Section 172 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended,
provides that a "net operating loss" experienced by a corporate
taxpayer in one year may be carried as a deduction to the preceding
three years and the succeeding five years to offset taxable income
of those years. The entire loss must be carried back to the
earliest possible year and any of the loss not "absorbed" by that
first year may then be carried to succeeding years, since
"[t]he portion of such loss which shall be carried to each of
the other taxable years shall be the excess, if any, of the amount
of such loss over the sum of the taxable income for each of the
prior taxable years to which such loss may be carried."
§ 172(b)(2). Proceeding under that provision respondent
taxpayer carried back a net operating loss of some $42,000, which
it had sustained in 1968, to 1966, in which year respondent had
ordinary income of about $7,000 and a capital gain of about
$167,000. After applying the "alternative tax" method of §
1201(a), which permits low capital gains taxation, respondent
maintained that after subtracting the $42,000 loss deduction from
the 1966 ordinary income, the negative balance of about $35,000 was
still available to offset income for 1967, respondent taking the
position that its 1968 loss had been "absorbed" in 1966 only to the
extent of the $7,000 ordinary income. Respondent accordingly made a
refund claim for the taxable year 1967, which the Commissioner
disallowed but which the District Court upheld. The Court of
Appeals affirmed.
Held: In carrying back a net operating loss under
§ 172 to a year in which the taxpayer had both ordinary income
and capital gains and employed the alternative tax computation
method of § 1201(a), the loss deduction available for
carryover to a succeeding year is the amount by which the loss
exceeds the taxpayer's "taxable income" -- ordinary income plus
capital gains for the prior year -- the loss carryover being
"absorbed" by capital gains as well as ordinary income. Pp.
429 U. S.
36-48.
(a) Absent any specific provision in the Code excluding capital
gains from "taxable income," the Code's definitions of "taxable
income" and gross income in §§ 63(a) and 61(a) require
that both capital gain
Page 429 U. S. 33
and ordinary income must be included in the taxable income that
§ 172 directs must be offset by the loss deduction before any
loss excess can be found available for transfer forward to the
succeeding taxable year, and if Congress had intended to permit a
loss deduction to offset only ordinary income when § 1201(a)
is used, it could easily have said so. Pp.
429 U. S.
36-41.
(b) The legislative history of the loss offset provisions does
not support respondent's contention that they were designed to
eliminate all consequences of the timing of the loss. Pp.
429 U. S.
426.
(c) Had Congress intended substantially to eliminate timing
accidents from the calculation of income on an average basis, it
would not have tolerated the departure from that purpose in §
172(c), under which a taxpayer cannot have a loss for a particular
year unless its deductions exceed its ordinary income and its
capital gains. Pp.
429 U. S.
467.
500 F.2d 1230, reversed.
STEWART, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which WHITE,
MARSHALL, REHNQUIST, and STEVENS, JJ., joined. STEVENS, J., filed a
concurring opinion,
post, p.
429 U. S. 48.
BLACKMUN, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which BURGER, C.J.,
and BRENNAN and POWELL, JJ., joined,
post, p.
429 U. S.
49.
MR. JUSTICE STEWART delivered the opinion of the Court.
Section 172 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended,
provides that a "net operating loss" experienced by a corporate
taxpayer in one year may be carried as a deduction to the preceding
three years and the succeeding
Page 429 U. S. 34
five years to offset taxable income of those years. [
Footnote 1] The entire loss must be
carried to the earliest possible year; any of the loss that is not
"absorbed" by that first year
Page 429 U. S. 35
may then be carried in turn to succeeding years. The respondent,
Foster Lumber Co., sustained a net operating loss of some $42,000
in 1968, which it carried back to 1966. In 1966, the respondent had
had ordinary income of about $7,000 and a capital gain of about
$167,000. The question presented is whether a loss carryover is
"absorbed" by capital gain as well as ordinary income, or is
instead limited to offsetting only ordinary income. The taxpayer
filed a refund suit in Federal District Court challenging the
Commissioner's
Page 429 U. S. 36
disallowance of its clam that the $35,000 of the 1968 loss not
used to offset its 1966 ordinary income survived to reduce its 1967
tax liability. The trial court and the Court of Appeals for the
Eighth Circuit agreed with the taxpayer. We granted certiorari to
resolve a Circuit conflict on a recurring question of statutory
interpretation. [
Footnote
2]
I
The dispute in this case centers on the meaning of "taxable
income" as used in § 172(b)(2) to govern the amount of
carrybacks and carryovers that can be successively transferred from
one taxable year to another. In relevant part, § 172(b)(2)
requires the net operating loss to be carried in full to the
earliest taxable year possible, and provides:
"The portion of such loss which shall be carried to each of the
other taxable years shall be the excess, if any, of the amount of
such loss over the sum of the taxable income for each of the prior
taxable years to which such loss may be carried."
