113 T.C. No. 22
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
UNIONBANCAL CORPORATION, F.K.A. UNION BANK, SUCCESSOR IN INTEREST
TO STANDARD CHARTERED HOLDINGS, INC. AND INCLUDABLE SUBSIDIARIES,
Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket No. 11364-97. Filed October 22, 1999.
In 1984, P was part of a controlled group of
corporations. On its 1984 Federal income tax return, P
reported an $11.6 million loss resulting from P’s sale
of a loan portfolio to its United Kingdom parent
corporation, SC-UK. United States and United Kingdom
competent authorities subsequently determined that the
actual loss was $87.9 million. Pursuant to a
settlement agreement for the 1984 taxable year, R
allowed P to deduct $2.3 million of the loss on its
1984 return. The remaining loss was deferred pursuant
to sec. 267(f), I.R.C. R determined that under sec.
1.267(f)-1T(c)(6), Temporary Income Tax Regs., 49 Fed.
Reg. 46998 (Nov. 30, 1984), P was not entitled to
deduct the deferred loss in 1988 when it left the
controlled group before the loan portfolio had been
disposed of outside the controlled group. Instead, R
determined that under sec. 1.267(f)-1T(c)(7), Temporary
Income Tax Regs., supra, SC-UK’s basis in the loan
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portfolio was increased by the amount of the deferred
loss. The United Kingdom has declined to allow SC-UK a
stepped-up basis in the loan portfolio.
In 1995, R replaced the temporary regulations under
sec. 267(f), I.R.C., with final regulations, effective
prospectively. The final regulations operate to restore a
deferred loss under sec. 267(f), I.R.C., to the seller when
it leaves the controlled group, even if the loss property
has not been disposed of outside the controlled group. R
denied P’s request for elective retroactive application of
the final regulations.
Held: Sec. 1.267(f)-1T(c)(6), Temporary Income
Tax Regs., supra, is valid. P is not entitled to
deduct the $85.6 million loss deferred under sec.
267(f), I.R.C.
Held: Sec. 1.267(f)-1T(c)(6), Temporary Income
Tax Regs., supra, does not violate Article 24,
paragraph (5) of the United States-United Kingdom
Income Tax Treaty, Dec. 31, 1975, 31 U.S.T. 5668.
Held: R's refusal to allow P to elect retroactive
application of the 1995 final regulations under sec.
267, I.R.C., is permissible under sec. 7805(b), I.R.C.
Frederick R. Chilton, Jr. and Paolo M. Dau, for petitioner.
Cynthia K. Hustad, for respondent.
THORNTON, Judge: Respondent determined a deficiency in
petitioner's corporate Federal income tax for the taxable year
ending October 31, 1988, in the amount of $1,676,690. The only
issue before the Court is whether respondent erred in refusing to
allow petitioner a deduction in the amount of $85,612,820
(representing losses previously deferred pursuant to section
267(f) and arising from petitioner’s 1984 sale of certain loans
to a member of the same controlled group) when petitioner left
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its controlled group in 1988.1 This question turns on the
validity of section 1.267(f)-1T(c)(6), Temporary Income Tax
Regs., 49 Fed. Reg. 46998 (Nov. 30, 1984), and the application of
section 7805(b).
The parties submitted this case fully stipulated in
accordance with Rule 122. The stipulation of facts is
incorporated herein by this reference.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Petitioner is a California corporation, with its principal
office in San Francisco, California. As described in more detail
below, in 1984 petitioner belonged to a controlled group of
corporations that included its indirect United Kingdom parent
corporation.2 In 1984, petitioner sold a loan portfolio to its
indirect United Kingdom parent corporation, realizing a loss of
$87.9 million. Respondent determined that petitioner was
permitted to deduct $2.3 million of the losses in taxable year
1984, but pursuant to section 267(f) was required to defer
additional losses associated with the sale. In 1988, petitioner
left the controlled group, which still held the loan portfolio.
1
All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code
in effect for the taxable year in issue, and all Rule references
are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
2
Unless otherwise specified, references to petitioner
include references to petitioner’s predecessor in interest, Union
Bank.
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Respondent denied petitioner’s claim for a deduction in taxable
year 1988 for the remaining amount of the loss associated with
the sale of the loan portfolio (i.e., $85.6 million).
Organizational Structure and History
On October 31, 1988, and at all prior times relevant hereto,
Standard Chartered Holdings, Inc. (Standard Chartered) was the
sole shareholder of Union Bancorp, which in turn was the sole
shareholder of Union Bank, a U.S. corporation. Standard
Chartered Overseas Holdings, Ltd. (SCOH), a United Kingdom
corporation, owned all of the stock in Standard Chartered.
Standard Chartered Bank (Standard Chartered-U.K.), a United
Kingdom corporation, owned all of the stock in SCOH. Therefore,
Standard Chartered-U.K. was the indirect parent of Union Bank.
On October 31, 1988, SCOH sold all its stock in Standard
Chartered to California First Bank, an unrelated party. On
November 1, 1988, Standard Chartered and its subsidiaries, Union
Bancorp and Union Bank, were liquidated into California First
Bank. California First Bank then changed its name to Union Bank.
On April 1, 1996, BanCal Tri-State Corp., a Delaware
corporation and parent of The Bank of California, merged into
Union Bank, with Union Bank surviving. Union Bank transferred
all the assets of its banking business to The Bank of California,
and Union Bank then changed its name to petitioner's present
name, UnionBanCal Corp.
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The 1984 Sale of the Loan Portfolio
On December 31, 1984, Union Bank sold to Standard Chartered-
U.K. loans that it had made to various foreign countries (the
loan portfolio). The sales price was $422,985,520. The face
value of the loan portfolio was $434,557,415.
On October 31, 1988, when SCOH sold all its stock in
Standard Chartered to California First Bank, the loan portfolio
had not been disposed of outside of the controlled group.
