Suffness v. U.S.
Suffness v. U.S.
Opinion
United States Court of Appeals,
Fifth Circuit.
No. 92–1122
Summary Calendar.
Michael B. SUFFNESS, and Dorit R. Suffness, Plaintiffs–Appellants,
v.
UNITED STATES of America, Defendant–Appellee.
Oct. 8, 1992.
Appeal from the United States District Court For the Northern District of Texas.
Before KING and WIENER, Circuit Judges.**
WIENER, Circuit Judge.
aintiffs–Appellants Michael B. and Dorit R. Suffness, husband and wife (Taxpayers) appeal
the adverse judgment of the district court, rendered following the bench trial of Taxpayers' income
tax refund suit on stipulated facts. The sole issue before the court was whether Taxpayers owed
interest on the amount of additional tax remitted by Taxpayers after they failed timely to reinvest, in
property of like kind, the proceeds of the involuntary conversion of their corporate stock certified by
the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to be "broadcasting property" and thus qualified for
deferral of recognition of gain. Agreeing fully with the district court's judgment denying Taxpayers'
claim for a refund of the disputed interest, which the government had collected by offset against
Taxpayers' subsequent income tax refund for 1988, we affirm.
I
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
As stipulated to the district court, Taxpayers filed their United States Income Tax Return for
* This case is being decided by quorum. See
28 U.S.C. § 46(d). calendar year 1986 (the return) on or about May 28, 1987.1 In the return, Taxpayers fully reported
the involuntary conversion sale of twenty-five shares of the common stock of Connection
Communications Corporation (CCC), duly certified by the FCC as "broadcasting property" for
purposes of deferred recognition of gain under §§ 1071 and 1033 of the Internal Revenue Code of
1954 (IRC).2 On the return, Taxpayers properly elected to defer recognition of the gain from the
involuntary conversion of their stock in CCC. But as Taxpayers did not, within two years after the
year of the involuntary conversion, reinvest the proceeds from their CCC stock in property similar
or related in service or use, they were required to and did file an amended 1986 return,3 timely paying
therewith the correct amount of additional tax—$15,072—on the gain from the involuntary
disposition of the CCC stock in that year. Taxpayers did not, however, remit interest on the
additional tax. The undisputed amount of such interest, calculated from the due date of the 1986
return (April 15, 1987) through the date tax was paid (March 13, 1989) is $3,166.95.
On May 22, 1989, the government collected the $3,166.95 interest by offsetting that amount
from Taxpayers' 1988 income tax refund, unrelated to the subject transaction. Taxpayers timely filed
a claim for refund which the government denied. Taxpayers then filed the instant refund suit in
federal district court, and the government answered. The parties stipulated the facts, after which each
moved for Judgment on the Pleadings or Summary Judgment. The district court denied Taxpayers'
motions and granted the motions of the government,
788 F.Supp. 304(N.D.Tex. 1992), dismissing
the Taxpayers' suit. They appealed timely to this court.
II
ANALYSIS
1 The Return was due April 15, 1987. As no mention is made of the May 28th filing having been delinquent, we assume that it was filed late pursuant to a valid extension. 2
26 U.S.C. §§ 1071, 1033. 3 Treas.Reg. § 1.1033(a)–2(c)(2). When the sale or exchange of radio broadcasting property, including stock in a corporation,
is certified by the FCC as necessary or appropriate to effectuate FCC policy with respect to radio
station ownership,4 the transaction is deemed to be an involuntary conversion for tax purposes.5 A
taxpayer whose certified broadcasting property is thus involuntarily converted has the option either
to (1) report the gain realized and pay tax thereon currently, or (2) defer recognition of such gain and
reinvest the proceeds in property "similar or related in service or use to the property so converted"
within two years after the close of the taxable year in which gain was realized.6 If a taxpayer elects
deferral but thereafter fails to make a qualifying investment in propert y of like kind within that
two-year period, he or she must recognize the gain retroactively to the year in which it was realized.7
Neither the IRC section covering FCC certified broadcasting property8 nor the section
covering deferral of recognition of gain realized on involuntary conversion of qualified property9
expressly mention interest in connection with the additional tax that must be remitted when the
proceeds of conversion are not timely reinvested in qualified property. Nevertheless, the IRC does
contain a section providing for the payment of interest on all taxes paid subsequent to the date due,
irrespective of the reason for the delayed, late, or delinquent payment.10 That provision contains no
exception for a situation in which the tax that is being paid was previously deferred pending possible
reinvestment of the proceeds of involuntary conversion.
