115 T.C. No. 6
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
TEXTRON INC. AND SUBSIDIARY COMPANIES, Petitioner v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket No. 20643-98. Filed August 7, 2000.
A filed a consolidated return with its wholly-
owned subsidiary (PR) in 1977. During that year, A
distributed a note to PR in redemption of PR’s shares
in A. In 1985, P acquired more than 80 percent of the
stock of A, and thereupon A and PR became members of
P’s consolidated group. In 1987, A redeemed the note
from PR. Later that year, PR liquidated into A. Held:
Under sec. 1.1502-14(d)(4), Income Tax Regs., P may not
take a deduction in 1987 for the capital loss PR
realized on the redemption of A’s note.
James P. Fuller, Kenneth B. Clark, and David L. Forst, for
petitioner.
Nancy B. Herbert and Ruth M. Spadaro, for respondent.
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OPINION
LARO, Judge: This case is before the Court fully
stipulated. See Rule 122. Petitioner petitioned the Court to
redetermine respondent’s determination of deficiencies in Federal
income tax for its taxable years ended January 2, 1988, December
31, 1988, December 30, 1989, December 29, 1990, December 28,
1991, and January 2, 1993, in the amounts of $5,083,201,
$1,783,938, $244,211, $1,152,171, $14,011,513, and $68,811,
respectively.
We decide herein whether petitioner is entitled to a claimed
$14,934,745 capital loss for the taxable year ended January 2,
1988 (1987 taxable year).1 We hold it is not. Unless otherwise
indicated, section references are to the Internal Revenue Code
and the regulations thereunder in effect for the years in issue.2
Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and
Procedure. Dollar amounts are rounded to the nearest dollar.
1
This case involves several issues, some of which have been
settled. The other issues remaining for decision will be
addressed in one or more subsequent opinions and/or orders.
2
The applicable regulations were revised in 1995, with
prospective effect. See T.D. 8597, 60 Fed. Reg. 36671 (July 18,
1995), generally effective for transactions in years beginning
after July 11, 1995.
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Background3
Textron Inc. (Textron) is the common parent of an affiliated
group of corporations within the meaning of section 1504(a) (the
Textron group) that filed a consolidated Federal income tax
return for its 1987 taxable year. For certain periods of time,
members of the Textron group included Paul Revere Corporation
(Paul Revere) and AVCO Corporation (AVCO).
Before joining the Textron group in 1985, AVCO was the
common parent of its own affiliated group of corporations within
the meaning of section 1504(a) (the AVCO group). In February
1967, Paul Revere purchased four million shares of AVCO stock for
$135 million. AVCO’s remaining stock was owned by the general
public and traded on the New York Stock Exchange. In November
1967, AVCO acquired all of the stock of Paul Revere, and Paul
Revere became a member of the AVCO group. Paul Revere still
owned the four million shares of AVCO stock at the time it was
acquired by AVCO.
On December 1, 1977, AVCO redeemed all of Paul Revere’s AVCO
stock (the stock redemption). In return for this stock, Paul
Revere received a promissory note from AVCO (the AVCO note), with
a face amount and fair market value of $40,419,005, and other
property. Paul Revere realized a $55,353,750 loss on the stock
3
When the petition was filed in this case, petitioner’s
principal place of business was Providence, Rhode Island.
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redemption. Pursuant to section 1.1502-14(b)(1)(iii), Income Tax
Regs., the AVCO group did not recognize this loss. Instead, Paul
Revere’s basis in the AVCO stock was allocated to the property
distributed in the stock redemption (including the AVCO note) in
accordance with section 1.1502-31(b)(2)(ii), Income Tax Regs.4
AVCO and Paul Revere were members of the AVCO group at all
times from 1967 to 1985. Textron began to acquire stock in AVCO
in 1984, and by January 9, 1985, Textron had acquired in excess
of 80 percent of the outstanding stock of AVCO and thereupon AVCO
and Paul Revere became members of the Textron group.
