2000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 442">*442 An appropriate order directing the parties to file revised computations will be issued.
APPENDIX: FLOWCHART SUMMARIZING LITIGATION
[Flowchart omitted]
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDUM OPINION
VASQUEZ, JUDGE: This matter is before the Court on the parties' disputed computations under
2000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 442">*443 BACKGROUND
1995 TAX COURT OPINION
Respondent determined deficiencies in petitioner's Federal income taxes as follows:
Taxable Year Ending Amount
___________________ ___________
Dec. 31, 1983 $ 38,934,552
Dec. 29, 1984 21,764,946
Dec. 28, 1985 285,591,539
On September 14, 1995, after the settlement of numerous issues by the parties, the Court rendered an opinion (1995 opinion) with regard to remaining issues in the case. See
2000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 442">*444 1995 ADVANCE TAX PAYMENTS
On December 15, 1995, after the release of the 1995 opinion, but before the Court entered a decision, petitioner paid respondent the following amounts (advance tax payments) on the deficiencies as anticipated by petitioner for the tax years in issue:
Taxable Year Ending Advance Tax Payments
___________________ ____________________
Dec. 31, 1983 $ 6,774,252
Dec. 29, 1984 31,222,100
Dec. 28, 1985 114,964,176
INITIAL TENTATIVE REFUNDS AND 1996 MOTION TO STRIKE
On August 7, 1996, a stipulation by the parties with regard to the
On July 26, 1996, before the parties filed their
Respondent did not object to the motion. The Court granted petitioner's motion. For the purposes of this opinion, we interpret the "not in issue" terminology to mean that petitioner did not seek to have this Court establish whether the carrybacks which led to the initial tentative refunds were properly allowed by respondent. 4
1996 STIPULATION AND TAX COURT DECISION
The relevant portions of the 19962000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 442">*446 stipulation follow:
1. Respondent may assess the deficiencies determined to be
due pursuant to the foregoing decision for the taxable [years]
ended December 31, 1983, December 29, 1984, and December 28,
1985. The deficiencies shown in the foregoing decision for the
1983 and 1984 taxable years and the overpayment shown in the
foregoing decision for the 1985 taxable year were determined
WITHOUT GIVING PETITIONER CREDIT FOR CARRYBACKS, including
carrybacks that were tentatively allowed under the provisions of
which carrybacks are not in issue in this case. FURTHER, THE
AMOUNTS OF THE NET TAX ASSESSED AND PAID AND THE DEFICIENCIES
SHOWN IN THE FOREGOING DECISION FOR THE 1983 AND 1984 TAXABLE
YEARS WERE DETERMINED AFTER REDUCING THE TAX ASSESSED AND PAID
FOR THOSE YEARS BY ALL AMOUNTS THAT WERE REFUNDED OR CREDITED IN
CONNECTION WITH THE AFOREMENTIONED CARRYBACKS. The reflection in
the decision of these refunds is not a substantive determination
of whether2000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 442">*447 the carrybacks are allowable and does not put the
carrybacks in issue.
* * * * * * *
9. It is further stipulated that business credit
carrybacks, net operating loss and capital loss carrybacks and
the effect of such carrybacks, and other similar tax attributes
defined in
respect to the Petitioner's taxable years beginning after
December 28, 1985, were not at issue in T.C. Docket No. 21562-90
and may be the subject of a claim for refund attributable to
such carrybacks and the effect of such carrybacks into
Petitioner's taxable years ended December 31, 1983, December 29,
1984, and December 28, 1985, * * *. [Emphasis added.]