Standard Chartered-U.K. transferred the loan portfolio outside of
the controlled group in 1989.
Tax Treatment of the Loan Portfolio Sale for Taxable Year 1984
On its 1984 corporate Federal income tax return, petitioner
claimed a loss of $11,571,895 in connection with the sale of the
loan portfolio, corresponding to the difference between
petitioner’s basis in the loan portfolio ($434,557,415) and the
sales price ($422,985,520). In 1995, in the course of
respondent’s Appeals Office review of the audit determinations
for the 1984 taxable year, petitioner filed an amended Federal
income tax return for its 1984 taxable year, claiming a revised
loss of $84,079,067 on the sale of the loan portfolio to Standard
Chartered-U.K. Respondent denied this affirmative adjustment.
Petitioner and respondent reached a partial appeals
settlement for taxable year 1984, under which respondent allowed
petitioner a loss deduction in 1984 in the amount of $2,314,379,
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which represented 20 percent of the loss claimed on petitioner’s
original 1984 return. Remaining losses associated with the sale
of the loan portfolio were deferred pursuant to section 267(f).3
Tax Treatment of the Loan Portfolio Deferred Loss for Taxable
Year 1988
On its Federal income tax return for taxable year 1988,
petitioner originally claimed no deduction for any loss resulting
from the sale of the loan portfolio in 1984. Instead, as
previously discussed, petitioner initially sought to deduct such
losses with respect to its 1984 taxable year. The settlement of
its 1984 taxable year having resulted in an allowance for that
year of only $2,314,379 of the losses, petitioner sought an
affirmative adjustment for its 1988 taxable year, claiming that
losses deferred from the 1984 loan portfolio sale should be
restored to petitioner on October 31, 1988, when it left the
Standard Chartered controlled group. Respondent disallowed
petitioner’s claim.
The Competent Authority Process
For United Kingdom income tax purposes, Standard Chartered-
U.K. claimed losses with respect to the loan portfolio predicated
3
The appeals settlement left unresolved the value of the
loan portfolio at the time of its sale to Standard Chartered-U.K.
Accordingly, the amount of any loss deferred under sec. 267 was
not determined as part of the settlement agreement.
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on the loan portfolio’s having a United Kingdom tax basis of
$422,985,520. In examining Standard Chartered-U.K.'s tax returns
for 1984 and certain subsequent years, the United Kingdom Inland
Revenue determined that Standard Chartered-U.K.’s tax basis in
the loan portfolio was overstated and consequently that its
allowable losses therefrom should be reduced for United Kingdom
income tax purposes.
In 1996, petitioner requested competent authority assistance
to resolve the value of the loan portfolio on December 31, 1984,
the amount of the loss realized on that date upon the sale of the
loan portfolio, and the proper treatment of the loss realized.
The United States Competent Authority and the United Kingdom
Competent Authority agreed that the value of the loan portfolio
on December 31, 1984, was $346,630,214 and that petitioner’s loss
on the sale was $87,927,200. The competent authorities were
unable, however, to resolve the tax treatment of this loss. The
United States would not withdraw its adjustment disallowing the
loss to petitioner. In addition, the United Kingdom would not
allow Standard Chartered-U.K. to increase its basis in the loan
portfolio to reflect the loss disallowed petitioner for U.S.
income tax purposes.
Petitioner has not returned to Standard Chartered-U.K. the
excess of the amount received from it for the loan portfolio over
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the value of the loan portfolio as determined under the competent
authority process.4
OPINION
Section 267(a)(1) generally disallows losses from the sale
or exchange of property between related parties, as defined in
section 267(b). If a loss is disallowed under section 267(a)(1),
subsection (d) generally provides a corresponding reduction in
the amount of any gain the related purchaser must recognize on a
subsequent resale of the property.5
4
In its letter to petitioner, the United States Competent
Authority stated:
The determination made by the competent authorities
results in improperly lodged funds in the U.S. to the extent
of the reduction in the transfer price (i.e., $76,355,304).
Since * * * [petitioner] and * * * [Standard Chartered-U.K.]
elect not to repatriate the funds, the $76,355,304 amount
will be treated as a contribution to the capital of * * *
[petitioner] by * * * [Standard Chartered-U.K.] during the
1984 taxable year.
5
Sec. 267(a) and (d) provides in pertinent part:
(a) In General.--
(1) Deduction for losses disallowed.--No deduction
shall be allowed in respect of any loss from the sale
or exchange of property * * *, directly or indirectly,
between persons specified in any of the paragraphs of
subsection (b).
* * * * * * *
(d) Amount of Gain Where Loss Previously Disallowed.--If–-
(1) in the case of a sale or exchange of property to
(continued...)
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Section 267(f) prescribes special rules for losses incurred
on the sale or exchange of property between related taxpayers
that are members of the same controlled group.6 Section 267(f)(2)
provides:
(2) Deferral (rather than denial) of loss from sale or
exchange between members.--In the case of any loss from the
sale or exchange of property which is between members of the
same controlled group and to which subsection (a)(1) applies
(determined without regard to this paragraph but with regard
to paragraph (3))--
(A) subsections (a)(1) and (d) shall not
apply to such loss, but
(B) such loss shall be deferred until the property
is transferred outside such controlled group and there
would be recognition of loss under consolidated return
principles or until such other time as may be
prescribed in regulations.
5
(...continued)
the taxpayer a loss sustained by the transferor is not
allowable to the transferor as a deduction by reason of
subsection (a)(1) * * *; and
(2) * * * the taxpayer sells or otherwise disposes of
such property * * * at a gain,
then such gain shall be recognized only to the extent that
it exceeds so much of such loss as is properly allocable to
the property sold or otherwise disposed of by the taxpayer.