On November 11, 1987, AVCO redeemed the AVCO note from Paul
Revere for $40,419,005 in cash (the note redemption). This was
$14,934,745 less than Paul Revere’s basis in the AVCO note.
Paul Revere was liquidated into AVCO in a tax-free
liquidation under section 332 on December 30, 1987. AVCO
remained with the Textron group through 1992. Textron, as parent
of the Textron group, claimed on its 1987 tax return a
$14,934,745 long-term capital loss on the note redemption.
Discussion
We decide whether the Textron group may deduct the loss
realized by Paul Revere on the redemption of the AVCO note in
1987. Section 1001 generally requires gain or loss to be
4
The tax treatment of the stock redemption is not in
dispute.
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recognized upon an exchange of property. See also sec.
1271(a)(1) (amounts received by the holder on the retirement of
any debt instrument are considered to be amounts received in
exchange for the instrument). Respondent asserts, however, that
the loss suffered by Paul Revere on the note redemption is
deferred by reason of section 1.1502-14(d)(4)(i), Income Tax
Regs., which provides:
(4) Exception for obligations acquired in tax-free
exchanges. (i) If –
(a) A member received an obligation of another member
in exchange for property,
(b) The basis of the obligation was determined in
whole or in part by reference to the basis of the property
exchanged, and
(c) The obligation has never been held by a nonmember,
then any gain or loss of any member on redemption or
cancellation of such obligation shall be deferred, and
subparagraph (3) of this paragraph shall not apply.
Petitioner offers four independent reasons why section
1.1502-14(d)(4), Income Tax Regs., does not apply to defer its
loss on the note redemption: (1) Section 1.1502-14(d)(4), Income
Tax Regs., operates solely to override section 1.1502-14(d)(3),
Income Tax Regs., and cannot otherwise defer gains or losses; (2)
Paul Revere did not receive the AVCO note in a tax-free exchange;
(3) the AVCO note was previously held by a nonmember of the
Textron group; and (4) Paul Revere did not receive the AVCO note
in exchange for property. We address these arguments in turn.
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1. Whether Section 1.1502-14(d)(4) Operates Solely as an
Exception to Section 1.1502-14(d)(3)
The flush language of section 1.1502-14(d)(4)(i), Income Tax
Regs., provides that if the enumerated requirements are met “then
any gain or loss of any member on redemption or cancellation of
such obligation shall be deferred, and subparagraph (3) of this
paragraph shall not apply.” Petitioner reads this language to
mean that section 1.1502-14(d)(4), Income Tax Regs., operates
solely to override section 1.1502-14(d)(3), Income Tax Regs., and
does not otherwise operate to defer gains and losses. We
disagree.
Section 1.1502-14(d)(3), Income Tax Regs., is a restoration
provision, i.e., it establishes the circumstances under which an
intercompany gain or loss deferred elsewhere in the consolidated
return regulations is triggered into income (i.e., restored).
Specifically, section 1.1502-14(d)(3), Income Tax Regs., restores
gains or losses deferred with respect to an obligation under
section 1.1502-14(d)(1), Income Tax Regs. Gains and losses
deferred under section 1.1502-14(d)(1), Income Tax Regs., are
those that are “recognized under the Code to a member during a
consolidated return year because of a sale or disposition (other
than a redemption or cancellation) of an obligation of another
member”.5
5
The parties agree that sec. 1.1502-14(d)(1), Income Tax
(continued...)
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If, as petitioner contends, section 1.1502-14(d)(4), Income
Tax Regs., functions solely to prevent gains and losses from
being restored by section 1.1502-14(d)(3), Income Tax Regs., then
it would be inapplicable where there had been no previous
deferral under section 1.1502-14(d)(1), Income Tax Regs.
However, the example set forth in the regulations at section
1.1502-14(d)(4)(iii), Income Tax Regs., disproves petitioner’s
contention. In the example, a corporation receives a security
from its newly formed subsidiary in a section 351 exchange, and
the security is later redeemed.6 In 1966, when these regulations
were implemented, and at all times through the year at issue, no
gain or loss was recognized under the Code on the receipt of a
5
(...continued)
Regs., is inapplicable both to the 1977 stock redemption and the
1987 note redemption.
