: (1) The purpose of section 904(c), i.e., to
eliminate the double taxation that could result from timing
differences between the methods of reporting income of the United
States and the foreign country and the foreign tax credit
limitations existing at that time; and (2) the mechanics of
determining the amounts of the foreign tax carryback and
carryover to be applied to the appropriate years specified in
section 904(c). H. Rept. 775, 85th Cong., 1st Sess. (1957),
1958-3 C.B. 811, 837-838, 892-895.
Congress did not include in the 1958 legislation a
provision, like the one it had enacted in 1954 for net operating
4
Sec. 6611(g) was amended, effective for interest accruing
after Oct. 3, 1982, to replace "the close of the taxable year"
with "the filing date (as defined in subsection (f)(3)) for the
taxable year". Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982,
Pub. L. 97-248, sec. 346(c)(1)(D), 96 Stat. 637. Sec. 6611(f)(3)
defines "filing date" as the last date prescribed for filing the
return, without regard to extensions. See also discussion infra
pp. 22-23.
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loss carrybacks,5 addressing the effect of foreign tax carrybacks
on deficiency interest.
Between 1959 and 1982, Congress amended section 6601(d) and
section 6611(f) several times in order to deal with the impact of
various carrybacks on the running of interest on underpayments
and overpayments. See Act of Nov. 10, 1978, Pub. L. 95-628, sec.
8(c)(2) and (c)(3)(A) and (B), 92 Stat. 3632; Tax Reduction and
Simplification Act of 1977, Pub. L. 95-30, sec. 202(d)(4)(C) and
(D), 91 Stat. 150 (employee credit carrybacks); Tax Reform Act of
1976, Pub. L. 94-455, sec. 2107(g)(2)(C) and (D), 90 Stat. 1904
(WIN credit carryback attributable to investment tax credit
carryback from subsequent year); Revenue Act of 1971, Pub. L. 92-
178, sec. 601(d)(3) and (4), 85 Stat. 559 (work incentive credit
carrybacks); Tax Reform Act of 1969, Pub. L. 91-172, sec.
512(e)(3)(C) and (4), 83 Stat. 641 (capital loss carrybacks); Act
of Dec. 27, 1967, Pub. L. 90-225, sec. 2(e) and (f), 81 Stat.
731, 732 (unused investment tax credit arising from NOL
carrybacks); Act of Sept. 2, 1964, Pub. L. 88-571, sec. 3(d) and
(e), 78 Stat. 858 (carrybacks of certain unused deductions of
life insurance companies); Revenue Act of 1962, Pub. L. 87-834,
sec. 2(e)(2) and (3), 76 Stat. 971, 972 (1962) (investment credit
carrybacks).
5
Sec. 6601(d)(1); see supra p. 8.
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As is apparent, none of the legislative actions dealt with
foreign tax carrybacks. In 1982, however, Congress did enact
amendments to sections 6601(d) and 6611(f) substituting "the
filing date * * * for" in place of "the last day of" or "the
close of the taxable year". See Tax Equity and Fiscal
Responsibility Act of 1982 (TEFRA), Pub. L. 97-248, sec.
346(c)(1) and (2), 96 Stat. 637. Then, in 1984, those sections
were further amended to take into account the elimination of the
carryback of unused deductions of life insurance companies. See
Deficit Reduction Act of 1984, Pub. L. 98-369, sec. 211(b)(26)
and (27), 98 Stat. 757. Finally, in 1997, Congress enacted
section 6601(d)(2) in the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997, Pub. L.
105-34, sec. 1055(a), 111 Stat. 944, effective for foreign tax
carrybacks arising in taxable years beginning after August 5,
1997. Thus, although this provision is not applicable to the
issue now before us, it moots this issue for the future.
The foregoing provides a background for our consideration
of petitioner's arguments and the impact of a recent decision,
Fluor Corp. & Affiliates v. United States, 126 F.3d 1397 (Fed.
Cir. 1997), which involved the identical issue for decision
herein. In that case, the Court of Appeals for the Federal
Circuit concluded that the reasoning of Manning v. Seeley Tube &
Box Co., 338 U.S. 561 (1950), and United States v. Koppers Co.,
348 U.S. 254 (1955), applied and that the taxpayer was required
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to pay interest on a deficiency in an amount unreduced by reason
of the carryback of foreign taxes from later years. The
foundation of the Court of Appeals' decision was the general
principle embodied in section 6601(a) that a taxpayer must pay
interest on any deficiency, i.e., what he owes the Government,
and that “Any departures from that principle * * * would require
‘a clear legislative expression to the contrary’”. Fluor Corp. &
Affiliates v. United States, 126 F.3d at 1400 (quoting Manning v.