Thus, when the loss has been carried back to the first year to
which it is applicable, the loss "survives" for carryover to a
succeeding taxable year only to the extent that it exceeds the
taxable income of the earlier year. "Taxable income" is defined in
§ 63(a) of the Code to mean "gross income, minus the
deductions allowed
Page 429 U. S. 37
by this chapter." Gross income is in turn defined by §
61(a) of the Code as "all income from whatever source derived," and
specifically includes "[g]ains derived from dealings in property."
On its face, the concept of "taxable income" thus includes capital
gains as well as ordinary income. In the absence of a specific
provision excluding capital gains, [
Footnote 3] it thus appears that both capital gain and
ordinary income must be included in the taxable income that §
172 directs must be offset by the loss deduction before any loss
excess can be found to be available for transfer forward to the
succeeding taxable year.
The respondent argues that the Code's prescribed method for
calculating the taxes due on its taxable income conflicts with this
natural reading of § 172. The Code provides two methods for
computing taxes due on corporate income, and a corporation is under
a statutory duty to employ the method that results in the lower
tax. 26 U.S.C. § 1201(a). Under § 11, the "regular
method," ordinary income and capital gains income are added
together to produce taxable income; during the period at issue a
22% tax rate was then imposed on the first $25,000 of taxable
income and the remainder was taxed at a 48% rate. Section 1201(a)
of the Code prescribes the "alternative tax," calculated in two
steps and applied when resulting in a lower tax liability for the
corporation. The first step computes a partial tax on the taxable
income reduced by the net long-term capital gain [
Footnote 4] at the
Page 429 U. S. 38
regular corporate rates imposed by § 11. This step
effectively subjects only ordinary income to the partial tax. The
second step imposes a 25% tax on the net long-term capital gain.
The alternative tax is the sum of the partial tax and the tax on
capital gain. In practical terms, the alternative tax does not
redefine taxable income, but it does result in a much lower
effective tax rate for corporations whose income is in whole or
substantial part composed of capital gain. It thus extends to
corporations the longstanding statutory policy of taxing income
from capital gain at a lower rate than that applicable to ordinary
income. The problem from the respondent's point of view is that the
mechanics of the alternative tax work in such a way that the
potential benefit of the loss deduction may not be fully reflected
in reduced tax liability for the taxable year to which the loss is
carried. The problem arises when, as in 1966 for the respondent,
the "alternative method" governs the calculation of tax liability,
and the ordinary income effectively subject to the partial tax
under the first step is less than the loss deduction subtracted
from it. The Code does not permit the excess loss to be subtracted
from the capital gain income before the second step is carried out.
[
Footnote 5] Under the
alternative method, therefore, the tax benefit of the loss
deduction is effectively lost for the carryover year to the extent
that it exceeds the ordinary income in that year. This can be seen
simply by considering the taxpayer's circumstances in this case.
Subtracting the loss deduction of $42,203.12 from the 1966 ordinary
income of
Page 429 U. S. 39
$7,236.05 under Step 1 [
Footnote
6] resulted in a negative balance of $34,967.07; no partial tax
was imposed, and the 25% rate on the $166,634.81 of capital gains
under Step 2 produced a tax of $41,658.70. If the loss deduction
had been merely $7,236.05, and thus exactly offset the $7,236.05 of
ordinary income, however, the tax due would still have been
$41,658.70. The taxpayer therefore asserts that only $7,236.05 of
the loss deduction was actually "used" in 1966, and that $34,967.07
remained to be carried forward to reduce its tax liability in
1967.
There can be no doubt that, if the "regular method" had been
applicable to the respondent's taxes in 1966, the loss deduction
($42,203.12) would have been fully "used" to offset capital gains
($166,634.81) as well as ordinary income
Page 429 U. S. 40
($7,236.05), leaving $131,667.74 to be taxed, and a tax bill of
$58,200.52. [
Footnote 7] It is
clear that the alternative tax produced the lower tax liability
despite the inability to fully "use" the loss deduction; the lower
tax resulted directly from the favorable rate of taxation of
capital gain income prescribed by the alternative method. The
question is whether the two "tax benefit" provisions relied on by
the respondent -- low capital gain taxation under the alternative
method and the loss carryback provision -- must each be maximized
independently of the other, or whether Congress instead anticipated
that the benefit provided by the loss deduction might, on occasion,
be subsumed in the greater benefit provided by the alternative tax
computation method.
Section 172 does not explicitly address the question of fit
between these two tax benefits, providing simply that
"[t]he portion of such loss which shall be carried to each of
the other taxable years shall be the excess, if any, of the amount
of such loss over the sum of the taxable income for each of the
prior taxable years to which such loss may be carried."
The respondent contends, and the Tax Court in
Chartier Real
Estate Co. v. Commissioner, 52 T.C. 346,
aff'd per
curiam, 428 F.2d 474 (CA1), held, that the phrase
Page 429 U. S. 41
"to which such loss my be carried" modifies "taxable income" as
well as "each of the prior taxable years." The Tax Court in the
Chartier case further held that
"'taxable income' in this context (as modified by the above
phrase) means that taxable income to which the loss is actually
applied in computing actual tax liability."