The principal thrust of the argument in Taxpayers' brief to this court is that, as the IRC section
4 IRC § 1071. 5 IRC § 1033. 6 IRC § 1033(a)(2)(A). 7 Treas.Reg. § 1.1033(a)–2(c)(2). 8 IRC § 1071. 9 IRC § 1033. 10 IRC § 6601. and Treasury Regulation covering subsequent payment of previously deferred tax on gain realized
in an involuntary conversion situation "are silent as to the imposition of interest if reinvestment is not
made during the two-year deferral period," the general provisions of the IRC regarding imposition
of interest on taxes not paid on or before the last day prescribed for their payment is inapplicable.
We find such logic fallacious. The IRC is, after all, a code; and any recognized method of code
interpretation supports precisely the reverse logic: As the general provision imposes interest on all
late tax payments, only an express provision in derogation of the general rule could exempt from
interest some particular type of tax when paid subsequent to its normal due date. In other words, the
silence of the general provision does not exempt the transaction authorized by the particular
provision; to the contrary, absent an express exception, the general provision always applies. Thus,
the Taxpayers' criticism of the district court's ruling is misplaced when they insist that simply because
the general IRC provision does not expressly impose interest on additional tax paid following the
specifically authorized deferral period for reinvestment of the proceeds of involuntary conversion, the
interest rule contained in the general provision cannot apply.
We recognize that logic and reason are not always ingredients of the IRC, Treasury
Regulations, Revenue Rulings—or even tax jurisprudence—but they are in the instant situation.
Options to defer recognition of gain by reinvesting the proceeds realized therefrom are exceptions
to the basic rule requiring recognition of gain in the year realized. As such, they are acts of grace,
of which the one here at issue is a specific example.11 It embodies the acknowledgment that forced
divestment of broadcasting property to implement the FCC's policy on station ownership could work
a severe tax and cash flow hardship on the divesting taxpayer.12 In that regard, involuntary
conversion of broadcasting property is not unlike the forced sale of immovable (real) property when
a sovereign exercises the power of expropriation or eminent domain.
11 IRC § 1071. 12 See, e.g., Filippini v. United States,
318 F.2d 841(9th Cir. 1963). Here, as in other involuntary conversion situations, the option either to defer gain or recognize
it currently rests entirely with the taxpayer. If the taxpayer elects to defer, he or she does so subject
to the express condition of making a timely reinvestment in qualifying property—in which case
recognition of gain is deferred until the replacement property is eventually sold or exchanged. Failure
timely to reinvest in qualified property, however, automatically revokes the election retroactively,
obligating the taxpayer who has elected deferral to recognize the gain as though it occurred in the
year of conversion. Thus, the tax that was due with the return for the y ear of the involuntary
conversion is again due thereon, albeit such tax is not delinquent. Obviously, the condition of
reinvestment is a resolutory condition or condition subsequent, the eventual failure of which dissolves
the right ab initio. The legal effect of such a retroactive dissolution on the right thus dissolved—here,
tentative deferral of gain recognition—is that such right is deemed never to have existed.
Equally fallacious is the other thrust of Taxpayers' argument: that the phrase "the last date
prescribed for payment" in the general interest provision13 should mean the date on which the tax
return is due for the year in which the two-year reinvestment period expires, not the due date of the
return for the year in which the involuntary conversion occurred. Taxpayers continue to insist that
their interpretation is proper when read in context of general IRC provisions on due dates for filing
and payment.14 We see no more validity in this position than we did in Taxpayers' effort to reverse
the roles of the IRC's general and particular interest provisions. Indeed, the IRC provisions that
Taxpayers would have us read in pari materiae with the general interest provision contain express
parenthetical caveats which state that due dates are determined without regard for any extension of
time for paying the tax.15 If it is nothing else, the deferral of recognition of gain on involuntary
conversion is a two-year extension of time within which to pay the gains tax on the transaction in
question.