* * *
6
For this purpose, a controlled group is determined under
the rules provided in sec. 1563(a), except that stock ownership
of more than 50 percent is substituted for the requirement in
sec. 1563 for stock ownership of at least 80 percent. See sec.
267(f)(1). It is undisputed that Standard Chartered-U.K. and
Union Bank were part of the same controlled group at the time of
the sale of the loan portfolio and immediately thereafter. Cf.
Turner Broad. Sys., Inc. & Subs. v. Commissioner, 111 T.C. 315,
329-338 (1998).
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In November 1984, respondent promulgated 1.267(f)-1T,
Temporary Income Tax Regs., 49 Fed. Reg. 46992 (Nov. 30, 1984)
(the Temporary Regulation). The Temporary Regulation provides
generally that consolidated return principles apply under section
267(f)(2) to the deferral and restoration of loss on the sale or
exchange of property between member corporations of a controlled
group. See sec. 1.267(f)-1T(c)(1), Temporary Income Tax Regs.,
49 Fed. Reg. 46998 (Nov. 30, 1984). As in effect for the years
in issue, the consolidated return rules for deferred intercompany
transactions generally defer a loss on a sale to another
controlled group member and allow for the deferred intercompany
loss to be taken into account by the selling member upon the
earliest of various specified dates. See sec. 1.1502-
13(c)(1)(i), (f)(1), Income Tax Regs.7 One such specified date is
the date immediately preceding the time when either the selling
member or the member which owns the property ceases to be a
member of the controlled group. See sec. 1.1502-13(f)(1)(iii),
Income Tax Regs.; see also Turner Broad. Sys., Inc. & Subs. v.
Commissioner, 111 T.C. 315, 334-337 (1998).
7
Sec. 1.1502-13, Income Tax Regs., as in effect in the
taxable year at issue was repromulgated in 1995 in T.D. 8597,
1995-2 C.B. 147, which also included the 1995 final regulations
under sec. 267(f).
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The Temporary Regulation contains a number of exceptions to
this general rule. One exception (the Loss Restoration
Exception) states as follows:
(6) Exception to restoration rule for selling member
that ceases to be a member. If a selling member of property
for which loss has been deferred ceases to be a member when
the property is still owned by another member, then, for
purposes of this section, sec. 1.1502-13(f)(1)(iii) shall
not apply to restore that deferred loss and that loss shall
never be restored to the selling member. [Sec. 1.267(f)-
1(T)(c)(6), Temporary Income Tax Regs., 49 Fed. Reg. 46998
(Nov. 30, 1984).]
If the Loss Restoration Exception applies, then the
Temporary Regulation provides a basis adjustment (the Basis Shift
Exception) to the purchasing member as follows:
(7) Basis adjustment and holding period. If paragraph
(c)(6) of this section precludes a restoration for property,
then the following rules apply:
(i) On the date the selling member ceases to be a
member, the owning member's basis in the property shall
be increased by the amount of the selling member's
unrestored deferred loss at the time it ceased to be a
member * * *. [Sec. 1.267(f)-1(T)(c)(7), Temporary
Income Tax Regs., 49 Fed. Reg. 46998 (Nov. 30, 1984).]
The Temporary Regulation remained in force until superseded
by the final regulation, section 1.267(f)-1, Income Tax Regs.
(the Final Regulation). The Final Regulation is prospective only
and applies with respect to transactions occurring in years
beginning on or after July 12, 1995. See T.D. 8597, 1995-2 C.B.
147, 160-161. Under the Final Regulation, consolidated return
principles apply to restore the deferred loss to the seller when
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it leaves the controlled group, even if the loss property has not
been disposed of outside the controlled group. See secs.
1.267(f)-1(a)(2), 1.1502-13(f)(1)(iii), Income Tax Regs.
Petitioner challenges the validity of the Loss Restoration
Exception. Petitioner asserts that the Temporary Regulation
violates the plain meaning and intent of section 267(f) by
effectively denying it the deferred loss on its 1984 loan
portfolio sale. In addition, petitioner argues that the
Temporary Regulation violates the U.S. income tax treaty with the
United Kingdom. See The Convention between the Government of the
United States of America and the Government of the United Kingdom
of Great Britain and Northern Ireland for the Avoidance of Double
Taxation and the Prevention of Fiscal Evasion with respect to
Taxes on Income and Capital Gains, Dec. 31, 1975, U.S.-U.K., 31
U.S.T. 5668 (hereinafter U.S.-U.K. treaty). Finally, petitioner
argues that respondent's refusal to allow it to elect retroactive
application of the Final Regulation is not authorized by section
7805(b).
I. Validity of the Temporary Regulation
A. Standard of Review
A legislative regulation “is entitled to greater deference
than an interpretive regulation, which is promulgated under the
general rulemaking power vested in the Secretary by section
7805(a).” Romann v. Commissioner, 111 T.C. 273, 281 (1998); see
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Ann Jackson Family Found. v. Commissioner, 15 F.3d 917, 920 (9th
Cir. 1994), affg. 97 T.C. 534 (1991); Greenberg Bros. Partnership
#4 v. Commissioner, 111 T.C. 198, 205 (1998); Peterson Marital
Trust v. Commissioner, 102 T.C. 790, 797 (1994), affd. 78 F.3d
795 (2d Cir. 1996). As stated in Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural
Resources Defense Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 843-844 (1984):
If Congress has explicitly left a gap for the agency to
fill, there is an express delegation of authority to the
agency to elucidate a specific provision of the statute by
regulation. Such legislative regulations are given
controlling weight unless they are arbitrary, capricious, or
manifestly contrary to the statute.
See also Nationsbank v. Variable Annuity Life Ins. Co., 513 U.S.
251, 256-257 (1995).