52 T.C. at 357-358. In other words, it was held, taxable income
refers only to that ordinary income offset by a loss deduction that
produces an additional reduction in tax liability under the
alternative tax computation method.
It is, of course, not unusual in statutory construction to find
that a defined term's meaning is substantially modified by an
attached clause. But reading "taxable income to which . . . such
loss may be carried" as equivalent to "taxable income to which such
loss may be carried and deducted, resulting in a reduction of tax
liability" gives these phrases a synergistic effect that goes well
beyond their natural import. Such a construction subtly redefines
"taxable income" in terms of the tax impact of a particular method
of tax calculation. It thus implicitly departs from the "term of
art" definition of taxable income given in § 63(a), while
discovering a significance in the word "carry" that goes well
beyond its usual connotation of a transfer of a loss from the year
in which it occurred. Standing alone, this strained reading of the
statute's terms falls considerably short of the explicit statutory
support the Court has previously required of taxpayers seeking a
tax benefit from losses suffered in other years.
See, e.g.,
Woolford Realty Co. v. Rose, 286 U. S. 319,
286 U. S. 326.
[
Footnote 8] If Congress had
intended to allow a loss deduction to offset only ordinary income
when the alternative tax calculation method is used, it could
easily have said so.
Page 429 U. S. 42
II
The respondent further asserts that the legislative history and
the broad policy behind the loss deduction section of the Code
support its interpretation of "taxable income" under § 172(b).
Although, for the reasons stated above, it can hardly be said that
the benefit claimed by the respondent is fairly within the
statutory language, it is not inappropriate to consider this
contention -- to consider, in short, whether "the construction
sought is in harmony with the statute as an organic whole."
See
Lewyt Corp. v. Commissioner, 349 U. S. 237,
349 U. S.
240.
The respondent relies on the Court's opinion in
Libson
Shops, Inc. v. Koehler, 353 U. S. 382,
353 U. S. 386,
for a description of the legislative purpose in allowing loss
carryovers. In that case, the Court said that the net operating
loss carryover and carryback provisions
"were enacted to ameliorate the unduly drastic consequences of
taxing income strictly on an annual basis. They were designed to
permit a taxpayer to set off its lean years against its lush years,
and to strike something like an average taxable income computed
over a period longer than one year."
There were, in fact, several policy considerations behind the
decision to allow averaging of income over a number of years.
Ameliorating the timing consequences of the annual accounting
period makes it possible for shareholders in companies with
fluctuating, as opposed to stable, incomes to receive more nearly
equal tax treatment. Without loss offsets, a firm experiencing
losses in some periods would not be able to deduct all the expenses
of earning income. The consequence would be a tax on capital, borne
by shareholders who would pay higher taxes on net income than
owners of businesses with stable income. [
Footnote 9] Congress also sought
Page 429 U. S. 43
through allowance of loss carryovers to stimulate enterprise and
investment, particularly in new businesses or risky ventures where
early losses can be carried forward to future more prosperous
years. [
Footnote 10]
The respondent focuses on the equalizing purposes of § 172
to argue that the Commissioner's insistence on the absorption of
the loss deduction by capital gain income is inconsistent with
§ 172's primary purpose of avoiding the subjection of
similarly situated taxpayers to significantly different treatment
solely on the basis of arbitrary timing. This argument is based on
the observation that, unless it is accepted, the taxpayer's ability
to fully benefit from the loss carryover deduction will turn on
whether ordinary income in the first year to which the loss may be
carried exceeds or is less than the loss deduction. If the ordinary
income exceeds the loss, the taxpayer will get the full benefit of
the deduction; if the ordinary income is less than the loss, the
shortfall will be absorbed by capital gain income without providing
an incremental tax reduction.
Congress may, of course, be lavish or miserly in remedying
perceived inequities in the tax structure. While there is no doubt
that Congress, through the loss carryover provisions, did intend to
reduce the arbitrariness inherent in a taxing system based on
annual accounting, the history of the loss
Page 429 U. S. 44
offset provision does not support the respondent's vision of a
Congress seeking perfection in the realization of it objective.
[
Footnote 11]
Over the years, Congress has shifted the definition of both the
kinds of losses and the kinds of income that may be used in
calculating the loss offset, indicating its ability in this area of
the Internal Revenue Code as in others to make precise definitions
and later to modify them in pursuing its broad policy goals.
[
Footnote 12] For example,
Congress in 1924 specifically provided that a noncorporate taxpayer
could use the excess of a loss deduction over ordinary income to
reduce the amount of capital gain subject to tax, [
Footnote 13] thus permitting full "use" of
the loss deduction by the taxpayer. The inference can be drawn that
Congress was aware of the potential "waste" of the deduction
otherwise, and acted to prevent it. That provision was, in turn,
left out of the 1939 Code, leading to the contrary inference that
Congress was aware of the "waste" of the deduction, but decided not
to remedy it.