Seeley Tube & Box Co., 338 U.S. at 566). The Court of Appeals
found that the ("deemed * * * paid * * * in") language of section
904(c) did not meet this standard and that there was no other
sufficient evidence fleshing out the statutory language to
justify a different result. In reaching its conclusion, the
Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit found unpersuasive the
arguments advanced by petitioner herein. It is to these
arguments that we now turn.
Petitioner insists that the language of section 904(c) is
clear that the foreign tax carryback is deemed paid in the year
to which it is carried back not only for purposes of computing
the amount of the foreign tax credit for that year but for all
purposes, including interest. We disagree. The critical
language of section 904(c)(“deemed * * * paid or accrued in”)
does no more than provide for taking the carryback into account
and a methodology for calculating the amount of the carryback
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which would be available. It says nothing about any other
purpose and is thus distinguishable from Shriners Hospitals for
Crippled Children v. United States, 862 F.2d 1561, 1563 (Fed.
Cir. 1988), cited by petitioner, where it was clear that the
statute there involved was to be retroactive “for all purposes”.
The Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit cogently made the
appropriate distinction in Fluor Corp. & Affiliates when it
observed:
while interpreting the word “deemed” to mean “treated
as if” answers the question of what year the credit
will be applied to, it does not answer the question of
when the reallocation of the foreign tax credit will be
deemed to occur--whether in the carryback year or at
the time the carryback was generated, one or two years
later. * * * We are thus confronted with an ambiguity
as to whether Congress meant the language of section
904(c) to forbid the assessment of interest on a
previous tax deficiency that is erased as a result of
the foreign tax carryback. [Fluor Corp. & Affiliates
v. United States, 126 F.3d at 1401-1402.]
Thus, the phrase is ambiguous, and it is our task to
determine its meaning. In so doing, we must find our way without
the benefit of any legislative history directed to this
ambiguity. In this connection, we think it of some significance,
albeit tangential, that, in the Technical Changes Act of 1949,
ch. 720, 63 Stat. 891, Congress amended section 131(c) of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1939 to include a provision, reenacted
in section 905(c) of the 1954 Code, that, if a taxpayer received
a refund of foreign taxes for which credit had been claimed, the
taxpayer would have to pay interest on the deficiency thus
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created only to the extent such interest was received from the
foreign government. Petitioner seeks to draw some support for
its position herein by contending that such action shows that, at
the time of the 1958 amendments to section 904(c), Congress had
limited interest on deficiencies attributable to a foreign tax
credit. We do not agree. In the first place, no foreign tax
carryback was involved. Secondly, if any inference were to be
drawn from such action, it is that Congress assumed that interest
on deficiencies involving foreign tax credits would be imposed
and that limiting such interest was necessary in order to avoid
double payment of interest on taxes paid on the same income. See
H. Rept. 920, 81st Cong., 1st Sess. 3 (1948). It is a far cry to
say that the objective of avoiding double payment of interest
should be considered as blessing the position of petitioner
herein, that no interest should be paid at all.
Petitioner argues that Congress' enactment of section
6611(g) (now section 6611(f)(2)), prohibiting interest on an
overpayment, i.e., a refund, created by a carryback of foreign
taxes, makes significant the failure to amend section 6601(d) to
include such a carryback among the specified carrybacks which
were not to reduce an underpayment, i.e., a deficiency, for the
purpose of determining interest due. We decline to adopt
petitioner's position. As the Court of Appeals for the Federal
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Circuit explained in rejecting the same argument in Fluor Corp. &
Affiliates v. United States, 126 F.3d at 1404:
While there is some force to that argument, in the
end we do not find it persuasive. Section 6601(d) in
effect codifies the rule of Seeley Tube and Koppers for
all the carryback provisions that the statute covers.
Fluor's argument is that because Congress codified the
rule of Seeley Tube and Koppers for other carryback
provisions, but not for the foreign tax carryback, the
Seeley Tube-Koppers rule does not apply to the foreign
tax carryback. We do not accept the contention that,
by codifying the rule for some carrybacks, Congress
must necessarily have meant to repudiate it for any
carryback not included in the codification.
Nor are we prepared to reach a different conclusion because
of the failure of Congress, in the ensuing years from 1958 to
1997, to take action in respect of interest on underpayments
involving carrybacks of foreign taxes. This position was also
advanced and rejected in Fluor Corp. & Affiliates; the Court of
Appeals for the Federal Circuit declared that Congress knew about
Manning v. Seeley Tube & Box Co., supra, and United States v.
Koppers Co., supra, and that since the rule of those cases:
did not depend on specific legislation imposing
deficiency interest, Congress had no need to legislate
in order to ensure that deficiency interest would be
imposed. Indeed, the contrary was true: In light of
Seeley Tube and Koppers, an informed Congress would
have assumed that specific legislation would be
required if it intended deficiency interest not to
accrue when a carryback eliminated a deficiency in the
carryback year. [Fluor Corp. & Affiliates v. United
States, 126 F.3d at 1404-1405.]