Pursuant to the record and the 1996 stipulation, on August 7, 1996, the Court also entered a decision (1996 decision) redetermining the deficiency determinations as follows:
Taxable Year Ending Deficiency
___________________ __________
Dec. 31, 1983 $ 6,780,478
2000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 442">*448 Dec. 29, 1984 33,217,385
Dec. 28, 1985 86,323,660
Pursuant to the Court's refund jurisdiction under section 6512(b)(1), the Court also concluded in the 1996 decision that as to the 1985 tax year, petitioner had an overpayment of $ 28,640,516 5 in addition to the deficiency of $ 86,323,660. 6
SUBSEQUENT TENTATIVE REFUNDS
On September 9, 1996, petitioner submitted to respondent another Form 1139 seeking2000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 442">*449 tentative refunds (subsequent tentative refunds) of $ 556,698, $ 14,045,138, and $ 49,907,010 for the 1983, 1984, and 1985 tax years, respectively. The subsequent tentative refund for 1985 resulted from carrying back NOL's generated in the 1995 tax year to 1985. 7 Furthermore, when the NOL's were carried back to 1985, business credits that initially offset the 1985 tax liability became eligible to be applied to the 1983 and 1984 tax years, creating refunds in those years. 8 Specifically, the NOL's were derived from additional interest and State taxes resulting from the litigation of the instant case. Respondent allowed the subsequent tentative refunds for 1983, 1984, and 1985.
2000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 442">*450 APPEAL OF 1995 OPINION
In late 1996, petitioner appealed the Court's valuation of the Carnation assets and the corresponding capital gains issue to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. On December 30, 1996, respondent assessed the deficiencies redetermined by the Court in the 1996 decision. 9 On July 31, 1998, the Court of Appeals affirmed this Court's holding that petitioner had to recognize capital gains on the sale of the Carnation assets but reversed and remanded the Court's 1995 opinion with regard to the valuation of the Carnation assets.
REMAND TO THE TAX COURT AND 1999 STIPULATION
After the Court scheduled the case for a2000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 442">*451 new trial, the parties reached a basis of settlement in 1999 as to the value of the Carnation assets (1999 stipulation). The valuation dispute affected only the deficiency and overpayment determinations for the 1985 tax year. 10 As part of the 1999 stipulation, the parties described the deficiency and/or overpayment computation for the 1985 tax year in their
1. * * * The parties hereby stipulate that Carnation
Company's basis in the trademarks was $ 239,500,000 and that the
capital gain upon the sale of these trademarks to NSA shall be
computed by reference to the foregoing basis * * *.
2. The parties' stipulation in paragraph 1 of Petitioner's
basis in the trademarks is for the sole purpose of resolving the
remaining disputed issue in this case2000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 442">*452 and has no precedential
value beyond determining Carnation Company's basis in the
trademarks and goodwill/going concern value.
3. Pursuant to T.C.
in this case on August 7, 1996, determining a deficiency of
income tax due from Petitioner for the taxable year ended
December 28, 1985, in the amount of $ 86,323,660. As a result of
this Stipulation of Settled Issue, the foregoing DEFICIENCY MUST
BE RECOMPUTED PURSUANT TO THE PARTIES' STIPULATION OF BASIS IN
PARAGRAPH 1. The Court's August 7, 1996 decision was accompanied
by a stipulation signed by Petitioner's counsel and Respondent's
counsel on July 26, 1996, and August 2, 1996, respectively. THE
STIPULATION ACCOMPANYING THE AUGUST 7, 1996 DECISION [(1996
STIPULATION)] CONTROLS THE MANNER IN WHICH THE INCOME TAX AT
ISSUE FOR THE 1985 TAXABLE YEAR WILL BE RECOMPUTED. The parties
will expeditiously submit the recomputed deficiency for the
Court to enter pursuant to
For ease of reference, the Court provides a flowchart in the appendix2000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 442">*453 which lists the various steps in this litigation.
THE PARTIES' POSITIONS
In the present
2000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 442">*454 Their deficiency and overpayment computations follow below:
RESPONDENT'S 1985
DEFICIENCY COMPUTATION 1
Tax liability $ 45,560,035
Tax on return $ 328,175
Amounts assessed
as a deficiency 86,323,660
__________________________________
Tax assessed
and paid 2 86,651,835
- Reductions (49,907,010)
__________________________________
- Net tax assessed and paid (36,744,825)
_________________________________________________
Deficiency 8,815,210
PETITIONER'S 1985
OVERPAYMENT COMPUTATION
Tax assessed and paid
- Tax liability (45,560,035)
_________________________________________________
Overpayment 41,091,800
2000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 442">*455 The parties agree that petitioner's tax liability for 1985 equals $ 45,560,035, but they interpret the 1996 and 1999 stipulations differently in determining the deficiency and/or overpayment for 1985. Although the NOL carrybacks, which resulted in the subsequent tentative refund for 1985, are not to be taken into account by the Court in redetermining the 1985 tax liability, 12 respondent argues that the 1996 and 1999 stipulations provide for the tax assessed and paid for the 1985 tax year to be reduced by the subsequent tentative refund. 13
Respondent first contends that the 1999 stipulation provides that the 1996 stipulation "'controls the manner in which the income tax at issue for the 1985 taxable year will be computed.'" Respondent2000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 442">*456 then argues that because the parties agreed in the 1996 stipulation that the initial tentative refunds for the 1983 and 1984 tax years would be treated as a reduction to the tax assessed and paid, the subsequent tentative refund for the 1985 tax year should be treated in the same fashion.