Page 429 U. S. 45
The 1939 revision of the Code, in fact, tolerated even further
"waste" of the loss deduction, providing not only that the loss
must be offset against net income (ordinary income and capital
gains), [
Footnote 14] but
that tax-exempt interest income must also be included in income
that the loss was required to offset. This provision had the same
arbitrary policy consequences that the respondent decries under the
alternative tax computation method applicable here. It required the
loss deduction to be "used up" in offsetting tax-exempt income,
thus "wasting" a portion of the loss deduction's capacity to reduce
overall tax liability. And it made the utility of the loss
deduction turn on the accidents of timing. The loss deduction would
be "wasted" in offsetting tax-exempt income realized in an early
year, while, if the tax-exempt income were not realized until a
later year, the full tax benefit of the loss deduction could have
been garnered. Such results cut against any assertion that the loss
deduction provisions have consistently been used completely to
minimize arbitrary timing consequences, and indicate that
Page 429 U. S. 46
Congress has not hesitated in this area to limit taxpayers to
the enjoyment of one tax benefit even though it could have made
them eligible for two.
The 1954 Internal Revenue Code continued the 1939 Code's
definition of ordinary and capital gain income as subject to setoff
by the § 172 loss deduction. Although several substantive
changes in the loss deduction section were made and commented on in
the legislative reports accompanying the 1954 Code, [
Footnote 15] there was no indication that
the addition to § 172(b) of the phrase "to which such loss may
be carried" was meant to signal a willingness to condition the loss
deduction's life on its ability to produce full tax benefits for
the taxpayer. In view of the predecessor statutes' tolerance of a
taxpayer's inability to maximize the tax benefit of a loss
deduction, and the complete failure of the Committee Reports in any
way to indicate the shift in policy the respondent claims to
discern in the 1954 Code revision, the legislative history simply
does not support the respondent's contention that the addition in
1954 of the phrase "to which such loss may be carried" was intended
to eliminate the requirement that the loss deduction be used to
offset capital gain under the alternative tax computation
method.
We turn finally to an examination of § 172(b) in the
context of the statute as it exists today. If the statute could be
viewed as consistently minimizing the arbitrariness of timing
consequences, a construction of § 172(b) inconsistent with
that approach might be suspect. Section 172 as a whole has not,
however, been drafted with the single-minded devotion to reducing
arbitrary timing consequences that the respondent urges should
control the decision in this case.
The most telling example of Congress' failure to remedy all
timing accidents that "rob" a taxpayer of the full benefit
Page 429 U. S. 47
of the loss deduction can be found in § 172(c). That
provision defines a "net operating loss" as "the excess of the
deductions allowed by this chapter over the gross income." A
taxpayer does not have a loss for a particular year unless its
deductions exceed its ordinary income and its capital gains. When
an ordinary income loss is experienced in a year of negligible
capital gains, it gives rise to a net operating loss that can be
carried over to other years. If that same ordinary income loss
comes in a year when the net capital gains exceed that loss, there
is no net operating loss under the statute to carry to another
year. Because the statute also forbids setting off that ordinary
loss against the capital gains before the capital gain tax is
computed under the alternative method, [
Footnote 16] the loss' potential tax benefit is
arbitrarily "lost" to the taxpayer solely as a result of accidents
of timing. Congress, of course, can and occasionally has in the
past treated loss years differently from carryover years. But if
Congress were intent on substantially eliminating accidents of
timing from the calculation of income on an average basis, it would
hardly have tolerated such a departure from that purpose at the
very inception of the tax benefit provided by § 172.
The respondent's argument is further undercut by the holding in
Chartier Real Estate Co., not challenged here, [
Footnote 17] that the statute
forbids using a loss deduction to offset capital gain income in a
loss carryover year. If such an
Page 429 U. S. 48
offset were permitted, the taxpayer would benefit by a further
reduction in its capital gain tax liability already calculated at a
preferential rate. The respondent in effect asks this Court to
infer from that deliberate denial of the limited tax benefit that
would accrue from using the loss to offset preferentially taxed
capital gains, that Congress implicitly meant to confer the even
greater tax benefit of using the loss to offset ordinary income
taxed at the higher regular rates. In a statutory section that part
by part manages explicitly to detail loss calculations on one hand
and deductions on the other, [
Footnote 18] such a leap in statutory construction must
be much more firmly grounded in a consistently articulated and
achieved congressional purpose than can be discerned here.
The respondent's broad argument, in short, boils down to a
contention that "harmony with the statute as an organic whole" can
be achieved in this area only by reading the Code provision so as
to give the greatest possible benefits to all taxpayers. For the
reasons we have discussed, that is a contention that cannot be
accepted.
The judgment is
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
Title 26 U.S.C. § 172 (1964 ed.):
"Net operating loss deduction."
"(a)
Deduction allowed."
"There shall be allowed as a deduction for the taxable year an
amount equal to the aggregate of (1) the net operating loss
carryovers to such year, plus (2) the net operating loss carrybacks
to such year. For purposes of this subtitle, the term 'net
operating loss deduction' means the deduction allowed by this
subsection."