6
The full text of sec. 1.1502-14(d)(4)(iii), Income Tax
Regs., is as follows:
This subparagraph may be illustrated by the following
example:
Example. Corporation P forms a subsidiary, S, in
a transaction to which section 351 applies and receives
as a result of such transaction, in addition to stock,
a security with a face value of $100 and a basis of
$50. If the security is redeemed for $100, the $50
gain on redemption is deferred and is not taken into
account until P ceases to be a member or the stock of S
is treated as disposed of under this subparagraph.
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security in exchange for property in a section 351 transaction.7
Thus, the corporation’s gain in the section 351 exchange would
not have been “recognized under the Code” as required to invoke
section 1.1502-14(d)(1), Income Tax Regs. As a result, section
1.1502-14(d)(4), Income Tax Regs., operated independently in the
example to defer the gain on the redemption of the security and
not as an override of section 1.1502-14(d)(3), Income Tax Regs.
Accordingly, we find that gains or losses on the redemption
of an obligation may be deferred under section 1.1502-14(d)(4),
Income Tax Regs., irrespective of the application of section
1.1502-14(d)(1) and (3), Income Tax Regs.
2. Whether The Stock Redemption Was a “Tax Free” Exchange
The heading to section 1.1502-14(d)(4), Income Tax Regs.,
refers to obligations acquired in “tax-free exchanges”.
Petitioner argues that the 1977 stock redemption was not a tax-
free exchange because stock redemptions are taxable under section
302.
7
Sec. 351(a) read:
SEC. 351(a) No gain or loss shall be recognized if
property is transferred to a corporation by one or more
persons solely in exchange for stock (or securities) in
such corporation and immediately after the exchange
such person or persons are in control (as defined in
section 368(c)) of the corporation.
Sec. 351 was amended in 1989 to provide that securities could no
longer be received tax-free under the provision. See Omnibus
Budget Reconciliation Act of 1989, Pub. L. 101-239, sec. 7203(a),
103 Stat. 2106, 2333.
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It is well settled that the heading of a section does not
limit the plain meaning of the text. See Brotherhood of R.R.
Trainmen v. Baltimore & O.R. Co., 331 U.S. 519, 529 (1947);
Warren v. Commissioner, 114 T.C. 343, 347 (2000). The text of
section 1.1502-14(d)(4), Income Tax Regs., requires only that an
obligation be received in exchange for property and that the
basis of the obligation be determined by reference to the basis
of the property exchanged. Paul Revere received the AVCO note in
exchange for its AVCO stock, and its basis in the note was
determined by reference to its basis in the stock. See sec.
1.1502-31(b)(2)(ii), Income Tax Regs. Thus, we find the stock
redemption to be a qualifying exchange covered by the provision.8
3. Whether Paul Revere Was a “Nonmember”
Section 1.1502-14(d)(4), Income Tax Regs., applies only if
the obligation at issue “has never been held by a nonmember”.
Sec. 1.1502-14(d)(4)(i)(c), Income Tax Regs. Section 1.1502-
14(d)(4)(i)(c), Income Tax Regs., does not specify how or when a
corporation’s status as a member or nonmember is to be
determined. Petitioner focuses on the word “nonmember” and
concludes that the deferral of Paul Revere’s loss ended in 1987,
8
Even if the heading did limit the scope of the provision,
the AVCO group recognized no gain or loss on the stock redemption
because the redemption was governed by sec. 1.1502-14(b)(1),
Income Tax Regs. The fact that the redemption would have been
taxable under sec. 302 had AVCO and Paul Revere not been members
of the same consolidated group is immaterial.
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upon AVCO’s redemption of the note, because Paul Revere held the
note for 7 years before Paul Revere became in 1985 a member of
the Textron group.9 Throughout that 7-year period, Paul Revere
and AVCO both had been members of the AVCO group.
