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■ | Texaco Inc. ('Texaco') was the parent corporation of a group of entities engaged in the production, refining, transportation, and marketing of crude oil and refined products in the United States and abroad. | |
■ | Texaco had a number of affiliates under its umbrella and one of them was Texaco International Trader Inc. ('Textrad'), which acted as an international trading company for the worldwide Texaco refining and marketing system. | |
■ | As the trading company, Textrad purchased crude oil from the Saudi Government by way of the Arabian American Oil Company (Aramco) and resold it to both affiliates and unrelated customers. | |
■ | Between 1979 and 1981, Saudi Arabia permitted Texaco and the other Aramco participants, through Letter 103/z, to buy crude oil at below market prices. The Saudi Government also established the official selling price ('the OSP') for such crude oil below the market price. | |
■ | The Saudi Government took these actions pursuant to requests from the United States and other consuming countries to moderate the price of crude oil. To ensure the price regulation, the Saudi Government prohibited Texaco and other participants in Aramco from re-selling the crude oil at price higher than the OSP. | |
■ | In compliance with the directions, Textrad resold the crude oil at the OSP to Texaco, its foreign affiliates and to other unrelated party. | |
■ | The restrictions by the Saudi Government, however, applied only to Saudi crude oil, and not to the products refined from such crude oil. Consequently, the buyers of Saudi crude oil, including Texaco's refining affiliates, earned large profits from the sale of refined products. | |
■ | The Commissioner contended that Textrad had unduly shifted profits to its foreign affiliates by re-selling crude oil at below market price. Therefore, increased Textrad's US taxable income under sections 482 and 61 of the Internal Revenue Code. | |
■ | Texaco argues that it had no power to control the allocation of profits on Saudi crude oil because of the restrictions imposed by Saudi Government. | |
■ | The Tax Court held that the Commissioner was precluded from allocating income to Texaco because the price restrictions imposed via Letter 103/z were the 'virtual equivalent of law'. | |
■ | Texaco was subject to that restriction and faced severe economic repercussions, including loss of its supply of Saudi crude and confiscation of its assets, if it violated Letter 103/z. Neither Texaco nor any other Aramco participant had any power to negotiate or alter the terms of this restriction. | |
■ | Further, appeal to Court of Appeal |
■ | The Court of Appeal affirmed the decision of Tax Court by holding that as per regulation of the Internal Revenue Code, the purpose of section 482 is to place a controlled taxpayer on a tax parity with an uncontrolled taxpayer. In the instant case Textrad had sold significant amounts of Saudi crude to unrelated customers at the same OSP as it sold to its affiliates. | |
■ | Since Letter 103/z deprived Textrad from selling Saudi crude oil to its foreign refining affiliates at a price exceeding the OSP, Texaco lacked the ability to control the allocation of the income. | |
■ | The court had referred to the following cases:- |
(a) | Commissioner v. First Security Bank, 405 U.S. 394 (1972), in that case the court held that section 482 did not authorize the Commissioner to allocate income to a party which was prohibited by law from receiving it. | |
(b) | Procter & Gamble Co. v. Commissioner 961 F.2d 1255 (6th Cir 1992) also supports the Tax Court's conclusion. In that case, the court held that a Spanish law prohibiting a foreign affiliate from paying royalties for the use of patents was sufficient to preclude the Commissioner from reallocating income to account for a reasonable royalty. |
■ | Therefore, it upheld that Tax Court's order that the Commissioner had no authority to allocate the income under section 482 of IRC as Textrad had no power to control the allocation of profit. |
1. | The Saudi government, with the approval of the King, issued Letter 103/z prohibiting the resale of Saudi crude at amounts exceeding the OSP. | |
2. | Texaco was subject to that restriction and faced severe economic repercussions, including loss of its supply of Saudi crude and confiscation of its assets, if it violated Letter 103/z. | |
3. | This mandatory price restriction applied to all sales of Saudi crude, including sales to affiliated entities. | |
4. | Neither Texaco nor any other Aramco participant had any power to negotiate or alter the terms of this restriction. |
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COURSE 1 TAX HAVENS COURSE - GLOBAL CITIZEN COURSE - BUSINESS INTERNATIONALIZATION COURSE
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