"(b) [as amended by § 317(b), Trade Expansion Act of 1962,
Pub.L. 87-794, 76 Stat. 889, and §§ 210(a) and 210(b),
Revenue Act of 1964, Pub.L. 88-272, 78 Stat. 47, 48]
Net
operating loss carrybacks and carryovers."
"(1)
Years to which loss may be carried."
"(A)(i) Except as provided in clause (ii) and in subparagraph
(D), a net operating loss for any taxable year ending after
December 31, 1957, shall be a net operating loss carryback to each
of the 3 taxable years preceding the taxable year of such
loss."
"(ii) In the case of a taxpayer with respect to a taxable year
ending on or after December 31, 1962, for which a certification has
been issued under section 317 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962, a
net operating loss for such taxable year shall be a net operating
loss carryback to each of the 5 taxable years preceding the taxable
year of such loss."
"(B) Except as provided in subparagraphs (C) and (D), a net
operating loss for any taxable year ending after December 31, 1955,
shall be a net operating loss carryover to each of the 5 taxable
years following the taxable year of such loss."
"
* * * *"
"(2)
Amount of carrybacks and carryovers."
"Except as provided in subsections (i) and (j), the entire
amount of the net operating loss for any taxable year (hereinafter
in this section referred to as the 'loss year') shall be carried to
the earliest of the taxable years to which (by reason of paragraph
(1)) such loss may be carried. The portion of such loss which shall
be carried to each of the other taxable years shall be the excess,
if any, of the amount of such loss over the sum of the taxable
income for each of the prior taxable years to which such loss may
be carried. For purposes of the preceding sentence, the taxable
income for any such prior taxable year shall be computed -- "
"(A) with the modifications specified in subsection (d) other
than paragraphs (1), (4), and (6) thereof; and"
"(B) by determining the amount of the net operating loss
deduction --"
"(i) without regard to the net operating loss for the loss year
or for any taxable year thereafter, and"
"(ii) without regard to that portion, if any, of a net operating
loss for a taxable year attributable to a foreign expropriation
loss, if such portion may not, under paragraph (1)(D), be carried
back to such prior taxable year,"
"and the taxable income so computed shall not be considered to
be less than zero. For purposes of this paragraph, if a portion of
the net operating loss for the loss year is attributable to a
foreign expropriation loss to which paragraph (1)(D) applies, such
portion shall be considered to be a separate net operating loss for
such year to be applied after the other portion of such net
operating loss."
"
* * * *"
"(c)
Net operating loss defined."
"For purposes of this section, the term 'net operating loss'
means (for any taxable year ending after December 31, 1953) the
excess of the deductions allowed by this chapter over the gross
income. Such excess shall be computed with the modifications
specified in subsection (d)."
"(d)
Modifications."
"The modifications referred to in this section are as
follows"
"(1)
Net operating loss deduction."
"No net operating loss deduction shall be allowed."
"(2)
Capital gains and losses of taxpayers other than
corporations."
"In the case of a taxpayer other than a corporation --"
"
* * * *"
"(B) the deduction for long-term capital gains provided by
section 1202 shall not be allowed."
[
Footnote 2]
420 U.S. 1003. In the present case, the Court of Appeals for the
Eighth Circuit followed the seminal Tax Court decision in
Chartier Real Estate Co. v. Commissioner, 52 T.C. 346,
aff'd per curiam, 428 F.2d 474 (CA1).
See 500
F.2d 1230. The Ninth Circuit is in agreement with the First and the
Eighth Circuits.
See Olympic Foundry Co. v. United States,
493 F.2d 1247, and
Data Products Corp. v. United States,
No. 74-3341 (Dec. 27, 1974),
cert. pending, No. 74-996.
The Fourth Circuit refused to follow the reasoning of those
Circuits in
Mutual Assurance Soc. v. Commissioner, 505
F.2d 128. The Sixth Circuit appears to agree in principle with the
Fourth Circuit's reasoning.
See Axelrod v. Commissioner,
507 F.2d 884.
[
Footnote 3]
Congress has specifically tailored definitions of taxable income
in other sections of the Code when the § 63(a) definition is
inadequate for its purposes.
See, e.g., 26 U.S.C. §
593(b)(2)(E) (mutual savings banks); § 832(a) (insurance
companies); § 852(b)(2) (regulated investment companies).
Congress, in fact, did state certain modifications of the term
"taxable income" in the third sentence of § 172(b)(2), but
none of these modifications suggests any instances in which taxable
income does not include capital gains.
[
Footnote 4]
For purposes of simplicity, we use the term "net long-term
capital gain" or simply "capital gain," rather than the statutory
phrase "excess of net long-term capital gain over net short-term
capital loss." Similarly, we sometimes in this opinion use the term
"loss deduction," rather than the statutory phrase "net operating
loss deduction."
[
Footnote 5]
See 26 U.S.C. § 1201(a)(2) and
Chartier Real
Estate Co., 52 T.C. at 350-356;
Weil v. Commissioner,
23 T.C. 424,
aff'd, 229 F.2d 593 (CA6).