We disagree with petitioner’s interpretation of the word
“nonmember” in section 1.1502-14(d)(4)(i), Income Tax Regs.,
because it reads that word out of context and in isolation. The
salient fact is that Paul Revere, having held the note from the
date of its issuance, was a member of the Textron group when the
note was redeemed. Petitioner’s reading is incongruous with the
purpose of the consolidated return regulations and leads to an
unreasonable result. The provisions of the regulation in
question must be construed consistently with the framework of the
consolidated return regulations, in light of their overall
purpose and regulatory scheme. Cf. Albertson’s, Inc. v.
Commissioner, 42 F.3d 537, 541 (9th Cir. 1994), affg. 95 T.C. 415
(1990); Woodral v. Commissioner, 112 T.C. 19, 22 (1999); see also
Estate of Schwartz v. Commissioner, 83 T.C. 943, 953 (1984)
9
Sec. 1.1502-1(a) and (b), Income Tax Regs., defines
“group” and “member” as follows:
(a) Group. The term “group” means an
affiliated group of corporations as defined in section
1504. See section 1.1502-75(d) as to when a group
remains in existence.
(b) Member. The term “member” means a
corporation (including the common parent) which is
included within such group.
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(canons of statutory construction apply to interpretation of
Treasury regulations); Whelan v. United States, 208 Ct. C1. 688,
529 F.2d 1000, 1002-1003 (1976) (canons of statutory construction
used to interpret administrative regulations).
The consolidated return regulations are built on the premise
that members of a consolidated group are a single economic entity
with regard to intercompany transactions and distributions and
that resulting gains or losses are given effect only when the
transferred property, or stock of the transacting member, leaves
the consolidated group. See also secs. 1.1502-13 & 1.1502-14,
Income Tax Regs.; see generally 3 Bittker & Lokken, Federal
Taxation of Income, Estates and Gifts, par. 90.5, at 90-48 (2d
ed. 1991):
The basic concept underlying * * * [the consolidated
return] provisions is that the consolidated group is * * * a
single taxable enterprise whose tax liability ought to be
based on its dealings with outsiders rather than on
intragroup transactions. This single taxpayer concept lies
at the heart of the treatment of intercompany transactions,
which, with some exceptions to prevent tax avoidance, are
eliminated in computing the group’s consolidated taxable
income.
Petitioner’s interpretation of section 1.1502-14(d)(4)(i)(c),
Income Tax Regs., conflicts with this framework. At the time
AVCO redeemed its note from Paul Revere, both were members of the
Textron group and both remained members as of the end of the 1987
taxable year. There were no “dealings with outsiders” that would
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entitle the group to take into account the loss from that
intercompany transaction.
For purposes of section 1.1502-14(d)(4)(i), Income Tax
Regs., we determine the status of Paul Revere as a member or
“nonmember” of the Textron consolidated group at the time of
redemption of the note. We interpret the word “nonmember” in
that provision of the regulations as applying to cases where a
member of a consolidated group cancels or redeems an obligation
that is held, or was held, by a corporation that is a nonmember
at the time of cancellation or redemption. We do not read
section 1.1502-14(d)(4)(i), Income Tax Regs., as applying to
cases such as we have here where a corporation/noteholder was
acquired by and became a member of the consolidated group before
the note’s redemption or cancellation.
Our reading is supported by consideration of the result that
would have occurred had AVCO redeemed Paul Revere’s AVCO stock in
1977 for cash. In that case, Paul Revere’s loss on the
redemption would have been deferred under section 1.1502-
14(b)(2)(iii), Income Tax Regs., and would have continued to be
deferred as of the end of the 1987 taxable year even though AVCO
and Paul Revere were then members of the Textron group rather
than the AVCO group. See secs. 1.1502-13(f), 1.1502-14(b)(3),
(f), Income Tax Regs. (termination of a consolidated group due to
the acquisition of its common parent by a nonmember does not
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restore deferred gains and losses if the members of the
terminating group become members of another group). The subject
loss, therefore, would have continued to be deferred in the year
in which petitioner now claims it is deductible.