The Temporary Regulation is a legislative regulation because
it was promulgated under the specific delegation of authority
contained in section 267(f)(2)(B). See Coca-Cola Co., &
Includible Subs. v. Commissioner, 106 T.C. 1, 19 (1996) (“A
legislative regulation is made pursuant to a specific grant of
authority, often without precise congressional guidance, to
define a statutory term or prescribe a method of executing a
statutory provision.”); see also Romann v. Commissioner, 111 T.C.
273, 281-282 (1998); Schwalbach v. Commissioner, 111 T.C. 215,
222-223 (1998). Contrary to petitioner’s assertion, the mere
fact that the Temporary Regulation may embody interpretations of
the operative statutory language does not alter its
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characterization as a legislative regulation. Cf. Batterton v.
Francis, 432 U.S. 416, 425 (1977); Levesque v. Block, 723 F.2d
175, 183 (1st Cir. 1983).
As a general proposition, temporary regulations are entitled
to the same deference we accord final regulations. See Schaefer
v. Commissioner, 105 T.C. 227, 229 (1995); Peterson Marital Trust
v. Commissioner, supra at 797; Truck & Equip. Corp. v.
Commissioner, 98 T.C. 141, 149 (1992). The Temporary Regulation
was promulgated without notice and public comment procedures.8
Petitioner argues that the Temporary Regulation therefore is not
entitled to Chevron deference, citing Bankers Life & Cas. Co. v.
8
The Treasury Decision in which the Temporary Regulation
was promulgated explained the absence of notice and public
comment procedures as follows:
There is a need for immediate guidance with respect to
the provisions contained in this Treasury decision. For
this reason, it is found impracticable to issue this
Treasury decision with notice and public procedure under
subsection (b) of section 553 of Title 5 of the United
States Code * * *. [T.D. 7991, 1985-1 C.B. 71, 81.]
Under the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. sec.
553(b)(3)(B) (1984), notice and public comment procedures are not
required “when the agency for good cause finds (and incorporates
the finding and a brief statement of reasons therefor in the
rules issued) that notice and public procedure thereon are
impracticable, unnecessary, or contrary to the public interest.”
Petitioner does not contend that the Temporary Regulation is
invalid for failure to comply with notice and public comment
procedures or to meet the requirements of the good cause
exception cited above. Accordingly, we do not reach these
issues.
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United States, 142 F.3d 973, 981 (7th Cir. 1998).9 We need not
resolve this question, however, for we conclude that the
Temporary Regulation is valid even under the traditional standard
of review for interpretive regulations as articulated in National
Muffler Dealers Association, Inc. v. United States, 440 U.S. 472,
476 (1979). Cf. Union Carbide Corp. v. Commissioner, 110 T.C.
375, 388 (1998); Sim-Air, USA, Ltd. v. Commissioner, 98 T.C. 187,
194 (1992). Under that standard, we must defer to respondent’s
regulations if they “implement the congressional mandate in some
reasonable manner.” National Muffler Dealers Association, Inc.
v. United States, supra at 476. The critical inquiry is “whether
the regulation harmonizes with the plain language of the statute,
9
In Bankers Life & Cas. Co. v. United States, 142 F.3d
973, 981 (7th Cir. 1998), the Court of Appeals for the Seventh
Circuit followed Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v Natural Resources Defense
Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837 (1984), and accorded deference to
interpretive regulations issued under sec. 7805(a) with notice
and comment procedures. The court cited Atchison, Topeka & Santa
Fe Ry. v. Pena, 44 F.3d 437 (7th Cir. 1994), for the proposition
that “the notice and comment procedure was the sine qua non for
Chevron deference.” The court in Bankers Life & Cas. Co. did not
address the appropriate standard of review for legislative
regulations issued without notice and comment procedures.
In Kikalos v. Commissioner, ___ F.3d ___ (7th Cir. 1999),
revg. in part T.C. Memo. 1998-92, the Court of Appeals for the
Seventh Circuit sua sponte raised the issue of the degree of
deference owed to temporary interpretive regulations issued by
respondent under section 163 without notice and comment
procedures. Because both parties assumed that Chevron deference
applied in this circumstance, the court reserved judgment on
whether a lesser degree of deference was appropriate.
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its origin, its purpose.” Id.; see also Ann Jackson Family
Found. v. Commissioner, 15 F.3d at 920.
B. The Parties’ Positions
The parties have stipulated that petitioner realized a loss
of $87,927,200 on the sale of the loan portfolio to Standard
Chartered. The parties also agree that section 267(f) provides
for deferral rather than denial of losses arising from sales
between corporations that are members of the same controlled
group. The crux of their disagreement is whether the deferred
loss must be restored to petitioner, or whether the Temporary
Regulation permissibly denies the loss to petitioner, allowing
instead a basis adjustment to the purchasing member of the
controlled group.
1. Does the Temporary Regulation Violate the Mandate of the
Statute?
Petitioner argues that the Temporary Regulation imposes a
result expressly prohibited by the statute. Specifically,
petitioner notes that section 267(a)(1), if applicable, would
disallow the seller's loss, with a corresponding reduction under
subsection (d) of any subsequent gain by the purchaser upon
resale of the loss property outside the controlled group.
Section 267(f)(2)(A), however, states that subsections (a)(1) and
(d) “shall not apply” to loss sales between controlled group
members. Therefore, petitioner concludes, in the case of loss
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sales between controlled group members, “If the seller’s loss may
not be disallowed to the seller, then of necessity it must
eventually be allowed to the seller, i.e., restored to it.”
Petitioner argues that, as applied to petitioner, the Temporary
Regulation impermissibly imposes the loss disallowance rule of
section 267(a)(1) and reinstates the gain-reduction rule of
section 267(d).
We disagree. By rendering inapplicable the general rules
contained in subsections (a)(1) and (d), section 267(f)(2)(A)
simply makes operable the special rules of subsection (f). Those
special rules indicate that when the selling member leaves the
controlled group before the loss property is disposed of outside
the group, the loss is deferred until such time as may be
prescribed in regulations.