[
Footnote 6]
The description in the text of the alternative tax computation
method is truncated; the mechanics are here set out in full:
bwm:
"Alternative Method" (Section 1201(a))
Taxable Income (excluding net operating loss
deduction):
Ordinary Income. . . . . . . . . . $7,236.05
Capital Gain Income. . . . . . . .166,634.81
$173,870.86
LESS: Net Operating Loss Deduction Resulting From
Carryback of 1968 Net Operating Loss . . . . . . .
(42,203.12)
------------
Taxable Income (Section 63(a)) . . . . . . . . . . .
$131,667.74
(Step 1 -- Partial Tax)
LESS: Excess of Net Long-Term Capital Gain Over
Net Short-Term Capital Loss. . . . . . . . . . . .
$166,634.81
------------
Balance. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
($34,967.07)
Partial Tax at Section 11 Rates on Balance
(Section 1201(a)(1)) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -0-
(Step 2 -- Capital Gain Tax)
PLUS: Capital Gain Tax at Flat 25 Percent Rate on
Excess of Net Long-Term Capital Gain Over Net
Short-Term Capital Loss (Section 1201(a)(2)). . . .
$41,658.70
Alternative Tax (Sum of Partial Tax and Capital
Gain Tax) (1966 rates). . . . . . . . . . . . . .
.$41,658.70
============
ewm:
[
Footnote 7]
The steps taken by the Internal Revenue Service to reach that
result are as follows:
bwm:
"Regular Method" (Section 11)
Taxable Income (excluding net operating loss
deduction):
Ordinary Income. . . . . . . . . . $7,236.05
Capital Gain Income. . . . . . . .166,634.81
$173,870.86
LESS: Net Operating Loss Deduction Resulting From
Carryback of 1968 Net Operating Loss. . . . . . . .
(42,203.12)
------------
Taxable Income (Section 63(a)). . . . . . . . . . .
.$131,667.74
Regular Tax (1966 rates). . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
$58,200.52
============
ewm:
(The regular tax reflects a $1,500 tax on multiple surtax
exemption not at issue in this case.)
[
Footnote 8]
The construction urged by the respondent also finds no support
in the Treasury Regulations on Income Tax that implement §
172.
See 26 CFR §§ 1.172, 1.172-5 (1976).
[
Footnote 9]
See generally United States Treasury Department and
Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation, Business Loss Offsets
(1947), excerpted in B. Bittker & L. Stone, Federal Income
Estate and Gift Taxation 859-863 (1972).
[
Footnote 10]
See, e.g., H.R.Rep. No. 855, 76th Cong., 1st Sess., 9
(1939):
"New enterprises and the capital goods industries are especially
subject to wide fluctuations in earnings. It is, therefore,
believed that the allowance of a net operating business loss
carryover will greatly aid business and stimulate new
enterprises."
See also H.R.Rep. No. 1337, 83d Cong., 2d Sess., 27
(1954):
"The longer period for averaging will improve the equity of the
tax system as between businesses with fluctuating income and those
with comparatively stable incomes, and will be particularly helpful
to the riskier types of enterprises which encounter marked
variations in profitability."
[
Footnote 11]
Since 1918, the carryover period has gradually been lengthened
to provide more potential years of positive income against which
experienced losses can be offset; a perfect system from a
taxpayer's point of view, however, would eschew any time
limitations altogether.
[
Footnote 12]
Section 204(b) of the Revenue Act of 1918 was the first
provision to permit the excess of expenses over income in one tax
year to be deducted in another tax year. A one-year carryover and
carryback was allowed.
See Act of Feb. 24, 1919, §
204, 40 Stat. 1060. In 1933, the National Industrial Recovery Act
abolished all net operating loss carryovers and carrybacks.
See Act of June 16, 1933, § 218(a), 48 Stat. 209. In
1939, a net operating loss carryover provision was reintroduced and
provided for a two-year carryover.
See Act of June 29,
1939, § 122, 53 Stat. 867. The three-year carryback and
five-year carryover permitted since 1958 has recently been amended
to allow seven years for carryover, and to permit the taxpayer to
elect to forgo carrybacks, and to instead carry the net operating
loss forward seven years.
See Tax Reform Act of 1976,
§ 806(a), 90 Stat. 1598.
[
Footnote 13]
Act of June 2, 1924, c. 234, § 208(a)(5), 43 Stat. 262.
[
Footnote 14]
Counsel for the respondent relied in oral argument on
Merrill v. United States, 122 Ct.Cl. 566, 105 F. Supp.
379, which excluded capital gain from the term "net income" in
interpreting the 1939 Code's § 12(g) limitation on tax
liability, to demonstrate that "net income" under the 1939 Code
could, for policy reasons, be construed to avoid the unnecessary
"wasting" of a loss. Such a construction would be in direct
conflict with the statute's general definition of "net income";
under § 122 of the 1939 Code governing loss deductions, there
was no phrase like "to which such loss may be carried" to give even
a colorable statutory construction basis to its argument that net
income does not include capital gain. The
Merrill case
obviously does not control construction of the "net income" term as
used in § 122 of the 1939 Code. And it would be anomalous in
any case to conclude that Congress meant to exclude capital gain
income from offsetting a loss deduction with the purpose of
avoiding "wasting" a loss deduction, when Congress simultaneously
required "waste" of the loss deduction by providing that it must
offset tax-exempt interest and depletion income as well as net
income.
