Swallows Revisited
By Edward Tanenbaum,
Esq.
Alston & Bird LLP, New York, NY
I'm just not sure how I come out on this or how I should come out
on this. But each time I read the opinion of the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the Third Circuit in Swallows Holding, Ltd. v. Comr., No.
06-3388 (2/15/08), a major IRS victory, I debate its conclusion
although not necessarily on policy grounds.
Swallows involved a Barbados corporation in the real estate
business. It received rental income from an unrelated party for the
years 1993-1996 but, although it filed its first tax return in
September of 1992, tax returns for the 1993-1996 years were not filed
by it until 1999. The issue in the case is the interpretation (or
plain meaning, as Swallows would have it) of §882(c)(2)
and Regs. §1.882-4(a)(3)(i).
Briefly, §882(c)(2) provides that a foreign corporation may
only receive the benefits of allowable deductions and credits if it
files a true and accurate tax return “in the manner prescribed
in Subtitle F ….” Regs. §1.882-4(a)(3)(i) provides
that, if a return was filed for the immediate preceding year, the
required return for the current taxable year must be filed within 18
months of the due date set forth in §6072.
The taxpayer filed tax returns for the years in issue well beyond
the prescribed period set forth in the regulation, and the IRS
proceeded to implement the regulation, disallowing the deductions and
asserting deficiencies. Swallows argued that, unlike some other
tax statutes, §882(c)(2) was silent as to the required
“time” for filing (the statute referring only to the
“manner” prescribed for filing rather than the common
phraseology of “time and manner” of filing) and that the
regulation, therefore, was an invalid exercise of the IRS's rulemaking
authority.
The Tax Court in Swallows Holding, Ltd. v. Comr., 126 T.C.
96 (2006), held for the taxpayer, stating that the plain reading of
the statute did not impose a “timely” filing requirement
(although the ability to file late returns and to secure deductions
was not without limit as, for example, where the IRS has already filed
substitute returns) and that the regulation was invalid because it was
unreasonable in light of the plain meaning of the statute and an
application of the factors set forth in National Muffler Dealers
Ass'n v. U.S., 440 U.S. 472 (1979). National Muffler
established a number of factors that are to be reviewed in determining
whether the IRS's interpretive regulation is reasonable, and the Tax
Court concluded that Regs. §1.882-4(a)(3) did not meet a number
of them, e.g., the regulation was not promulgated contemporaneously
with the statute; existing case law had consistently held that the
statute did not include a “timely” filing requirement,
etc.
In rounding out its decision, the Tax Court also found that the
standard set forth in National Muffler had not been replaced by
Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. National Resources Defense Counsel,
Inc., 467 U.S. 837 (1984), and that, in any event, the result
would have been the same under that case. In Chevron, the
Supreme Court concluded that if the interest of Congress is clear, an
agency “must give effect to the unambiguously expressed interest
of Congress,” but if the statute is silent or ambiguous, the
agency's interpretation will be upheld if it is based on a permissible
construction of the statute.
The Third Circuit concluded that the Tax Court erred in applying
National Muffler to the exclusion of Chevron. In the
court's view, the IRS has to be given discretion to provide a
regulation (as long as it's reasonable) in order to interpret an
ambiguous provision.
The court cited a number of cases (going both ways) that dealt with
the issue of whether the term “manner” also includes a
timing element; it also cited other sections of the Code which, by IRS
regulations, have been interpreted to include a timing element.
Moreover, the court determined that “manner” is broad
enough to include a possible “timing” element and that one
could read the words “in the manner prescribed in subtitle
F” to include a timing element or, alternatively, to infer that
Congress did not have the timing requirement in mind. As a result, the
court concluded that the language of §882(c)(2) is obviously not
clear and unambiguous and that the regulation at issue was justified
and not unreasonable.
Well, I'm not yet a believer. The Third Circuit cited a number of
cases that have “struggled” over the issue, suggesting
that the language of the statute is ambiguous, although I'm still not
that convinced. Two such cases are representative. Anglo-American
Tea Trading Co. v. Comr., 38 B.T.A. 711 (1938), held quite clearly
that the predecessor statute to §882(c)(2) should not be read so
as to include the concept of time and, in fact, relied on a number of
cases holding to that effect. Espinosa v. Comr., 107 T.C. 146
(1986), held that, in the case of the nonresident alien statutory
analogue, i.e., §874(a), the language should be read to include
the concept of time. But the facts in that case were quite different
and fairly egregious and, in fact, the court acknowledged that.
I also find it interesting that we have two statutes, §874(a)
and §882(c)(2), and a bunch of predecessor statutes, each of
which uses the same language and none of which includes the
“time” element. Yet we are led to believe that Congress
has not yet “spoken to the precise question at issue,”
Huh? And the Swallows appellate court goes on to say that
“Congress does not uniformly use the phrase 'time and
manner’ when it desires a particular Code provision to
embody a timing element.” It seems to me that what Congress
desired in this particular case begs the very question we're
pondering.
I recognize the contrary argument that we would not be having this
running debate if things were all that clear and unambiguous. But I'm
not convinced that Congress has not, in fact, spoken to the issue or
that we know that it desires §882(c)(2) to embody a timing
element. The plain language of both the relevant current and
predecessor statutes is quite clear and stands in contrast to those
statutes using the term “in the time and manner.” If there
were such ambiguity, and if Congress “desired” the time
element to be included, why hasn't it yet spoken up over all these
years? On the other hand, I suppose one could argue that Congress has
specifically chosen not to act in the face of the IRS regulations,
thereby reflecting its acquiescence in their interpretation.
I'd like to think that Congress knows what it's doing when it
legislates language of a statute and that we don't need external
guidance to set us straight. On the other hand, this wouldn't be the
first time that Congressional intent needed a little interpretive
boost from the IRS or even the courts. Transcending this debate,
however, is the question of what the answer in this case should be
purely as a policy matter, although, sadly, that has not always been
regarded as relevant. Maybe it should be.
This commentary also will appear in the May 9, 2008, issue of
the Tax Management International Journal. For more information,
in the Tax Management Portfolios, see Katz and Plambeck, 908 T.M.,
U.S. Income Taxation of Foreign Corporations, and in Tax Practice
Series, see ¶7120, Foreign Persons' U.S. Activities.
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