The Temporary Regulation does not replicate the loss
disallowance and gain adjustment mechanisms of subsections (a)(1)
and (d). Generally speaking, under subsection (a)(1) the loss is
denied absolutely, not only to the seller but to any party. The
gain-reduction adjustment under subsection (d) mitigates the
subsection (a)(1) loss disallowance only where the transferee
subsequently resells the loss property at a gain. By contrast,
the Temporary Regulation generally preserves the deferred loss in
the controlled group for U.S. income tax purposes by means of a
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basis adjustment that applies without regard to whether the loss
property is subsequently resold at a gain or loss.
2. Does the Temporary Regulation Permissibly Accrue the
Benefit of the Deferred Loss to the Purchasing Member
Rather Than to the Selling Member?
Petitioner argues that recognition of the deferred loss by
the purchasing party is inconsistent with a general principle
that allowable losses should be confined to the taxpayer
sustaining them, citing various cases, including New Colonial Ice
Co. v. Helvering, 292 U.S. 435, 440-441 (1934). Section 267,
however, constitutes a statutory exception to any such general
principle. Losses otherwise allowable under section 165 are
disallowed under section 267 to prevent abuses resulting from the
generation of loss deductions by persons with common economic
interests. See Davis v. Commissioner, 88 T.C. 122 (1987), affd.
866 F.2d 852 (6th Cir. 1989); Hassen v. Commissioner, 63 T.C. 175
(1974), affd. 599 F.2d 305 (9th Cir. 1979).
In McWilliams v. Commissioner, 331 U.S. 694 (1947), the
Supreme Court thoroughly considered and explained the purposes of
section 24(b) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939, which was the
predecessor to section 267:
Section 24(b) states an absolute prohibition--not a
presumption--against the allowance of losses on any sales
between the members of certain designated groups. The one
common characteristic of these groups is that their members,
although distinct legal entities, generally have a near-
identity of economic interests. It is a fair inference that
even legally genuine intra-group transfers were not thought
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to result, usually, in economically genuine realizations of
loss, and accordingly that Congress did not deem them to be
appropriate occasions for the allowance of deductions.
* * *
We conclude that the purpose of section 24(b) was to put
an end to the right of taxpayers to choose, by intra-family
transfers and other designated devices, their own time for
realizing tax losses on investments which, for most
practical purposes, are continued uninterrupted. [Id. at
699-700; fn. ref. omitted.]
In sum, under section 267(a)(1), to the extent that a
property sale between related taxpayers gives rise to an
otherwise deductible loss to the seller, it is a loss that is
neither recognized nor allowed. For purposes of this rule, it is
irrelevant whether the sale was bona fide. “Congress obviously
did not want the courts to face the difficult task of looking
behind the sales. Instead, Congress made its prohibition
absolute in reach, believing that this would be fair to the great
majority of taxpayers.” Miller v. Commissioner, 75 T.C. 182, 189
(1980).
In Turner Broad. Sys., Inc. & Subs. v. Commissioner, 111
T.C. 315, 332-333 (1998), we concluded that the special rules of
section 267(f) reflect an extension of the related party
provisions of section 267(a)(1):
The legislative history regarding section 267(f)
indicates that it was intended to “extend” the related party
provisions of section 267 even though subsection (f)(2)(A)
makes subsections (a)(1) and (d) inapplicable.
Nevertheless, there is a general theme that runs through the
gain recognition limitation in section 267(d) and the loss
deferral provisions of subsection (f) in that they both
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prevent an immediate loss deduction to the seller and accrue
the loss either in terms of a limited gain recognition to
the purchaser pursuant to section 267(d) or as a deferral of
the tax benefit of the loss pursuant to section 267(f). We
think what Congress intended to ‘extend’ was the class of
transaction in which there would be a delay, of some kind,
in the recognition of a loss until there was an economically
genuine realization of the loss. [Fn. ref. omitted;
emphasis added.]
Consistent with this rationale, the Temporary Regulation
reasonably interprets section 267(f) as requiring deferral until
the loss property is disposed of outside the controlled group, at
which time there is an economically genuine realization of the
loss.
Nothing in the statutory language expressly mandates that
the benefit of the deferred loss accrue to the seller.
Petitioner cites various cases, including Hassen v. Commissioner,
supra, and Grady Whitlock Leasing Corp. v. Commissioner, T.C.
Memo. 1997-405, for the proposition that the loss that is
disallowed under section 267(a)(1) is the seller’s loss.
Therefore, petitioner concludes, the loss that is deferred under
section 267(f) must be the seller’s loss, rather than the
controlled group’s loss, and must be restored to the seller. The
cited cases, however, add nothing to the analysis other than to
show that section 267(a)(1) does not permit recognition of the
loss putatively sustained by the seller. The statute does not
otherwise identify the disallowed loss with the seller. To the
contrary, the gain-reduction adjustment under subsection (d)
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explicitly identifies the loss with the property transferred and
not with the seller. Specifically, subsection (d) provides that
where the “loss sustained by the transferor" is disallowed under
subsection (a)(1), the “loss * * * properly allocable to the
property sold or otherwise disposed of" reduces any gain
recognized by the transferee. Similarly, the Temporary
Regulation effectively identifies the deferred loss with the loss
property by means of a basis adjustment.
Petitioner argues that the use of the verb “defer” in
section 267(f) necessarily denotes postponement and restoration
of the seller’s loss to the seller. Under the literal language
of the statute, however, what is deferred under section
267(f)(2)(B) is not the seller's recognition of the seller's
loss, but rather the "loss" itself. Under the Temporary
Regulation, this loss is not recognized by the seller or any
other party while the controlled group continues to hold the loss
property. Rather, the loss is recognized only when the loss
property leaves the controlled group. This result is within the
statutory delegation of authority to the Treasury Department.