13 IRC § 6601(a). 14 IRC §§ 6072(a), 6151(a). 15 See, e.g., IRC § 6151(c). Likewise, Taxpayers' attempt to analogize deferral of recognition of gain in involuntary
conversion situations to such deferral on the sale of one's principal residence is an example of the
proverbial fallacy of comparing apples and oranges. The sale of the home is not an involuntary
transaction forced upon the taxpayer as is an FCC divestiture or a taking in eminent domain; it is a
voluntary act of the homeowner. Moreover, the relief provided for the seller of his or her principal
residence is grounded in Congress's recognition that while, for most taxpayers, the home is the most
valuable asset, it is not a business or investment asset and any gain almost always results purely from
inflation. Moreover, principal residences occupy a unique and elevated societal pedestal in this
country, and collectively play an equally unique and significant role in the national economy—not to
mention the influential home builders and lenders lobbies which favor and urge such special tax
treatment. To a significant degree, the tax treatment of the principal residence is sui generis and thus
not analogous to the tax treatment of any other assets including broadcasting property.
To see clearly the error of Taxpayers' position in the instant case—that no interest is due on
the additional tax when it is remitted two years after it was otherwise payable—we need only observe
that, in granting some specially situated taxpayers the option to defer recognition of gain on
involuntary conversion, Congress intended to grant relief, not a windfall. Were we to hold that no
interest is due simply because the specific section of the IRC which provides the deferred recognition
option for broadcasting property fails to reiterate the general rule imposing interest on tax which is
remitted after it would otherwise have been payable, every taxpayer whose broadcasting property is
involuntarily converted would, in effect, be entitled to a two-year, interest-free loan from the
government in an amount equal to the deferred gains tax. That would even hold true for taxpayers
who, from the outset, have no intention whatsoever of reinvesting the proceeds of the conversion in
qualifying property. If that were the law, who would be foolhardy enough not to elect deferral and
use the government's money interest-free for two years?
Stated another way, taxpayers who elect deferral would have the free investment use of the government's tax money for two years while the government waits to see if those taxpayers make
qualifying investments. That would be a classic taxpayer windfall, not a detriment. For, at least in
theory, a taxpayer electing deferral should be able to realize the same investment return on the use
of the government's tax money during the deferral period as such taxpayer would eventually be
required to pay to the government as interest should no qualifying reinvestment be timely made.
Refreshingly, t he tax law in the instant case is clear, logical and reasonable: If deferral is
elected but reinvestment is not timely made, the gain realized on the sale or exchange in question is
recognized, ab initio, for the year in which it occurred—here, 1986. Under such circumstances, the
resulting gains tax of $15,072 on Taxpayers' sale of CCC stock was due and payable retroactively as
of April 15, 1987, the date that Taxpayers' 1986 return was due. To the extent such tax was not paid
on that date, it bears interest as prescribed in the IRC,16 just like any other tax not paid by the date
the return is due for the year in which the taxable event occurs.
As the government notes, interest is not a penalty. Hence the fact that Taxpayers were lawful
in delaying the payment of their gains tax pending the outcome of efforts to reinvest in property of
like kind is wholly irrelevant to the issue of interest.17
The undisputed amount of interest on the additional tax, calculated from the original due date
of the return until remitted by Taxpayers, is $3,166.96. That is precisely the amount that the IRS
collected by offset against Taxpayers' 1988 income tax refund. For the reasons set forth above, it is
clear beyond peradventure that such interest was owed by the Taxpayers.
16 IRC § 6601(a). 17 See, e.g., Manning v. Seeley Tube & Box Co.,
338 U.S. 561, 563–66,
70 S.Ct. 386, 387–89,
94 L.Ed. 346(1950); United States v. Childs,
266 U.S. 304, 309–10,
45 S.Ct. 110, 111,
69 L.Ed. 299(1924); United States v. Premier Oil Refining Co. of Texas,
209 F.2d 692, 697–98 (5th Cir. 1954); Bowman v. United States,
824 F.2d 528, 531(6th Cir. 1987); Grauvogel v. Commissioner,
768 F.2d 1087, 1090(9th Cir. 1985). III
CONCLUSION
Unlike many federal income tax cases, the instant litigation involves nothing Byzantine or
arcane. The facts are clear; the law is clear; the ruling by the district court is clear—and eminently
correct.
AFFIRMED at Appellants' cost.
Reference
- Status
- Published