Petitioner seeks a result different from a cash redemption
relying on the mere fact that AVCO redeemed the stock for a note
rather than cash. We do not believe that this distinction in
fact leads to a different result. Petitioner offers no
explanation why the consolidated return regulations would give
effect to gains and losses realized in intercompany redemptions
paid for with debt but not those realized in intercompany
redemptions paid for by cash or other property. In fact, we
understand petitioner to concede that Paul Revere’s status as a
member of the Textron group at the time the loss was realized on
the note redemption satisfies the membership requirement of
section 1.1502-14(d)(4)(i)(a), Income Tax Regs. (“A member
received an obligation of another member in exchange for
property”), even though Paul Revere was not a member of the
Textron group at the time it received the AVCO note in exchange
for the AVCO stock. We conclude that Paul Revere is a member for
purposes of section 1.1502-14(d)(4)(i)(c), Income Tax Regs., and
that the AVCO note was never held by a nonmember.
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4. Whether the AVCO Stock Was “Property”
Deferral under section 1.1502-14(d)(4), Income Tax Regs., is
required only if the obligation is received by a member in
exchange for property. See sec. 1.1502-14(d)(4)(i)(a), Income
Tax Regs. The term “property” is undefined in the regulations.
The parties agree that Paul Revere received the AVCO note in
a redemption satisfying the requirements of section 302.
Petitioner argues that because stock of the distributing
corporation is not considered property in a section 302
transaction, the reference in section 1.1502-14(d)(4), Income Tax
Regs., to “property” excludes the AVCO stock given up by Paul
Revere in the stock redemption.10 Petitioner further argues that
this reading is consistent with the economic substance of the
transaction because this would permit petitioner to recognize and
take into account the substantial economic loss that Paul Revere
realized in the redemptions.
The pre-1966 consolidated return regulations deferred to
Code definitions when a word used in the regulations was not
specifically otherwise defined.11 See Foster v. Commissioner,
10
Sec. 317(a) provides: “For purposes of this part * * *
[secs. 301 through 318], ‘property’ means money, securities, and
any other property; except that such term does not include stock
in the corporation making the distribution (or rights to acquire
such stock).”
11
T.D. 6894, 1966-2 C.B. 362, promulgated new consolidated
return regulations under sec. 1502 of the 1954 Code. The new
(continued...)
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T.C. Memo. 1966-273, modified and remanded on a different issue
sub nom. Likins-Foster Honolulu Corp. v. Commissioner, 417 F.2d
285 (10th Cir. 1969). The 1966 regulations abandoned that rule
in favor of a more general requirement that “The Code, or other
law, shall be applicable to the group to the extent the
[consolidated return] regulations do not exclude its
application.” Sec. 1.1502-80, Income Tax Regs.
Here the consolidated return regulations are on point, so
contrary provisions in the Code are inoperative. See First Natl.
Bank in Little Rock v. Commissioner, 83 T.C. 202 (1984) (though
sections 166 and 585 otherwise entitled bank to take a bad debt
deduction arising from an intercompany loan, election of
consolidated return treatment required deferral under sec.
1.1502-14(d)(1), Income Tax Regs.). While the 1977 stock
redemption met the requirements of section 302, AVCO and Paul
Revere had elected consolidated treatment, and thus the tax
consequences of the stock redemption were determined under
section 1504 and sections 1.1502-14(b)(1)(iii) and 1.1502-
31(b)(2)(ii), Income Tax Regs. These provisions do not exclude
stock of the redeeming corporation from the definition of
property.
11
(...continued)
regulations were applicable to taxable years beginning after Dec.
31, 1965.
