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Deductions Reallocated to Worldwide Income

AUG. 4, 2000

FSA 200045010

DATED AUG. 4, 2000
DOCUMENT ATTRIBUTES
  • Institutional Authors
    Internal Revenue Service
  • Code Sections
  • Subject Area/Tax Topics
  • Index Terms
    income, source, U.S.
    foreign tax credit, limit
    FSCs
    FSCs, transfer pricing rules
  • Jurisdictions
  • Language
    English
  • Tax Analysts Document Number
    Doc 2000-28960 (7 original pages)
  • Tax Analysts Electronic Citation
    2000 TNT 219-46
Citations: FSA 200045010

UILC: 861.08-09, 861.16-00, 863.02-01, 904.00-00,

 

925.01-00, 927.03-00

 

Release Date: 11/9/2000

 

 

                                             Date: August 4, 2000

 

 

              Refer Reply To: CC:INTL:BR3/TL-N-1885-00

 

 

    INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE NATIONAL OFFICE FIELD SERVICE ADVICE

 

 

         MEMORANDUM FOR DISTRICT COUNSEL, DELAWARE-MARYLAND

 

                ATTN: SANDRA JEFFERSON CC:SER:DEM:BAL

 

 

                                FROM:

 

                            Irwin Halpern

 

                Senior Technical Reviewer CC:INTL:BR3

 

 

                              SUBJECT:

 

                                * * *

 

 

[1] This Field Service Advice responds to your memorandum dated April 14, 2000. Field Service Advice is not binding on Examination or Appeals and is not a final case determination. This document is not to be used or cited as precedent.

DISCLOSURE STATEMENT

[2] Field Service Advice is Chief Counsel Advice and is open to public inspection pursuant to the provisions of section 6110(i). The provisions of section 6110 require the Service to remove taxpayer identifying information and provide the taxpayer with notice of intention to disclose before it is made available for public inspection. Section 6110(c) and (i). Section 6110(i)(3)(B) also authorizes the Service to delete information from Field Service Advice that is protected from disclosure under 5 U.S.C. section 552(b) and (c) before the document is provided to the taxpayer with notice of intention to disclose. Only the National Office function issuing the Field Service Advice is authorized to make such deletions and to make the redacted document available for public inspection. ACCORDINGLY, THE EXAMINATION, APPEALS, OR COUNSEL RECIPIENT OF THIS DOCUMENT MAY NOT PROVIDE A COPY OF THIS UNREDACTED DOCUMENT TO THE TAXPAYER OR THEIR REPRESENTATIVE. The recipient of this document may share this unredacted document ONLY with those persons whose official tax administration duties with respect to the case AND the issues discussed in the document require inspection or disclosure of the Field Service Advice.

LEGEND:

 

Taxpayer = * * *

 

Product A = * * *

 

X = * * *

 

Year 1 = * * *

 

Year 5 = * * *

 

 

ISSUE

[3] Whether Taxpayer properly allocated certain legal fee and settlement expense deductions to a class of gross income comprised solely of domestic income.

CONCLUSION

[4] Taxpayer has not established that the legal fee and settlement expense deductions definitely relate to a class of gross income comprised solely of domestic income. As a result, we agree with the Examination Division's proposed reallocation of the deductions to the class of gross income comprised of Taxpayer's worldwide Product A sales. We also agree with the Examination Division's proposed apportionment methodology. Finally, we note the applicability of the section 927(e)(1) source rule.

FACTS

[5] We understand the facts to be as follows.

[6] Taxpayer manufactures and sells Product A on a worldwide basis. X is a particular type of Product A that Taxpayer manufactured in the United States and sold both in the United States and abroad. Taxpayer pays a commission to its wholly owned foreign sales corporation (FSC) with regard to export sales of Product A. Taxpayer computes its FSC commission under the administrative pricing methods of section 925(a)(1) and (2).

[7] In Year 1 Taxpayer discontinued sales of X due to reports that it caused damage. This damage occurred in various countries where Taxpayer sold X. Since Year 1, Taxpayer has incurred legal fees and settlement expenses associated with X.

[8] On its Year 5 federal income tax return Taxpayer allocated the legal fee and settlement expense deductions associated with X to a class of income comprised solely of domestic income. In response to an informal document request concerning the basis for this allocation Taxpayer stated as follows: "The facts support that essentially all [X] litigation-related expenses relate to US legal and settlement costs. These costs were incurred to support the class of gross income, sales to the domestic market, that produces domestic source income. Accordingly it is appropriate to allocate these costs to domestic sources." In addition, Taxpayer orally alleged that all of the litigation at issue occurred within the jurisdiction of the United States and that all of the litigants have been domestic. Taxpayer produced no documentary evidence to substantiate its allocation. Neither did Taxpayer provide information dividing its overall deduction between legal fees and settlement expenses nor did it provide any information regarding the specific nature of the legal fees or settlement expenses.

