Federal Circuit invalidates duplicated-loss factor of loss-disallowance Regs.In Rite Aid Rite Aid (NYSE: RAD) is a United States retailer and pharmacy chain, operating over 5,000 stores in 31 states and the District of Columbia. Rite Aid Corporation is one of the nation's leading drugstore chains. Corp., 255 F3d 1357 (2001), the Federal Circuit ruled invalid the duplicated-loss factor of the loss-disallowance regulations under Regs. Sec. 1.1502-20(c)(1)(iii) and (c)(2)(vi). This factor, which purportedly pur·port·ed adj. Assumed to be such; supposed: the purported author of the story. pur·port sought to ensure that a parent and its subsidiary did not both benefit from a loss in the value of the subsidiary's assets, failed to reflect the consolidated group's tax liability and, therefore, was not within Treasury's authority under Sec. 1502. Loss-Disallowance Regulations Sec. 1501 allows affiliated corporations Affiliated corporation A corporation that is an affiliate to the parent company. to file consolidated returns. By making a consolidated return, the consolidated corporations are deemed to have consented to all the regulations prescribed pre·scribe v. pre·scribed, pre·scrib·ing, pre·scribes v.tr. 1. To set down as a rule or guide; enjoin. See Synonyms at dictate. 2. To order the use of (a medicine or other treatment). under Sec. 1502. One such regulation is Regs. Sec. 1.1502-20 (the loss-disallowance regulation), which disallows a loss on the sale of a subsidiary's stock to the extent the loss does not exceed the sum of (1) extraordinary-gain dispositions, (2) positive investment adjustments and (3) duplicated losses. Extraordinary-gain dispositions disallow To exclude; reject; deny the force or validity of. The term disallow is applied to such things as an insurance company's refusal to pay a claim. any loss on the sale of a subsidiary's stock to the extent that the subsidiary, while a member of the group, recognized income or gain (which causes a positive stock-basis adjustment) on certain clearly identifiable transactions occurring after Nov. 18, 1990. These transactions include (1) gain on the disposition of certain assets described in Secs. 1221, 1231 and 1060; (2) positive Sec. 481(a) adjustments; (3) discharge of debt income (to the extent it gives rise to a positive stock-basis adjustment); and (4) any other event (or item) identified in guidance published in the Internal Revenue Bulletin. The amount of any recognized income or gain is reduced by the expenditures directly related to the extraordinary-gain disposition, including allocable al·lo·ca·ble adj. Capable of being allocated. Adj. 1. allocable - capable of being distributed allocatable, apportionable distributive - serving to distribute or allot or disperse Federal income taxes. The extraordinary-gain-disposition factor applies even to assets the subsidiary acquired after joining the group. Positive investment adjustments disallow any loss on the disposition of a subsidiary's stock, to the extent stock basis increased by positive earnings in any given year. Positive investment adjustments are defined as the sum of modified taxable income Under the federal tax law, gross income reduced by adjustments and allowable deductions. It is the income against which tax rates are applied to compute an individual or entity's tax liability. The essence of taxable income is the accrual of some gain, profit, or benefit to a taxpayer. (as defined in Regs. Sec. 1.1502-32(b)(2)), not including distributions and taking into account only years in which the amount is positive. Thus, negative adjustments to stock basis during loss years are disregarded in computing computing - computer the positive investment adjustment. To avoid double counting Double counting may refer to:
The duplicated-losses component disallows any loss on the disposition of a subsidiary's stock to the extent of the subsidiary's duplicated losses. The regulations define "duplicated loss" as the excess (if any) of (A) the sum of (1) the aggregate adjusted basis of the subsidiary's assets (other than its stock and securities), (2) losses carried to the subsidiary's first tax year following a disposition or deconsolidation and (3) deferred deductions, over (13) the sum of (1) the value of the subsidiary's stock, (2) its liabilities and (3) any other relevant items. The stated rationale behind the duplicated-loss rules is that, without the duplicated-loss component, not only can the parent claim a deduction for its loss on the sale of a subsidiary's stock, but the subsidiary can claim a loss on the sale of its "loss" assets after leaving the parent's group. The validity of the duplicated-loss factor was the subject at issue in the Rite Aid appeal. In Rite Aid, the taxpayer purchased 80% of Encore's stock in 1984 and the remaining 20% in 1988, for a purchase price totaling approximately $4.5 million. Rite Aid later sold Encore to an unrelated party. The buyer, however, refused to make a Sec. 338(h)(10) election to treat the transaction as an asset sale for tax purposes. Rite Aid realized a tax loss on the sale, calculated at approximately $22.2 million. Under the loss-disallowance regulations, the entire loss was disallowed. Rite Aid's disallowed loss was a function of the three components of the loss-disallowance regulations, and Rite Aid originally challenged the validity of all three of those components. However, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. the Court of Federal Claims, the parties orally agreed that any issues related to the extraordinary-gain and positive-investment-adjustment factors would be 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. if the court were to uphold the validity of the duplicated-loss provision, as the duplicated-loss factor alone exceeded Rite Aid's entire incurred loss. Specifically, Rite Aid had a "duplicated loss" of $28.5 million--the excess of Encore's adjusted basis in its assets over the value of its assets immediately after the sale--compared to the $22.2 million loss claimed on the stock sale. Rite Aid maintained that it suffered a true economic loss of over $22 million. The company contended that the loss was permanently denied solely by virtue of its election to file a consolidated return. It argued that the loss would have been deductible That which may be taken away or subtracted. In taxation, an item that may be subtracted from gross income or adjusted gross income in determining taxable income (e.g., interest expenses, charitable contributions, certain taxes). under Sec. 165 if a consolidated