3. The Temporary Regulation Is Consistent With the
Pertinent Legislative History.
This result also harmonizes with the purpose of the statute
to prevent premature recognition of losses among related
taxpayers. Before the enactment of subsection (f) in 1984,
- 22 -
section 267 had long included certain controlled corporations
within the definition of related parties under section 267(b)
that were subject to the general loss disallowance and gain
adjustment provisions of subsections (a)(1) and (d).10 When
Congress created the special rules of section 267(f), it also
enlarged the class of controlled corporations defined as related
parties, to curb further the sorts of abuses that section 267 was
meant to address:
Congress believed that certain related parties, such as
* * * controlled corporations should be made subject to the
related party rules in order to prevent tax avoidance on
transactions between those parties. [Staff of Joint Comm. on
Taxation, General Explanation of the Revenue Provisions of
the Deficit Reduction Act of 1984, at 542 (J. Comm. Print
1985).]
The House bill would have simply applied the general loss
disallowance rules of section 267(a)(1) to the expanded class of
controlled corporations.11 The Senate bill followed the House
10
Prior to amendment in 1984, sec. 267(b)(3) defined as
related taxpayers:
Two corporations more than 50 percent in value of the
outstanding stock of each of which is owned, directly or
indirectly, by or for the same individual, if either one of
such corporations, with respect to the taxable year of the
corporation preceding the date of the sale or exchange was,
under the law applicable to such taxable year, a personal
holding company or a foreign personal holding company.
11
The House report stated:
the bill extends the loss disallowance and accrual
(continued...)
- 23 -
bill in its expanded definition of related taxpayers, but
provided special rules for sales or exchanges between controlled
group members. The Senate bill generally would have allowed the
party transferring property to a member of the same controlled
group to recognize the loss in the year that the loss property
was disposed of outside the controlled group.12
11
(...continued)
provisions of section 267 * * * to transactions between
certain controlled corporations. For purposes of these
loss disallowance and accrual provisions, corporations
will be treated as related persons under the controlled
corporation rules of section 1563(a), except that a 50-
percent control test will be substituted for the 80-
percent test. (These rules are not intended to
overrule the consolidated return regulation rules where
the controlled corporations file a consolidated
return.) [H. Rept. 98-432 (Vol. 2), at 277 (1984); fn.
ref. omitted.]
12
Section 180 of the Senate bill provided in pertinent
part:
(c) Deferral (Rather Than Denial) of Loss From Sale or
Exchange Between Members of a Controlled Group.--Section 267
* * * is amended by adding at the end thereof the following
new subsection:
“(g) Deferral of Losses From Sales or Exchanges Between
Members of Controlled Groups.--In the case of any loss from
a sale or exchange of property between members of the same
controlled group to which subsection (a)(1) applies
(determined without regard to this subsection)--
“(1) subsections (a)(1) and (d) shall not apply to
such loss, but
“(2) no deduction shall be allowed with respect to
such loss to the transferor of such property until the
first taxable year of such transferor in which the
transferee--
(A) sells, exchanges or otherwise disposes of
such property (or exchanged basis property with
respect to such property) to a person other than a
(continued...)
- 24 -
The Senate report stated in pertinent part:
The bill extends the loss disallowance and accrual
provisions of section 267 * * * to transactions between
certain controlled corporations. For purposes of these loss
disallowance and accrual provisions, corporations will be
treated as related persons under the controlled corporation
rules of section 1563(a), except that a 50-percent control
test will be substituted for the 80-percent test. These
rules are not intended to overrule the consolidated return
regulation rules where the controlled corporations file a
consolidated return. In the case of controlled
corporations, losses will be deferred until the property is
disposed of * * * by the affiliate to an unrelated third
party in a transaction which results in a recognition of
gain or loss to the transferee, or the parties are no longer
related. In a transaction where no gain or loss is
recognized by the transferee, the loss is deferred until the
substitute basis property is disposed of. [S. Print 98-169
(Vol. 1), at 496 (1984); fn. ref. omitted; emphasis added.]
In support of its position, petitioner relies upon the
underscored Senate report language supra. This report language
was dropped, however, in the conference committee report, which
stated as follows:
The provision generally follows the Senate amendment with
the following modifications:
* * * * * * *
(3) The operation of the loss deferral rule is clarified
to provide that any loss sustained shall be deferred until
the property is transferred outside the group, or until such
other time as is provided by regulations. These rules will
apply to taxpayers who have elected not to apply the
12
(...continued)
member of such controlled group (determined as of
the time of the disposition), and
(B) recognizes gain or loss on such
disposition”. [S. Print 98-169 (Vol. 2), at 520-
521 (1984).]
- 25 -
deferral intercompany transactions rules, except to the
extent regulations provide otherwise. [H. Conf. Rept. 98-
861, at 1033 (1984), 1984-3 C.B. (Vol. 2) 1, 287.]
Petitioner argues that the indication in the conference
committee report that it “generally” follows the Senate bill
reflects a legislative intent to adopt the sense of the Senate
report language in question without expressly repeating it. We
are unpersuaded that this is so. It is clear that the conference
committee report “generally” follows the Senate bill by including
special rules for transfers between controlled group members,
unlike the House bill, which contained no such special rules. It
is also clear that the special rules actually adopted by the
conference committee (and enacted into law) differ significantly
from the Senate bill. Among these differences is the omission of
the Senate provision requiring that the deferred loss be restored
to the transferor. It seems clear that Congress, having
considered the issue, ultimately rejected any mandate that the
deferred loss be recognized by the transferor when it leaves the
controlled group. Instead, Congress specified that the deferral
lasts until the property is transferred outside the controlled
group, or until such other time as regulations may prescribe.