[9] On audit, the Examination Division has proposed allocating Taxpayer's legal fee and settlement expense deductions to a class of gross income comprised of Taxpayer's worldwide Product A sales. This class of gross income includes both statutory and residual groupings for purposes of determining Taxpayer and its FSC's combined taxable income under the FSC provisions, as well as for purposes of determining Taxpayer's section 904 foreign tax credit limitation. As a result, Exam has proposed apportioning the deductions between statutory and residual groupings based on relative amounts of gross income in each grouping.

LAW AND ANALYSIS

[10] The determination of combined taxable income under section 925 and the foreign tax credit limitation under section 904 both require the computation of taxable income from specific sources or activities. These computations are governed by the regulations under section 1.861-8. Treas. Reg. sections 1.861-8(a)(1) and 1.861- 8(f)(1). The section 1.861-8 regulations generally require taxpayers to allocate deductions to a class of gross income and, to the extent necessary to make the determination required by an operative Code section, to apportion deductions within the class between statutory and residual groupings of gross income. Treas. Reg. section 1.861- 8(a)(2). Where more than one operative Code section applies, taxpayers are required to use the same method of allocation and the same principles of apportionment for all operative sections. Treas. Reg. section 1.861-8(f)(2).

1. ALLOCATION

[11] The section 1.861-8 regulations distinguish between deductions that are definitely related to a specific class of gross income, deductions that are definitely related to all gross income, and deductions that are not definitely related to any gross income. A class of gross income may consist of one or more items (or subdivisions of these items) of gross income enumerated in section 61. Treas. Reg. section 1.861-8(a)(3).

[12] The allocation rules emphasize the factual relationship between a deduction and a class of gross income. As a result, a deduction must be definitely related to a class of income in order to be allocated to that class. Classes of gross income are not predetermined, but must be determined on the basis of the deduction to be allocated. Treas. Reg. section 1.861-8(b)(1).

[13] A deduction is considered definitely related to a class of gross income if the deduction is incurred as a result of, or incident to, an activity or in connection with the property from which such class of gross income is derived. Where a deduction is incurred as a result of, or incident to, an activity or in connection with property, which activity or property generates, has generated, or could reasonably have been expected to generate gross income, such deduction is considered definitely related to such gross income as a class. In some cases, it is appropriate to determine the categories of gross income to which a deduction does not relate, and conclude that the deduction relates to a class of income consisting of all other gross income. Treas. Reg. section 1.861-8(b)(2).

[14] As applied to legal fees and expenses, the section 1.861-8 principles focus on the nature of the specific deductions. As a result, fees for legal services are ordinarily definitely related and allocable to specific classes of gross income or to all of a taxpayer's gross income, depending on the nature of the services rendered. Treas. Reg. section 1.861-8(e)(5).

[15] Because section 1.861-8 determinations are highly factual, section 1.861-8(f)(5) emphasizes a taxpayer's general obligation to furnish, upon request, information supporting its return positions. Because allocations are based on the factual relationship between deductions and gross income, this information must substantiate the factual relationships between a taxpayer's deductions and related classes of gross income. See also Treas. Reg. section 1.6001-1 (stating taxpayers' general recordkeeping requirements).

[16] Taxpayer's allocation methodology and support therefor do not meet the regulatory standards. Taxpayer provided no documentary evidence to substantiate its position that the legal fees and settlement costs at issue definitely related to a class of gross income comprised solely of domestic income. The Examination Division appropriately focused on this lack of substantiation, supplemented by the facts that Taxpayer sold X both within the United States and abroad and that damages associated with X arose both within the United States and abroad. Based on these considerations, the Examination Division's proposed reallocation of Taxpayer's legal fee and settlement expense deductions to the class of gross income comprised of Taxpayer's worldwide Product A sales is reasonable and consistent with the regulations.

2. APPORTIONMENT

[17] Once a deduction has been allocated to a class of gross income, the section 1.861-8 regulations next require a consideration of its apportionment. Apportionment arises if a deduction has been allocated to a class of gross income that includes both statutory and residual groupings of gross income. A statutory grouping is the gross income from a specific source or activity that must first be determined in order to arrive at taxable income from such specific source or activity under an operative Code section. Treas. Reg. section 1.861-8(a)(4).

[18] The apportionment of a deduction must be accomplished in a manner that reflects to a reasonably close extent the factual relationship between the deduction and the grouping of gross income. Examples of bases and factors that may be used for apportionment include: (i) Comparison of units sold, (ii) Comparison of the amount of gross sales or receipts, (iii) Comparison of costs of goods sold, (iv) Comparison of profit contributions, (v) Comparison of expenses incurred, assets used, salaries paid, space utilized, and time spent that are attributable to the activity or properties giving rise to the class of gross income, and (vi) Comparison of the amount of gross income. However, a method of apportionment may not be used when it does not reflect, to a reasonably close extent, the factual relationship between the deduction and the groupings of income. Treas. Reg. section 1.861-8T(c)(1).

[19] Taxpayer allocated its legal fee and settlement expense deductions to a class of gross income that is in a residual grouping for purposes of both the FSC combined taxable income and foreign tax credit limitation provisions. As a result, Taxpayer did not apportion the deductions. However, an apportionment is required by the Examination Division's reallocation of the deductions to the class of gross income comprised of Taxpayer's worldwide Product A sales, because that class includes both statutory and residual groupings of gross income. While an exhaustive discussion of the apportionment of these deductions is beyond the scope of your inquiry, we include the following general points related to Taxpayer's FSC and foreign tax credit determinations.

a. Computation of combined taxable income under the FSC provisions.