Petitioner agrees that the 1999 stipulation directs the Court to consider the language of the 1996 stipulation. Petitioner, however, argues in a memorandum that the 1996 stipulation says "nothing at all" about whether the subsequent tentative refund is to be treated as a reduction to the tax assessed and paid for 1985. Petitioner further argues that the "absence of any such language for 1985 is not only conspicuous, but dispositive: it shows that the parties meant to treat 1985 differently from 1983 and 1984." 14
2000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 442">*457 DISCUSSION
This Court applies general principles of contract law to compromises and settlements of Federal tax cases. We stated in
The issue before us is whether the subsequent tentative refund should be subtracted from the tax assessed and paid for 1985, the result of which is a deficiency. When we examine the language used in the 1999 stipulation, we find that it does not specifically provide for the tax assessed and paid for the 1985 year to be reduced by the subsequent tentative refund. The relevant portion of the 1999 stipulation does state that the "income tax at issue" for the 1985 year should be computed according to the 1996 stipulation. 15
The 1996 stipulation provides that as to the 1983, 1984, and 1985 tax years, petitioner should not be given credit for carrybacks which are not in issue (i.e., the carrybacks should not be considered in determining taxable income and the corresponding tax2000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 442">*459 liability). The 1996 stipulation also states that the 1983 and 1984 tax assessed and paid should be reduced by tentative refunds. In computing the deficiency and overpayment for 1985, however, the parties did not address in the 1996 stipulation whether a tentative refund for 1985 was to be treated as a reduction to the tax assessed and paid for 1985.
Although it is evident from both stipulations that the 1985 tax liability should be computed without considering the carrybacks not in issue, it is unclear from the stipulations whether the parties also meant for a tentative refund for 1985 to reduce the tax assessed and paid. Because the parties have not clearly set forth the substance of their agreement and since we cannot discern the intent of the parties from the ambiguous language of the stipulations, we will not construe an agreement to exist with regard to the disputed issue.
Having concluded that the 1996 and 1999 stipulations do not address the issue of whether to treat the subsequent tentative refund as a reduction to the tax assessed and paid, we would normally look to relevant statutory and case law to determine how to treat the subsequent tentative refund in the deficiency2000 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 442">*460 computation. However, because respondent has conceded an overpayment of $ 36,441,904 in the event that the Court does not sustain his interpretation of the settlement agreements, we hold that petitioner is entitled to a refund of $ 36,441,904. 16
Additionally, respondent requests that if the Court concludes that petitioner is entitled to a refund, the Court include language in the decision document protecting respondent's right to challenge the validity of the carrybacks that resulted in the subsequent tentative refund for 1985. Respondent's request arises from an unpublished opinion of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit that upheld a U.S. District Court's decision that the United States was barred under res judicata principles from subsequently recovering a tentative refund pursuant to section 6213(b)(3). See
To the extent not herein discussed, we have considered the parties' other arguments and found them to be irrelevant or without merit.
To reflect the foregoing,
An appropriate order directing the parties to file revised computations will be issued.