4. Relevance of Purchasing Member’s Tax Treatment Under
United Kingdom Tax Law.
In the final analysis, petitioner's argument that the
Temporary Regulation is invalid rests on the United Kingdom’s
- 26 -
refusal to allow Standard Chartered-U.K. to recognize the loss.
Petitioner contends that, in this specific fact situation,
because the United Kingdom denied the loss for United Kingdom tax
purposes to the member of the controlled group who bought the
property, the Temporary Regulation has the effect of denying and
not deferring the loss, contrary to section 267(f).
We disagree. Under the Temporary Regulation, Standard
Chartered-U.K. was entitled under U.S. tax law to have its basis
in the loan portfolio increased for U.S. income tax purposes.
The inability of Standard Chartered-U.K. to avail itself of the
deferred loss under United Kingdom tax law is irrelevant. Had
petitioner transferred the loan portfolio to a U.S. affiliate, or
had its foreign affiliates been located outside the United
Kingdom, the results might have been different. We agree with
respondent that the validity of the Temporary Regulation cannot
depend upon the treatment of the deferred loss under foreign tax
law. Cf. United States v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., 493 U.S.
132, 143-145 (1989); Biddle v. Commissioner, 302 U.S. 573, 578-
579 (1938).
5. Effect of the Final Regulation on the Validity of the
Temporary Regulation.
Petitioner contends that the Loss Restoration Exception in
the Temporary Regulation is "diametrically, fundamentally and
precisely opposed" to the treatment of deferred losses under the
- 27 -
Final Regulation, and that both cannot be reasonable
interpretations of the statute. Petitioner contends that the
Final Regulation is evidence that the Temporary Regulation was in
error.
We are unpersuaded by petitioner's arguments. After
receiving public comments on the Temporary Regulation, the
Treasury Department adopted the changes incorporated in the Final
Regulation, explaining that it was simplifying the rules to
correspond more closely to the consolidated return rules.13 It is
well established that “the agency administering the statute has
flexibility to change a regulation in the light of administrative
experience.” Central Pa. Sav. Association & Subs. v.
13
The Notice of Proposed Rulemaking for the proposed 1995
regulations states:
The proposed regulations retain the basic approach
of the current regulations but simplify their operation
by more generally incorporating the consolidated return
rules.
The proposed regulations eliminate the rule that
transforms S's [selling member's] loss into additional
basis in the transferred property when S ceases to be a
member of the controlled group. Instead, the proposed
regulations generally allow S's loss immediately before
it ceases to be a member. This conforms to the
consolidated return rules, and eliminates the need for
special rules. An anti-avoidance rule is adopted,
however, to prevent the purposes of section 267(f) from
being circumvented, for example, by using the proposed
rule to accelerate S's loss. [Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking, Consolidated Groups and Controlled Groups--
Intercompany Transactions and Related Rules, reprinted
in 1994-1 C.B. 724, 732.]
- 28 -
Commissioner, 104 T.C. 384, 390 (1995). Moreover, a Treasury
regulation “is not invalid simply because the statutory language
will support a contrary interpretation.” United States v. Vogel
Fertilizer Co., 455 U.S. 16, 26 (1982). The question is “not
whether the Treasury Regulation represents the best
interpretation of the statute, but whether it represents a
reasonable one.” Atlantic Mut. Ins. Co. v. Commissioner, 523
U.S. 382, 389 (1988). As discussed above, the Temporary
Regulation is a reasonable interpretation of section 267(f).
II. The Temporary Regulation Does Not Violate the United
States-United Kingdom Income Tax Treaty
Petitioner argues that the Temporary Regulation is
inconsistent with Article 24, paragraph (5) of the U.S.-U.K.
treaty, which provides as follows:
Enterprises of a Contracting State, the capital of
which is wholly or partly owned or controlled, directly or
indirectly, by one or more residents of the other
Contracting State, shall not be subjected in the first-
mentioned Contracting State to any taxation or any
requirement connected therewith which is other or more
burdensome than the taxation and connected requirements to
which other similar enterprises of the first-mentioned State
are or may be subjected.
Neither section 267(f) nor the Temporary Regulation
discriminates between United Kingdom taxpayers and U.S.
taxpayers, or between U.S. taxpayers owned by United Kingdom
interests and U.S. taxpayers not owned by United Kingdom
- 29 -
interests. For U.S. income tax purposes, petitioner was treated
no differently than any other U.S. taxpayer.
Petitioner argues that the Temporary Regulation
discriminates against U.S. subsidiaries owned by foreign
purchasing members without effectively connected income, because
“losses sustained by such subsidiaries are uniformly denied”
under the Temporary Regulation, in the absence of competent
authority intervention. Petitioner argues that this “requirement
of competent authority intervention, entirely avoided by a U.S.
corporation with a U.S. parent,” is more burdensome than
requirements imposed on U.S.-owned corporations, in contravention
of Article 24 of the U.S.-U.K. treaty.
Petitioner’s argument is without merit. The operation of
neither section 267(f) nor the Temporary Regulation is
conditioned on the country of incorporation of the taxpayer’s
parent, but rather on the taxpayer’s selling property at a loss
to members of the same controlled group, without reference to
where those related parties may be incorporated. A U.S.
corporation with a U.S. parent would face the same burdens and
requirements as petitioner, all other things being equal, if it
sold property at a loss to a United Kingdom corporation that was
a member of the same controlled group. Conversely, a U.S.
corporation with a United Kingdom parent might sell property to a
U.S. affiliate without implicating the competent authority
- 30 -
process. We agree with respondent that petitioner’s problem, to
the extent it has one, does not arise under U.S. income tax law
but under United Kingdom tax law, which has not given effect to
the increase in Standard Chartered-U.K.’s basis as provided under
the Temporary Regulation. The failure of the competent authority
process to resolve this inconsistent treatment under U.S. and
U.K. tax laws is unfortunate, but it does not reflect upon the
validity of either section 267(f) or the Temporary Regulation.