return had not been elected and "the denial of the deduction imposes a tax on income that would otherwise not be taxed." Rite Aid claimed that Sec. 1502 grants authority to the Secretary to promulgate To officially announce, to publish, to make known to the public; to formally announce a statute or a decision by a court. regulations only so "as to clearly reflect the income tax liability ... and in order to prevent avoidance of such tax liability" by the group and the members. To the extent that the loss-disallowance regulations deny a deduction for an economic loss that the Code allows to nonconsolidated filers, Rite Aid maintained that the regulations are inconsistent with the grant of authority and therefore invalid. The government argued that the duplicated-loss factor "prohibits a consolidated group of corporations from recognizing a loss on the sale of an affiliate's stock and the purchaser from recognizing the same loss when selling the assets of the purchased subsidiary." Additionally, the government maintained that the regulations clearly disallow the loss and that the plaintiff had the burden of overcoming the well-established rule of judicial deference The introduction to this article provides insufficient context for those unfamiliar with the subject matter. Please help [ improve the introduction] to meet Wikipedia's layout standards. You can discuss the issue on the talk page. to regulations promulgated prom·ul·gate tr.v. prom·ul·gat·ed, prom·ul·gat·ing, prom·ul·gates 1. To make known (a decree, for example) by public declaration; announce officially. See Synonyms at announce. 2. by rulemaking agencies, particularly "legislative regulations." Given the high level of deference afforded legislative regulations, the government argued that the regulation must be upheld unless it is "arbitrary, capricious capricious adv., adj. unpredictable and subject to whim, often used to refer to judges and judicial decisions which do not follow the law, logic or proper trial procedure. A semi-polite way of saying a judge is inconsistent or erratic. , or manifestly contrary to the statute." The Court of Federal Claims ruled in favor of the government, finding that the loss-disallowance regulations fell "within the four corners of section 1502." However, the Federal Circuit reversed, agreeing with Rite Aid that the regulation is "manifestly contrary to the statute." In rendering its decision, the court wrote, "in the absence of a problem created from the filing of consolidated returns, the Secretary is without authority to change the application of other tax code provisions to a group of affiliated corporations filing a consolidated return." Additionally, citing American Standard, Inc., 220 Ct. C1.411 (1979), the court stated, "section 1502 `does not authorize To empower another with the legal right to perform an action. The Constitution authorizes Congress to regulate interstate commerce. authorize v. to officially empower someone to act. (See: authority) the Secretary to choose a method that imposes a tax on income that would not otherwise be taxed.'" Moreover, the court wrote: The loss realized on the sale of a former subsidiary's assets after the consolidated group sells the subsidiary's stock is not a problem resulting from the filing of consolidated income tax returns. The scenario also arises where a corporate shareholder sells the stock of a non-consolidated subsidiary. The corporate shareholder could realize a loss under I.R.C. [section] 1001, and deduct de·duct v. de·duct·ed, de·duct·ing, de·ducts v.tr. 1. To take away (a quantity) from another; subtract. 2. To derive by deduction; deduce. v.intr. the loss under I.R.C. [section] 165. The subsidiary could then deduct any losses from a later sale of assets. The duplicated loss factor, therefore, addresses a situation that arises from the sale of stock regardless of whether corporations file separate or consolidated returns. Consequently, the court held that the Secretary lacked the authority to deny the application of Sec. 165 to Rite Aid's loss on the stock sale. Further, the government attempted to invoke To activate a program, routine, function or process. the statutory language requiring consolidated corporations to consent to all prescribed regulations--what the government called taking "the bitter with the sweet." The Federal Circuit disagreed with the government, holding that a taxpayer is not required to "acquiesce in a regulation promulgated outside the authority delegated by Congress. The `bitter with the sweet' does not include the invalid." Impact of Rite Aid The court's decision raises questions about the validity of the extraordinary-gain-disposition and positive-investment-adjustment factors of the loss-disallowance regulations, as well as consolidated return regulations that may change the application of other Code provisions to a consolidated group, absent a problem created from filing a consolidated return. Finally, Regs. Sec. 1.1502-20(g) provides an election for the reattribution of a subsidiary's losses to the common parent. If a member disposes of a subsidiary's stock at a loss, to the extent the loss would be disallowed, the common parent may elect to attribute to itself any of the subsidiary's net operating losses Net operating losses Losses that a firm can take advantage of to reduce taxes. (NOLs) or net capital losses. If the election is made, the common parent would succeed to the reattributed losses as if they, were transferred in a Sec. 381 transaction. The election is particularly attractive, because it allows the common parent to carry over NOLs that could offset ordinary income, while a loss on the disposition of a subsidiary's stock would be capital in nature. Therefore, the Rite Aid decision may have an adverse effect for certain taxpayers that may actually prefer to have their loss disallowed so they could make the reattribution election. FROM JEREMY B. BLANK, CPA (Computer Press Association, Landing, NJ) An earlier membership organization founded in 1983 that promoted excellence in computer journalism. Its annual awards honored outstanding examples in print, broadcast and electronic media. The CPA disbanded in 2000. , MLT (MultiLink Trunking) See port aggregation. , AND MARSHALL S Marshall. 1 City (1990 pop. 12,711), seat of Saline co., N central Mo.; inc. 1839. In a large farm area, it is a processing center for grain, eggs, meat, and dairy products. Marshall is the seat of Missouri Valley College. . SOLOMON, CPA, WASHINGTON, DC |
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