Beyond the foregoing analysis, we again observe, see supra
note 2, that, as a general rule, actions by subsequent Congresses
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carry minimal weight. We think this is especially the case where
the attempt to use the record of legislative action, upon which
petitioner relies, is directed to turning a legislative silence
into an inferred relief from the overriding rule of section
6601(a) that interest is due on taxes owed to the Government.
Our view in this regard is reinforced by the fact that when the
rule of no reduction in computing an underpayment by virtue of a
carryback of excess foreign taxes was enacted in 1997, see supra
p. 12, the legislative history makes clear that it was intended
to overrule the decision of the Court of Federal Claims in Fluor
Corp. & Affiliates v. United States, 35 Fed. Cl. 520 (1996),
which allowed a foreign tax carryback to reduce an underpayment
for purposes of computing interest, and that the Congress
believed that the rule should be the same for both underpayments
and overpayments. See H. Conf. Rept. 105-220, 575-576 (1997); S.
Rept. 105-33, 178-179 (1997); H. Rept. 105-148, 551-552 (1997).6
The committee reports specifically comment that no inference is
to be drawn under prior law as to the proper computation of
interest on an underpayment when there is a carryback of excess
foreign taxes.
One final element in the more than 50 years of history is
involved in resolving the principal issue before us. Petitioner
6
The 1997 legislation was enacted before Fluor Corp. &
Affiliates v. United States, 126 F.3d 1397 (1997), revg. 35
Fed.Cl. 520 (1996).
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suggests on brief, but without any evidentiary support, that
respondent adopted the interpretation advanced by petitioner and
administratively reduced deficiencies by carrybacks of excess
foreign taxes for the purpose of computing interest. Presumably,
petitioner seeks to establish an administrative practice which
could be taken into account in interpreting an ambiguous statute.
See BankAmerica Corp. v. Commissioner, 109 T.C. at 16 (citing
Hanover Bank v. Commissioner, 369 U.S. 672, 686 (1962)). A
similar argument was made by the taxpayer in Fluor Corp. and
rejected by the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. See
Fluor Corp. & Affiliates v. United States, 126 F.3d at 1405.
We have traveled a complicated path in an effort to discern
an answer to the choice before us. That choice is whether: (1)
We should hold for petitioner on the ground that there is a
loophole which we should leave to Congress to close (as it has
done for the future), or (2) we should hold for respondent on the
ground that there is at most a "glitch" in the statutory
framework and that the statutory provisions are sufficiently
"elastic" (United States v. Koppers Co., 348 U.S. at 264), to
accord, as the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit has done
in Fluor, compelling effect to section 6601(a) and continued
vitality to Seeley Tube & Box Co. and Koppers Co. so as to hold
that an underpayment, i.e., deficiency, is not reduced by a
carryback of foreign taxes for the purpose of computing interest.
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We have been unable to perceive any persuasive reasons why
carrybacks of excess foreign taxes should be treated differently
where an underpayment rather than an overpayment is concerned.
Petitioner has argued that, unlike other carrybacks, such as a
net operating loss carryback, a "matching" rather than an
"averaging" principle is involved. We are unimpressed. Such
"matching" stemmed, according to petitioner, from a desire to
mitigate distortions arising from differences in taxable years
and accounting methods between the United States and foreign tax
systems. We are not persuaded that such "matching" element
dictates that we provide petitioner with the relief sought
herein. The same matching principle, if applicable, would
dictate that a taxpayer was entitled to interest on an
overpayment as well as relief from interest on an unreduced
underpayment. Again, a similar argument was made by the taxpayer
in Fluor Corp. & Affiliates and rejected by the Court of Appeals
for the Federal Circuit which stated:
Even if that [matching] were the sole purpose behind
section 904(c), however, it would not answer the
question whether foreign tax carrybacks cancel the
deficiency interest that would be due on any deficiency
eliminated by the carryback. The fact that Congress
wanted to allow some room for matching foreign tax
credits with the recognition of corresponding income
under the U.S. tax system does not mean that Congress
wanted to allow taxpayers to use foreign tax carrybacks
to avoid the normal consequences of tax underpayments
in prior years. * * * [Fluor Corp. & Affiliates v.
United States, 126 F.3d at 1405.]
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The same rationale applies to other situations pointed to by
petitioner where foreign tax credits are involved, e.g., a 10-
year statute of limitations for refunds of such credits, the
inapplicability of "quickie" refunds, and the relation back of
deductions in respect of disputed foreign taxes.
The long and the short of the matter is that we think that
the statutory provisions are not so explicit as to require us to
conclude that Congress intended that interest be denied to a
taxpayer on overpayments due to carrybacks of foreign taxes but
that a taxpayer who fails to pay his taxes when due is relieved
of interest on the ground that such carrybacks reduce his
underpayment. This result would be "eccentric" if not "absurd",
adjectives that should be avoided when dealing with actions by
the legislature. See Dunn Trust v. Commissioner, 86 T.C. 745,
755 (1986).