III. Respondent’s Authority To Limit the Retroactive Effect
of the Final Regulation
During the administrative proceedings of this case,
petitioner requested elective retroactive application of the
Final Regulation. In a January 16, 1997, Technical Advice
Memorandum, respondent denied petitioner’s request. Petitioner
argues that respondent’s denial was not authorized by section
7805(b).
Section 7805(b) provides:
(b) Retroactivity of Regulations or Rulings.--
The Secretary may prescribe the extent, if any, to
which any ruling or regulation, relating to the
internal revenue laws, shall be applied without
retroactive effect.[14]
14
Sec. 7805(b) was amended in 1996, effective for
regulations that relate to statutory provisions enacted on or
after July 30, 1996. See Taxpayer Bill of Rights 2, Pub. L.
104-168, sec. 1101(b), 110 Stat. 1452, 1469 (1996). Accordingly,
the amendments are inapplicable to the instant case.
- 31 -
Section 7805(b) “sets out a blanket rule which specifically
permits the Commissioner to prescribe prospective effect to
regulations which would otherwise have retroactive application.”
Wendland v. Commissioner, 79 T.C. 355, 381-382 (1982), affd. 739
F.2d 580 (11th Cir. 1984), also affd. sub nom. Redhouse v.
Commissioner, 728 F.2d 1249 (9th Cir. 1984). Under section
7805(b), there is a presumption that every regulation will
operate retroactively, unless the Secretary specifies otherwise.
See Manocchio v. Commissioner, 710 F.2d 1400, 1403 (9th Cir.
1983), affg. 78 T.C. 989 (1982); Butka v. Commissioner, 91 T.C.
110, 129 (1988), affd. 886 F.2d 442 (D.C. Cir. 1989). In the
instant case, the Secretary did specify otherwise and, in doing
so, clearly acted within his authority. See Butka v.
Commissioner, supra at 129 (“Section 7805(b) certainly gives [the
Secretary] authority to provide, if he so chooses, that the new
regulation will operate only prospectively”).
Petitioner argues that respondent’s exercise of his
authority to issue prospective regulations, being discretionary,
is reviewable for abuse of discretion. Petitioner states on
brief:
Petitioner submits that when retroactive application of a
regulation would not have inequitable results, Respondent
does not have the authority to limit retroactivity.
Congress only gave Respondent the discretion to prevent
retroactivity to the extent required in order to avoid undue
hardship or discrimination.
- 32 -
Neither the express language of section 7805(b) nor its
legislative history, however, contains any suggestion of such
conditions on the Secretary’s authority to issue prospective
regulations. To the contrary, the pertinent legislative history
indicates that section 7805(b) was intended to prevent problems
that might otherwise arise from retroactive application of
regulations, rather than to restrict the Secretary’s ability to
promulgate prospective regulations.
The predecessor to section 7805(b) was enacted in the
Revenue Act of 1921, ch. 136, section 1314, 42 Stat. 227. The
legislative history states that the purpose of the 1921 provision
was to–-
permit the Treasury Department to apply without retroactive
effect a new regulation or Treasury decision reversing a
prior regulation of Treasury decision * * *. This would
facilitate the administration of the internal revenue laws
in that it would make it unnecessary to reopen thousands of
settled cases. [H. Rept. 350, 67th Cong., 1st Sess. (1921),
1939-1 C.B. (Part 2) 168, 180; emphasis added.]
In 1934, the 1921 provision was reenacted with various
substantive amendments that are not central to the present
discussion. The pertinent legislative history to the 1934
legislation states:
The amendment extends the right granted by existing law to
the Treasury Department to give regulations and Treasury
decisions amending prior regulations or Treasury decisions
prospective effect only, by allowing the Secretary * * * to
prescribe the exact extent to which any regulation or
Treasury decision, whether or not it amends a prior
regulation or Treasury decisions, will be applied without
- 33 -
retroactive effect. * * * Regulations, Treasury decisions,
and rulings which are merely interpretive of the statute,
will normally have a universal application, but in some
cases the application of regulations, Treasury decisions,
and rulings to past transactions which have been closed by
taxpayers in reliance upon existing practice, will work such
inequitable results that it is believed desirable to lodge
in the Treasury Department the power to avoid these results
by applying certain regulations, Treasury decisions, and
rulings with prospective effect only. [H. Rept. 704, 73d
Cong. 2d Sess. (1934), 1939-1 C.B. (Part 2) 554, 583;
emphasis added.]
This is not a case where petitioner alleges detrimental
reliance upon an existing practice that would be undone by
retroactive application of new regulations. Moreover,
petitioner's suggestion that section 7805(b) requires respondent
to apply regulations retroactively if they would be beneficial to
the taxpayer raises significant administrability problems of the
sort which section 7805(b) was intended to prevent.
Petitioner has cited, and we have discovered, no case
constraining the Secretary’s authority to issue prospective
regulations. In support of its position, petitioner cites
various cases, including Automobile Club of Mich. v.
Commissioner, 353 U.S. 180, 184 (1957), for the proposition that,
in enacting the predecessor to section 7805(b), Congress gave
respondent the authority "to limit retroactive application to the
extent necessary to avoid inequitable results". The Automobile
Club of Mich. case, however, like all the other cases cited by
petitioner, deals with respondent's obligation to limit
- 34 -
retroactivity to avoid inequitable results when taxpayers have
entered into transactions in reliance on past regulations. That
concern is simply not relevant when the taxpayer is requesting
retroactive application of a new regulation.
Remaining contentions not addressed herein we deem
irrelevant, without merit, or unnecessary to reach.
To reflect the foregoing and concessions by the parties,
Decision will be entered
under Rule 155.