226. FTC Expands Corporate Capital Gains Exemption.KPMG KPMG Klynveld Peat Marwick Goerdeler (accounting firm) KPMG Kaiser Permanente Medical Group KPMG Keiner Prüft Mehr Genau (German) KPMG Kommen Prüfen Meckern Gehen Germany Webpage Click on the above link to visit the KPMG Germany webpage on the Mondaq website For editorial cut-off cut-off Anesthesiology The point at which elongation of the carbon chain of the 1-alkanol family of anesthetics results in a precipitous drop in the anesthetic potential of these agents–eg, at > 12 carbons in length, there is little anesthetic activity, date, disclaimer, and notice of copyright see end of this article. The Federal Tax Court has handed down an important ruling on the interpretation of a key capital gains exemption in German corporate tax law (ruling of 6 July 2000 - I B 34/00 - DB 2000, 1940). 1. Background [section] 8b (2) KStG creates an exemption for the capital gain realised by a corporation on the disposition of shares in another corporation. Under old corporation tax law, the exemption was limited to dispositions of shares in foreign corporations. To qualify for the exemption, the selling corporation had to be entitled en·ti·tle tr.v. en·ti·tled, en·ti·tling, en·ti·tles 1. To give a name or title to. 2. To furnish with a right or claim to something: , with respect to the shares sold or otherwise disposed of, to a dividends received exemption under a tax treaty or to an indirect foreign tax credit under [section] 26 (2) or (3) KStG. Under new corporation tax law, the capital gain exemption applies to dispositions of shares in all corporations, domestic and foreign, and is no longer contingent, with respect to foreign shares, on the existence of a tax treaty or qualification for the indirect foreign tax credit. As explained in article no. 120, the tax authorities have long taken the position that the capital gains exemption of [section] 8b (2) KStG does not apply to capital gain realised by means of a constructive dividend constructive dividend A corporate payment to a stockholder that is characterized by the Internal Revenue Service as a dividend distribution even though the corporation calls it something else. or a constructive contribution (sec. 41 (5) KStR = corporation tax guidelines guidelines, n.pl a set of standards, criteria, or specifications to be used or followed in the performance of certain tasks. ). A constructive dividend occurs when a German subsidiary sells shares in another corporation to its parent or affiliate at less than fair market value. A constructive contribution occurs where a German parent sells shares to its subsidiary at less than fair market value. Constructive dividends and contributions are in practice hard to avoid in related party transactions, if only because of the difficulties in determining fair market value. The wording of [section] 8b (2) KStG under old corporation law makes no mention of constructive dividends or constructive contributions. The new version of [section] 8b (2) KStG, on the other hand, states that it applies to gains resulting from constructive contributions, but is still silent as to constructive dividends. The new corporation tax law applies to sales of shares in calendar year corporations from 2002 onwards on·ward adj. Moving or tending forward. adv. also on·wards In a direction or toward a position that is ahead in space or time; forward. Adv. 1. and (generally) to sales of shares in non-calendar year corporations occurring after the end of the fiscal year ending in 2002 (e.g. from 1 July 2002 onwards for a corporation with a fiscal year ending on July 30th). 2. Facts And Issues Of The Case The case involved the 1995 sale of a 100 % stake in a Polish corporation by a German subsidiary to its U.S. parent company, and was of course subject to the old corporation tax law. The sale took place at book value (DM 38,388). The tax authorities took the position that expenses totalling DM 129,035, which the subsidiary had incurred to build up the Polish corporation, should have been capitalised (added to the subsidiary's basis in the shareholding), hence that the book value should have been DM 167,423. The tax authorities also considered this figure to be the fair market value. Hence, the tax authorities treated the amount of the underpayment (DM 129,035) as a constructive dividend, increased the subsidiary's earnings for the year by this amount, and assessed tax accordingly. The German subsidiary appealed the adverse assessment and also filed a motion to stay collection of tax. Under German tax procedure law ([section] 361 AO, [section] 69 FGO FGO Florida Grand Opera FGO Field Grade Officer FGO Film Grain Optimization FGO Foxshaw Gardens Online (UK) FGO Fresh Gallery Otara (Otara exhibitions gallery run by Manukau City Council, New Zealand) ), taxpayers are entitled to have collection of tax stayed or, if already collected, to have tax refunded Tax refund Money back from the government when too much tax has been paid or withheld from a salary. , pending the outcome of an appeal, where "serious doubt" exists as to the legality le·gal·i·ty n. pl. le·gal·i·ties 1. The state or quality of being legal; lawfulness. 