As we see it, the principle of symmetry in respect of the
obligation for interest owed to or by the Government is mandated
by the historical development of legislative and judicial action.
Such development has continued to reflect the continued vitality
of Seeley Tube & Box Co. and Koppers Co.. We hold, as did the
Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in Fluor Corp. &
Affiliates, that an underpayment, i.e., a deficiency, is not
reduced by a carryback of foreign taxes for purposes of computing
interest.
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This leaves us with the question of when the interest stops
accruing on the portion of the reductions of the deficiencies
attributable to the foreign tax carrybacks. In the Tax Equity
and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982, Pub. L. 97-248, sec.
346(c), 96 Stat. 637, Congress changed the effective dates of
carryback credits in all of the carryback interest provisions for
both overpayments and deficiencies from the last day of the
taxable year in which the credit arose to the due date for filing
the return for that year. This change was effective for interest
accruing after October 3, 1982.
In Fluor Corp. & Affiliates v. United States, supra, the
taxpayer used a foreign tax carryback from 1984 to offset a
deficiency in its 1982 tax. The Court of Appeals for the Federal
Circuit held that the accrual of interest on the amount of the
1982 deficiency represented by the carryback ended as of the
close of the taxable year in which the carryback became
available, not on the due date of the taxpayer's return for that
year. Id. at 1406. It selected the close of the taxable year,
because that was the date in the interest provisions as they
existed in 1958, when the foreign tax carryback and carryover
provision (section 904(c)) was enacted. The Court of Appeals
reasoned:
Although Congress in 1982 changed the timing rules
for interest on carrybacks covered by section 6601(d),
* * * , we decline the government's invitation to treat
that legislative change as if it changed the period for
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calculating interest under the non-statutory deficiency
interest rule applicable to foreign tax carryovers.
There was no statutory change made in 1982 with respect
to the foreign tax carryover, so we cannot attribute to
Congress the intention to have the foreign tax
carryover timing rules follow the 1982 legislative
change in the rules applicable to other carryovers.
* * * [Id. at 1406.]
We find this approach difficult to understand. Having
previously held that the absence of a specific statutory
treatment did not preclude symmetrical treatment of interest on
underpayments and overpayments, as articulated by Manning v.
Seeley Tube & Box Co., supra, and United States v. Koppers Co.,
supra, a ruling that a deficiency for one year was not reduced by
a foreign tax carryback from a later year for purposes of
calculating interest due, the Court of Appeals for the Federal
Circuit then proceeds to adopt an asymmetrical approach to the
issue of when interest on the amount of the deficiency offset by
the carryback ceases to accrue. In so doing, the Court of
Appeals for the Federal Circuit considered the specific provision
of section 6611(g) (now section 6611(f)(2)), dealing with
cessation of interest in respect of foreign tax carrybacks where
an overpayment was involved (see supra p. 9), a barrier to
recognizing the filing date of the return rather than the close
of the taxable year in which the carryback arose as the critical
date where an underpayment was involved and there was no
applicable specific statutory provision.
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We are not persuaded that the absence of a specific
statutory counterpart to section 6611(g) dealing with interest on
overpayments (which was specifically amended by TEFRA) provides a
sufficient basis for reaching the opposite result in respect of
the applicable date when an underpayment is involved. Such a
consequence, at the very least, suggests eccentric action by the
Congress, a concept we are not prepared to adopt under the
circumstances herein. See J.C. Penney Co. v. Commissioner, 312
F.2d 65, 68 (2d Cir. 1962), affg. 37 T.C. 1013 (1962). In short,
with all due respect to the Court of Appeals for the Federal
Circuit, we opt for the same symmetrical disposition of the
cutoff date in respect of interest as was accorded the obligation
to pay interest where an excess foreign tax carryback is
involved.
Petitioner has excess foreign tax carrybacks from 1981 and
1982 to reduce its deficiencies for 1979 and 1980. The interest
on the 1981 carryback is not affected by the TEFRA amendments.
The carryback from 1981 became effective as of the last day of
the taxable year 1981 (December 31, 1981), and the carryback from
1982 became effective as of the due date of the return for that
year (March 15, 1983). We hold that the interest accrues until
such dates as computed by respondent.
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In keeping with the above holdings,
An appropriate order
will be entered denying
petitioner's motion.
Reviewed by the Court.
COHEN, CHABOT, SWIFT, JACOBS, GERBER, WELLS, RUWE, COLVIN,
HALPERN, CHIECHI, GALE, and THORNTON, JJ., agree with this
opinion.
PARR, BEGHE, LARO, and MARVEL, JJ., did not participate in
the consideration of this opinion.