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The only authority cited by petitioner in support of its
position is Tech. Adv. Mem. 96-27-003 (Feb. 28, 1996).12 The
TAM concluded that the definition of “redemption” in section
317(b) may have some general application in the determination of
whether a redemption took place for the purposes of section
1.1502-13(f)(1), Income Tax Regs. Petitioner reads into this
that respondent’s administrative position was that the definition
of property set forth in section 317(a) is similarly relevant to
the interpretation of the consolidated return regulations. This
assumption is inaccurate. In G.C.M. 39,608 (Mar. 5, 1987),13
respondent determined that the gain realized on a consolidated
subsidiary’s distribution of its parent’s stock to its parent in
a section 311 transaction resulted in a deferral of gain pursuant
to section 1.1502-14(c)(1), Income Tax Regs. The G.C.M. found
the stock of the parent corporation to be “property” for purposes
of the consolidated return regulations even though the stock was
held by the parent as treasury stock after the distribution. The
G.C.M. concurrently looked to the section 317(b) definition of
12
Technical advice memoranda (TAMs) and private letter
rulings have no precedential value but merely represent the
Commissioner’s position as to a specific set of facts. See sec.
6110(k)(3); Bunney v. Commissioner, 114 T.C. ___, ___ n.2 (2000)
(slip op. at 5).
13
A general counsel memorandum is a legal opinion from one
division of the Commissioner’s Office of Chief Counsel to another
and is not binding on this Court. See Old Harbor Native Corp. v.
Commissioner, 104 T.C. 191, 207 (1995).
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redemption to interpret section 1.1502-13(f)(1), Income Tax Regs.
Thus, respondent did not consider the two positions to be
contradictory. We are not aware that respondent has ever taken
the position, administratively or otherwise, that the definitions
found in section 317 are universally applicable to interpret the
consolidated return regulations.
In any case, as stated above, had AVCO redeemed the stock
for cash, the gain or loss would have been deferred under section
1.1502-14(b)(2)(iii), Income Tax Regs. Under petitioner’s
interpretation, a consolidated taxpayer could elect to recognize
losses on the redemption of the stock between members at its
whim. Instead of redeeming depreciated member stock with cash,
it could simply redeem the stock with debt and then retire the
debt. We decline petitioner’s invitation to interpret an
undefined term so as to achieve this anomalous result.
Petitioner’s interpretation would undermine the structure of the
consolidated return regulations by treating as recognition events
what are purely intragroup transactions.
As to petitioner’s economic substance argument, the
consolidated return regulations were promulgated under the
congressional mandate of section 1502 to regulate the privilege
of filing consolidated returns. Once an eligible group of
corporations consents to consolidation both the taxpayer and the
Government are bound by the consolidated return regulations. See
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sec. 1502. Though Paul Revere may have realized a genuine
economic loss on a separate entity basis, recognition of that
loss is deferred by reason of petitioner’s election to be bound
by the consolidated return regulations.
5. Whether the Loss Was Restored Upon Liquidation of Paul
Revere
As a final matter, we note that the liquidation of Paul
Revere in 1987 did not restore Paul Revere’s loss on the note
redemption. A member’s gain or loss deferred by section 1.1502-
14(d)(4), Income Tax Regs., is restored immediately before the
earlier of the time: (1) When the deferring member (in this
case, Paul Revere) ceases to be a member, or (2) when the stock
of the debtor member (in this case, AVCO) is considered to be
disposed of by any member. See sec. 1.1502-14(d)(4)(ii), Income.
Tax Regs. However, in the event the deferring member ceases to
be a member because its assets are acquired by another member of
the group in a transaction described in section 381(a) (such as a
section 332 liquidation), the gain or loss is not so restored.
See sec. 1.1502-14(e)(2), Income Tax Regs. Paul Revere ceased to
be a member of the Textron Group when it liquidated in a section
332 transaction. Thus, the liquidation was not a restoration
event.
In reaching our holdings herein, we have considered all
arguments made by the parties, and, to the extent not discussed
above, we find those arguments to be irrelevant or without merit.
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To reflect the foregoing,
An appropriate order will be
issued.