[20] Treas. Reg. section 1.925(a)-1T(c)(6) defines the combined taxable income of a related supplier and its FSC as the excess of the foreign trading gross receipts over the total costs of the related supplier and the FSC that relate to such receipts. For this purpose, the following costs (other than cost of goods sold) are considered to be related gross receipts from export property sales: (a) the expenses, losses, and other deductions definitely related, and therefore allocated and apportioned thereto, and (b) a ratable part of any other expenses, losses, or deductions that are not definitely related to any class of gross income. The determination of these costs is to be made in a manner consistent with the rules of section 1.861-8. Treas. Reg. section 1.925(a)-1T(c)(6)(iii)(D). Please note that the combined taxable income amount is relevant to the computation of Taxpayer's FSC benefits under both the section 925(a)(2) combined taxable income and section 925(a)(1) gross receipts administrative pricing methods. See section 925(d) (limiting the section 925(a)(1) gross receipts amount to two times the amount that would have been determined under the section 925(a)(2) combined taxable income method).

[21] Accordingly, consistent with the Examination Division's reallocation of Taxpayer's legal fee and settlement expense deductions to the class of income comprised of Taxpayer's worldwide Product A sales, these deductions must be apportioned between the statutory grouping of gross income from exports and the residual grouping of other income. The Examination Division's proposed apportionment of these deductions on the basis of relative amounts of gross income in the groupings is reasonable and permissible under the standards of Treas. Reg. section 1.861-8T(c)(1).

b. Computation of the allowable foreign tax credit.

[22] For purposes of computing the section 904 foreign tax credit limitation, taxpayers must apportion their deductions between the statutory groupings described in section 904(d) and the residual grouping of other income. Treas. Reg. section 1.861-8T(f)(1)(ii).

[23] Sales of inventory property produced within the United States and sold outside the United States are subject to the mixed sourcing rules of section 863. Taxpayer's sales that included its FSC acting as a commission agent are subject to Example 2 of section 1.863-3T(b)(2) (1988) (applicable for tax years beginning before December 30, 1996). See Notice 89-11, 1989-1 C.B. 632. Example 2 states a "50/50" methodology for apportioning section 863(b) gross income between U.S. and foreign sources. Under this methodology, deductions that are allocable and apportionable to the section 863(b) gross income are apportioned between the gross U.S. and foreign source amounts on a pro rata basis. Treas. Reg. section 1.863- 3T(b)(2), Example 2(ii) (1988) (applicable for tax years beginning before December 30, 1996). See also Treas. Reg. section 1.861- 8(f)(3)(i) (deferring to the section 1.863-3 rules with regard to activities under section 863(b)). The Examination Division's proposed apportionment methodology is consistent with the section 863(b) rules.

[24] Finally, we note the applicability of the section 927(e)(1) source rule for purposes of determining Taxpayer's section 904(d) foreign source taxable income amounts. Section 927(e)(1) limits a related supplier's foreign source taxable income from FSC sales to the amount of foreign source taxable income that the related supplier would have earned under the analogous section 994 domestic international sales corporation ("DISC") transfer pricing rule. The section 927(e)(1) limitation applies to FSC section 863(b) and non- section 863(b) sales that generate foreign source income and utilize either the section 925(a)(1) gross receipts or the section 925(a)(2) combined taxable income administrative pricing method. In computing the limitation, foreign source taxable income from each transaction or section 927(d)(2)(B) grouping is compared against the foreign source limitation for DISC sales under section 927(e)(1). Any residual amount of foreign source taxable income for each transaction or grouping in excess of the applicable section 927(e)(1) limitation is resourced as U.S. source taxable income. See, e.g., Rev. Rul. 89-93, 1989-2 C.B. 133. Treasury Regulations provide further guidance on the section 927(e)(1) limitation. Compare Treas. Reg. section 1.927(e)-1T (T.D. 8126, March 2, 1987) and Treas. Reg. sections 1.927(e)-1(a)(3), 1.927(e)-1(b) (applicable to taxable years beginning after December 31, 1997).

CASE DEVELOPMENT, HAZARDS AND OTHER CONSIDERATIONS

* * *

[25] If you have any further questions, please call (202) 622- 3850.

                                   IRWIN HALPERN

 

                                   Senior Technical Reviewer

 

                                   Branch 3

 

                                   Office of the Associate Chief

 

                                     Counsel (International)
DOCUMENT ATTRIBUTES
  • Institutional Authors
    Internal Revenue Service
  • Code Sections
  • Subject Area/Tax Topics
  • Index Terms
    income, source, U.S.
    foreign tax credit, limit
    FSCs
    FSCs, transfer pricing rules
  • Jurisdictions
  • Language
    English
  • Tax Analysts Document Number
    Doc 2000-28960 (7 original pages)
  • Tax Analysts Electronic Citation
    2000 TNT 219-46
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