2. Adherence to or observance of the law. 3. A requirement enjoined by law. Often used in the plural. of the assessment. The determination as to the existence of "serious doubt" is made on a summary basis. Both the tax authorities and the Tax Court denied the motion to stay. The taxpayer appealed the denial to the Federal Tax Court, which handed down the ruling here reported on in an interlocutory Provisional; interim; temporary; not final; that which intervenes between the beginning and the end of a lawsuit or proceeding to either decide a particular point or matter that is not the final issue of the entire controversy or prevent irreparable harm during the pendency of the proceeding. The taxpayer (the subsidiary) did not contest the tax authorities' estimation of the fair market value of the shareholding and appears likewise to have accepted the finding that the expenses incurred in connection therewith there·with adv. 1. With that, this, or it. 2. In addition to that. 3. Archaic Immediately thereafter. Adv. 1. should have been capitalised. However, the taxpayer argued that no constructive dividend was paid because the excess of fair market value over the selling price constituted a capital gain that was exempt from taxation under [section] 8b (2) KStG. The tax authorities reiterated the position taken in the corporation tax guidelines (sec. 41 (5) KStR) that the statute did not apply to capital gains resulting from constructive dividends or constructive contributions. 3. Court's Holding And Obiter Dictum [Latin, By the way.] Words of an opinion entirely unnecessary for the decision of the case. A remark made or opinion expressed by a judge in a decision upon a cause, "by the way", that is, incidentally or collaterally, and not directly upon the question before the court or The Federal Tax Court held that the taxpayer was not entitled to a stay of collection because, no matter who was right on the issue of [section] 8b (2) KStG, no capital gain was realised. By conceding con·cede v. con·ced·ed, con·ced·ing, con·cedes v.tr. 1. To acknowledge, often reluctantly, as being true, just, or proper; admit. See Synonyms at acknowledge. 2. the issues of fair market value and capitalisation n. 1. same as capitalization. Noun 1. capitalisation - writing in capital letters capitalization writing - letters or symbols that are written or imprinted on a surface to represent the sounds or words of a language; "he turned the paper of costs, the taxpayer in fact admitted that the book value of the shareholding in question should have been DM 167,423 at the time of sale. Since, after addback of the constructive distribution, the sales proceeds likewise totalled DM 167,423, there was no net gain or loss. Whether [section] 8b (2) KStG applies to gains realised by addback of constructive dividends was moot An issue presenting no real controversy. Moot refers to a subject for academic argument. It is an abstract question that does not arise from existing facts or rights. , because the addback did not lead to any gain in this case. While the court could have stopped here, it instead delved into the underlying issue of the proper interpretation of [section] 8b (2) KStG. After examining the statutes involved, the court concluded that the logic of these statutes indicated that [section] 8b (2) KStG should apply "not just to the [contractually] agreed capital gain, but also to the capital gain as adjusted for tax reasons" (loc. cit. p. 1941). The court thus indicates that capital gains resulting from both constructive dividends and constructive contributions should be tax exempt where the other requirements of [section] 8b (2) KStG are fulfilled. 4. Consequences Of The Decision The July 2000 ruling of the Federal Tax Court indicates that the court is prepared to decide against the tax authorities and hold that [section] 8b (2) KStG also applies to capital gains realised by reason of constructive dividends and constructive contributions triggered by sales or other dispositions of qualifying corporate shares. Where cases posing this issue are pending, the ruling here reported on establishes the existence of the "serious doubt" required by German tax procedure law to obtain a stay of collection of tax (or a refund of tax already collected) until the case is finally decided. The July 2000 ruling thus diminishes the risks run by corporations relying on [section] 8b (2) KStG in related party transactions. However, as the facts of the case in question indicate, sales of shares at book value are not entirely shielded from adverse tax consequences by [section] 8b (2) KStG even when the statute is construed to cover constructive dividends and constructive contributions. Where the correct book value of the shares disposed of is understated, the book value will be adjusted upwards under standard balance sheet correction principles. Only the gain on sale in excess of the true book value enjoys the projection of [section] 8b (2) KStG as construed by the Federal Tax Court. Certain caveats are necessary, however. We are reporting here on a summary interlocutory ruling. It is conceivable con·ceive v. con·ceived, con·ceiv·ing, con·ceives v.tr. 1. To become pregnant with (offspring). 