See Internal Revenue Code of 1939 §§
122(d)(1), (2).
[
Footnote 15]
See H.R.Rep. No. 1337, 83d Cong., 2d Sess., 27 (1954);
S.Rep. No. 1622, 83d Cong., 2d Sess., 31-33 (1954); H.R.Conf.Rep.
No. 2543, 83d Cong., 2d Sess., 30 (1954).
[
Footnote 16]
See Chartier Real Estate Co. v. Commissioner, 52 T.C.
346.
[
Footnote 17]
The
Chartier holding relied on
Weil v.
Commissioner, 23 T.C. 424, a case in which the Tax Court had
concluded that the express language of the 1939 Code provided for a
flat rate of tax on taxable capital gain, unreduced by a loss
deduction, as an alternative to the tax imposed upon such gain when
it is included in gross income and taxed in the regular manner. An
amicus curiae brief filed in the present case urges that
this holding be reconsidered on policy grounds should the
respondent's argument be rejected, but concedes that the language
of § 1201(a)(2) supports the result reached in
Weil
and applied in
Chartier.
[
Footnote 18]
Section 172(d)(2)(b) provides a further indication that capital
gains are properly included in the taxable income that a loss
deduction must offset before being carried to a succeeding
carryover year. For a noncorporate taxpayer who normally computes
his tax liability by deducting 50% of net long-term capital gains
under § 1202 of the Code, § 172(d)(2)(b) requires that
the full amount of ordinary income plus capital gains be offset
against the net operating loss. That "taxable income" encompasses
capital gain income for individual taxpayers under § 172
strongly suggests that the "taxable income" of corporate taxpayers
should be given similar scope.
MR. JUSTICE STEVENS, concurring.
MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN advances persuasive policy arguments
against the Court's reading of § 172. But the same
Page 429 U. S. 49
arguments apply equally to the Code's treatment of an operating
loss which occurs in the same year as an offsetting capital gain.
In paragraph 7 of his opinion, MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN seems to accept
the necessity of a "wooden and unimaginative reading" of the
statute in the "same year" situation, though he rejects such a
reading in a case involving different years. Since the statutory
language seems rather plain in both situations, I think we have the
same duty in both to resist the temptation to attempt any creative
rewriting of the Internal Revenue Code. The relevant Code
provisions were perfectly clear in 1939, and there is simply no
basis for concluding that the 1954 Code was intended to achieve the
result favored by MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN, no matter how sensible such
a result would be. Accordingly, as much as I would like to reach
the result advocated by the dissent, I find the arguments in the
Court's opinion, which I join, unanswerable.
MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE, MR. JUSTICE
BRENNAN, and MR. JUSTICE POWELL join, dissenting.
What is at issue here is whether a corporate taxpayer's fiscal
1966 net operating loss deduction, carried back from 1968, as
provided for by § 172(a) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954,
26 U.S.C. § 172(a), was, to use the Government's and the
Court's term, "absorbed" by the taxpayer's capital gain [
Footnote 2/1] for 1966 despite the
taxpayer's inability to offset the deduction against capital gain.
[
Footnote 2/2]
The Government's position is that the 1968 loss was
"completely
Page 429 U. S. 50
absorbed" [
Footnote 2/3] in
1966, and is unavailable for any other "carry" year (here, fiscal
1967) of the taxpayer; the Government thus would deny the taxpayer
an tax benefit whatsoever for the excess of its 1968 loss over its
1966 net operating income. [
Footnote
2/4] The Court today agrees. Because I feel the Court's
conclusion is at odds with obvious congressional policies, defeats
the purposes of both the capital gain and the "carry" provisions,
and is the product of a wooden and unimaginative reading of the
pertinent Code sections, I dissent. Congress, accordingly, if its
policies are to be effectuated, must try once again.
1. There are two separate policies at work here. Each favors the
taxpayer; neither favors the Government. The first is the policy
behind Congress' separating capital gain from ordinary income and
providing the alternative method of tax computation by § 1201
of the Code, 26 U.S.C. § 1201. By placing a ceiling on the tax
rate for capital gain, Congress encourages both the investment and
the formation of capital that has proved so essential for the
Nation's economic development and strength. Chief Judge Mehaffy, in
his opinion for the Court of Appeals in the present case, put it
this way:
"The purpose behind the alternative tax in section 1201 is to
alter the tax rate to reflect the traditionally unique character of
income arising out of the sale of capital assets."
500 F.2d 1230, 1232 (CA8 1974).
The second policy is that behind the carryback and carryover
provisions: to afford the taxpayer relief from the peaks and
valleys occasioned by our system of reporting and paying income
taxes annually, and to encourage venture capital.