APPENDIX: FLOWCHART SUMMARIZING LITIGATION
[Flowchart omitted]
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure, and all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the years in issue (or the Internal Revenue Code in effect for years in which carrybacks were generated).↩
2. Although we discuss petitioner's 1983 and 1984 tax years herein, we dispose of those tax years separately in an accompanying order.↩
3. During 1985, Carnation was acquired by and became a subsidiary of Nestle Enterprises, Inc., petitioner's predecessor. For 1985, Nestle Enterprises, Inc., and Carnation filed a consolidated return. Petitioner has filed its petition as a successor in interest to Nestle Enterprises, Inc.↩
4. As explained infra in the 1996 stipulation, the parties agreed that the decision of the Court would not serve as res judicata with regard to this issue.↩
5. The overpayment of $ 28,640,516 resulted from the difference between petitioner's $ 86,651,835 tax liability (consisting of a $ 328,175 tax shown on petitioner's tax return plus the $ 86,323,660 deficiency established by the Court) and the combination of a $ 328,175 payment made with petitioner's 1985 tax return and the $ 114,964,176 advance tax payment for the 1985 tax year.↩
6. Because respondent did not assess the advance tax payments as a deficiency until Dec. 30, 1996, they were not part of the deficiency computations. See
7. Sec. 172(b)(1)(C) provides that if a taxpayer has a "specified liability loss", the specified liability loss can serve as a carryback to the preceding 10 taxable years. The definition of a specified liability loss, however, has materially changed between 1995 (the year in which the NOL carrybacks were generated) and today. See sec. 172(f) before and after amendment by the Omnibus Consolidated and Emergency Supplemental Appropriations Act, 1999, Pub. L. 105-277, sec. 3004(a), 112 Stat. 2681-905 (which applies to NOL's arising in taxable years ending after Oct. 21, 1998).↩
8. A part of the refunds for 1983 and 1984 resulted from carrying back business credits generated in 1986 and 1987.↩
9. The advance tax payments for 1983 and 1984 did not cover the entire deficiency assessed for 1983 and 1984 by respondent pursuant to the Court's decision. In order to cover the shortfall, respondent credited $ 6,226 and $ 1,995,285 to petitioner's 1983 and 1984 tax accounts, respectively. Those funds came from interest overpaid by petitioner for the years in issue.↩
10. The valuation of the Carnation assets affected the amount of capital gains petitioner had to recognize for the 1985 tax year.↩
11.
(1) the sum of
(A) the amount shown as the tax by the taxpayer upon
his return, * * * plus
(B) the amounts previously assessed (or collected
without assessment) as a deficiency, over --
(2) the amount of rebates, as defined in subsection (b)(2),
made.
In describing their respective positions, the parties characterize the sum of the amount shown as a tax on the return and the amounts previously assessed as a deficiency as the "tax assessed and paid" by petitioner. We use the same terminology in this opinion as a shorthand reference to the
Tax liability -- (tax assessed and paid -- rebates).↩
1. We have slightly altered respondent's and petitioner's
presentations for comparison purposes.↩
2. Petitioner made a $ 328,175 payment with its 1985 tax return
and a $ 114,964,176 payment in anticipation of our 1996 decision.
Petitioner's tax assessed and paid of $ 86,323,660 is net of
$ 28,640,516 returned to petitioner by respondent (i.e., $ 328,175 +
$ 114,964,176 - $ 28,640,516).↩
12. Both parties agree that the NOL carrybacks, which resulted in the subsequent tentative refunds, are also not in issue before the Court.↩
13. Our use of the singular form of the term "subsequent tentative refunds" refers to the subsequent tentative refund for the 1985 tax year.↩
14. In addition, petitioner also argues that respondent's own Internal Revenue Manual instructs its employees not to take into account tentative refunds (resulting from NOL carrybacks not in issue) in the computation of a deficiency. See Internal Revenue Manual, Part XXXV-Chief Counsel Directives Manual Exhibit (35)(10)00- 28 (July 11, 1991). In response, respondent only argues that "regardless of the interpretation" of the Internal Revenue Manual, statements "issued to guide the [Internal Revenue] Service's employees in performing their duties have a directory nature and do not bind Respondent."↩
15. We believe that the reference in par. 3 of the 1999 stipulation indicating that the deficiency be computed according to par. 1 refers to par. 1 of the 1999 stipulation and not the 1996 stipulation.↩
16. Petitioner agrees that the cash or credit refund should be $ 36,441,904.↩
17. Petitioner objects only to the language being placed in the decision document itself instead of in a stipulation to the decision document.↩