2. that the Federal Tax Court would reach another result when ruling on the merits on the merits adj. referring to a judgment, decision or ruling of a court based upon the facts presented in evidence and the law applied to that evidence. A judge decides a case "on the merits" when he/she bases the decision on the fundamental issues and considers . This appears unlikely, however, given the care with which the present ruling was drafted. Furthermore, the wording of [section] 8b (2) KStG has been revised under the new corporation tax law to include constructive contributions (see sec. 1 above). By negative inference (logic) inference - The logical process by which new facts are derived from known facts by the application of inference rules. See also symbolic inference, type inference. from the failure of the legislature to mention constructive dividends in spite of the well-publicised controversy surrounding this issue at the time of enactment of the relevant legislation in 2000, one may argue that constructive contributions are excluded from the exemption under the new corporation tax law. However, we again consider it unlikely that the tax courts would follow this argument, since it would cause the new version of the statute to be more restrictive than the old statute in this one limited respect, whereas overall the new statute is obviously intended to be broader. Editorial cut-off date: 31 May 2001 Disclaimer and notice of copyright This article treats the subjects covered in condensed con·dense v. con·densed, con·dens·ing, con·dens·es v.tr. 1. To reduce the volume or compass of. 2. To make more concise; abridge or shorten. 3. Physics a. form. It is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter and should not be relied on as a basis for business decisions. Specialist advice must be sought with respect to your individual circumstances. KPMG Germany in particular insists that the tax law and other sources on which the article is based be consulted in the original, whether or not such sources are named in the article. Please note that the article is current only through its editorial cut-off date shown immediately above (not to be confused with the later date as of which the article was placed online - the date appearing at the article's outset). Related developments subsequent to the editorial cut-off are not necessarily reported on in later articles. Please note as well that later versions of this article or other articles on related topics may have since appeared on this database or elsewhere and should also be searched for and consulted. While KPMG Germany's articles are carefully reviewed, it can accept no responsibility in the event of any inaccuracy in·ac·cu·ra·cy n. pl. in·ac·cu·ra·cies 1. The quality or condition of being inaccurate. 2. An instance of being inaccurate; an error. or omission omission n. 1) failure to perform an act agreed to, where there is a duty to an individual or the public to act (including omitting to take care) or is required by law. Such an omission may give rise to a lawsuit in the same way as a negligent or improper act. . Any claims nevertheless raised against KPMG Germany on the basis of this article are subject to German substantive law The part of the law that creates, defines, and regulates rights, including, for example, the law of contracts, torts, wills, and real property; the essential substance of rights under law. and, to the extent permissible per·mis·si·ble adj. Permitted; allowable: permissible tax deductions; permissible behavior in school. per·mis thereunder, to the exclusive jurisdiction of the courts in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. This article is the intellectual property of KPMG Germany (KPMG Deutsche Treuhand-Gesellschaft AG). No use of or quotation from the article is permitted without full attribution at·tri·bu·tion n. 1. The act of attributing, especially the act of establishing a particular person as the creator of a work of art. 2. to KPMG Germany and the article's stated author(s), if any. Distribution to third persons is prohibited without the express written consent of KPMG Germany in advance. KPMG Germany Marie-Curie-Stra[beta]e 30 Frankfurt D - 60439 GERMANY Tel: 6995870 Fax: 6995871050 E-mail: wbader@kpmg.com URL URL in full Uniform Resource Locator Address of a resource on the Internet. The resource can be any type of file stored on a server, such as a Web page, a text file, a graphics file, or an application program. : www.kpmg.de (c) Mondaq Ltd, 2002 - Tel. +44 (0)20 7820 7733 - http://www.mondaq.com |
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