LAURIE SELBER SILVERSTEIN, UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE.
The Official Information Company ("TOIC") and HireRight Solutions, Inc. ("HireRight," and collectively, the "Debtors") ask this Court to adjudicate the corporate income tax liability, if any, owed by them to the State of Oklahoma for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2011 even though they have a tax protest proceeding pending before the Oklahoma Tax Commission. The Debtors assert that the Court can determine the tax liability in a streamlined manner not available in the Oklahoma system because the Court can determine the constitutionality of the relevant tax statute as an initial matter while the Oklahoma Tax Commission cannot. In making this request, however, the Debtors ignore well-established law that a court — including this Court — should not rule on constitutional issues unless such adjudication is unavoidable. For this reason, and because this request does not further the purposes of 11 U.S.C. § 505(a), the Court will abstain from determining the Debtors' tax liability.
The Debtors are privately held information services companies that serve commercial
During the relevant tax period, TOIC owned 100% of HireRight and included HireRight in its Oklahoma consolidated corporate income tax return (the "Tax Return") for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2011 (the "Tax Year"). In 2010, HireRight sold (the "Sale") 100% of its outstanding membership interest in Explore Information Services, LLC ("Explore") for $520,000,000 and recognized a federal taxable gain of approximately $383,000,000 (the "Gain"). Explore was a single-member limited liability company and a disregarded entity for tax purposes; it did not have any employees in Oklahoma and its headquarters was located in Minnesota. In its Tax Return, TOIC excluded the Gain in calculating its taxable income under the belief that it was nonunitary income
After an audit by its Compliance Division, the Oklahoma Tax Commission concluded that the Gain was apportionable unitary income subject to Oklahoma tax for the Tax Year. Accordingly, on August 23, 2012, the Oklahoma Tax Commission issued a proposed assessment of additional tax in the amount of $17 million plus penalties and interest in the amount of $1.7 million.
On December 5, 2012, TOIC and HireRight timely filed a protest (the "Protest") with the Oklahoma Tax Commission disputing the assessment (the "Tax Dispute"), thereby initiating a proceeding (the "Tax Proceeding"). In their letter submission, they argued that the Oklahoma Tax Commission erred in its assessment by treating the Gain as apportionable income from the sale of assets used in a unitary business conducted in Oklahoma. TOIC and HireRight reasoned that the gain was properly allocable outside of Oklahoma because the gain was from nonunitary property that had a situs outside of Oklahoma. In the alternative, TOIC and HireRight asserted that if the gain is appportionable income, TOIC is entitled to a deduction from its Oklahoma taxable income for the amount of the Gain because it is a qualifying gain under Okla. Stat. tit. 68, § 2358(D)(1).
In 2013, the Tax Proceeding was progressing. The Oklahoma Tax Commission propounded discovery and TOIC fully responded. But then, the parties agreed to stay the Tax Proceeding pending the outcome of CDR Sys. Corp. v. Okla. Tax Comm'n,
During the pendency of the Tax Proceeding and before any substantive rulings by the presiding administrative law judge (the "ALJ"), on February 8, 2015, the Debtors filed voluntary chapter 11 petitions in this Court. The Oklahoma Tax Commission filed a proof of claim against TOIC in the amount of $24,710,008 asserting a $1.7 million general unsecured claim and a $23 million priority unsecured claim under 11 U.S.C. § 507(a)(8). On August 14, 2015, the Court confirmed the Debtors' chapter 11 plan (the "Plan"), and on September 1, 2015, the Debtors filed a notice of the occurrence of the Plan's effective date. The Plan provides for payment in full of all priority tax claims.
On August 27, 2015, the Debtors filed their Motion for an Order (A) Setting a Hearing to Determine the Amount of the Oklahoma State Income Tax Liability of Certain Debtors, (B) Establishing a Briefing Schedule in Support of the Tax Determination Hearing and (C) Staying Current Tax Proceeding (the "Section 505 Motion").
Before examining whether grounds exist to abstain, the Court must first determine whether it has jurisdiction over the Tax Dispute.
Section 505(a)(1) authorizes bankruptcy courts to adjudicate a debtor's tax liability:
While there are exceptions set forth in the statute, the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has "consistently interpreted § 505(a) as a jurisdictional statute that confers on the bankruptcy court authority to determine certain tax claims."
While section 505(a)(1) provides the jurisdictional nexus to decide the Tax Dispute, it also vests the Court with discretion to abstain from determining a tax liability.
The legislative history of section 505 reveals two primary reasons for its promulgation. First, section 505 is meant to help a debtor obtain a prompt resolution of a tax claim, which if left to another forum, could result in delaying the administration of the bankruptcy case.
Here, resolving the Tax Dispute in this Court does not further the primary purposes underlying section 505. Adjudication of the Tax Dispute before the Oklahoma Tax Commission would neither delay the administration of the bankruptcy case nor protect creditors from dissipation of the estate's assets via an uncontested tax assessment. The Plan has been confirmed and gone effective. And, the Debtors are, and have been, contesting the tax assessment in an appropriate forum since 2012.
As importantly, the central premise of the Section 505 Motion fails because the Court is not in a position to more efficiently adjudicate the Tax Claim than the ALJ. The Debtors take the position that the Court can streamline the process by addressing the constitutional issues first unlike the Oklahoma regulatory scheme where constitutional issues can only be addressed on appeal to the Oklahoma courts after the non-constitutional issues are adjudicated by the ALJ.
It is axiomatic that a court should avoid ruling on constitutional issues when possible.
Additionally, the Debtors appear to be using section 505(a)(1) as a collateral attack vehicle rather than for its designed purpose. Prepetition, the Debtors and the Oklahoma Tax Commission agreed to stay the Tax Proceeding pending the CDR decision. To the Debtors' dismay, the Oklahoma Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of Section 2358(D)(2)(a) and the Debtors were left in a forum with unfavorable precedent. Instead of challenging the CDR decision through appropriate channels in Oklahoma, the Debtors decided to file the Section 505 Motion and seek adjudication here. At the hearing on the Section 505 Motion, the Debtors candidly admitted that it was unlikely that they would have filed the Section 505 Motion had the CDR decision gone the other way. This concession, coupled with the agreement with the Oklahoma Tax Commission to hold the Tax Proceeding in abeyance pending the CDR decision, undermines the Debtors' position that this Court is a more efficient forum for resolving the Tax Dispute. The Debtors can obtain a prompt decision in the Oklahoma system, it just may not be the one they want.
Section 505(a) is not meant to be used in this fashion. Rather, the intent behind section 505(a) is to mitigate delaying the administration of a bankruptcy case and to protect dissipation of estate assets.
In addition to considering the two-fold purpose of section 505, courts analyze a nonexclusive list of six factors in determining whether to abstain under section 505(a):
An additional inquiry a court should consider, and which carries dispositive import, is the availability of an alternative forum; without an available forum, abstention is inappropriate.
Regarding factors one and four, adjudicating the Tax Claim would involve complex tax analysis and a somewhat lengthy trial. The Court agrees with the Oklahoma Tax Commission that the Debtors downplay the intricacies of the tax issues. As noted by the Debtors, the Court would have to examine the business differences between HireRight and Explore, and the elements of Explore's business operation that resulted in the realization of income to HireRight. The unitary business argument alone would likely require factual inquiries into the centralization of management, the existence of functional integration among the companies, and the economies of scale between HireRight and Explore.
The second and sixth factors also counsel in favor of abstention. As noted above,
For all these reasons, the Court will deny the Section 505 Motion and abstain from determining the Debtors' tax liability. An appropriate order will enter.