"Those provisions were enacted to ameliorate the unduly drastic
consequences of taxing income strictly on an
Page 429 U. S. 51
annual basis. They were designed to permit a taxpayer to set off
its lean years against its lush years, and to strike something like
an average taxable income computed over a period longer than one
year."
Libson Shops, Inc. v. Koehler, 353 U.
S. 382,
353 U. S. 386
(1957). [
Footnote 2/5]
See also
Bulova Watch Co. v. United States, 365 U.
S. 753,
365 U. S. 759
(1961); S.Rep. No. 665, 72d Cong., 1st Sess., 11 (1932); H.R.Rep.
No. 55, 76th Cong., 1st Sess., 9 (1939); H.R.Rep. No. 23, 19, 81st
Cong., 2d Sess., 59 (1950).
The Government's -- and the Court's -- position, however, sets
these policies at cross purposes. The alternative method, required
under § 1201 when capital gain is sufficient to make it
beneficial for the current year, may become a fatal trap if net
operating loss happens to be sustained in a subsequent year. This
is so because the Government, as it has here, then confronts the
taxpayer with the proposition that the carryback loss excess has
been "absorbed" even though no ordinary income, or income of any
kind, has in fact absorbed it. Use of the alternative method thus
has the wholly unintended -- and undesirable result of undercutting
the ameliorative purpose of the "carry" provisions, and they become
meaningless in specific application. What supposedly was given by
each provision is now, and to a largely unpredictable extent, taken
away. I regret this disregard for avowed congressional policies and
for the statutory provisions that effectuated those policies.
2. There is a mathematical and tax illogic and unfairness in the
Government's -- and the Court's -- analysis. Assuming,
Page 429 U. S. 52
as we must, that inequality is not unknown in income taxation,
that an adverse event of year A does not ordinarily soften the tax
impact upon a prior or subsequent and more prosperous year B, that
this is a consequence of the fact that income and the taxes thereon
are computed on an annual basis,
see Burnet v. Sanford &
Brooks Co., 282 U. S. 359,
282 U. S. 363
(1931);
Woolford Realty Co. v. Rose, 286 U.
S. 319,
286 U. S. 326
(1932), and that "
general equitable considerations' do not
control the question of what deductions are permissible,"
United States v. Olympic Radio & Television,
349 U. S. 232,
349 U. S. 236
(1955); Lewyt Corp. v. Commissioner, 349 U.
S. 237, 349 U. S. 240
(1955), the fact remains that the carryback and carryover
provisions, as noted above, were designed to provide a leveling
influence on the peaks and valleys and to have the taxpayer's
burden be one that is more realistic and in tune with actual
economic gain. Thus,
"where the benefit claimed by the taxpayer is fairly within the
statutory language and the construction sought is in harmony with
the statute as an organic whole, the benefits will not be withheld
from the taxpayer."
Ibid. This is accomplished, it seems to me, by deeming
a net operating loss as "carried" to taxable income only to the
extent there is an actual setoff. Despite the Court's intimation to
the contrary,
ante at
429 U. S. 43-44,
this effectuates only fairness, not perfection. No one expects
perfection in income taxation.
3. As the Government applies its theory to this taxpayer, the
results are startling. Had the capital gain of fiscal 1966 been
realized in its entirety in fiscal 1967, the taxpayer's net
operating loss excess (remaining after washing out the small net
operating income of fiscal 1966) would be applied in its entirety
against the larger net operating income of 1967. The result is that
the taxpayer's total income taxed for 1966-1968 would then be its
actual net economic gain for that period. The same would be true if
the taxpayer's fiscal 1967 net operating income had been realized
in fiscal
Page 429 U. S. 53
1966. But under the Government's -- and the Court's analysis,
solely because the taxpayer realized capital gain in fiscal 1966,
the net operating loss of 1968 is said to be totally "absorbed" in
1966 even though the "absorption" is imaginary and little less than
mystical.
The Government's "absorption" serves to make the "income" taxed
for the aggregate period exceed the taxpayer's actual economic gain
by the amount of the so-called "absorption." The result thus
depends on happenstance, that is, on whether the capital gain comes
earlier or later. This totally defeats the ameliorative purpose of
the carryback and carryover legislation and, it seems to me, is
punitive in application. [
Footnote
2/6] On this approach, the taxpayer, to the extent business
exigencies permit, is forced to time capital gain in accord with
its estimate of unknown and unforeseeable net operating income or
loss in future tax years. And it is hardly an answer to claim, as
the Government does, that the "absorption" of the excess in fiscal
1966 really did
Page 429 U. S. 54
not serve to increase the amount taxed for the aggregate period.
No taxpayer, struggling with the realities of the business and tax
worlds, will ever be convinced that the allowance of a deduction by
words when coupled with its disallowance by administrative fiat,
does not result in the taxpayer's being taxed on more economic gain
than it has realized. In contrast, the application of consistent
prior judicial decisions,
see paragraph 4,
infra,
would better accord with economic reality, and would treat
corporate taxpayers with stable income and those with fluctuating
income over the "carry" period more nearly the same.
4. Decisions in favor of the taxpayer's position provided an
unbroken line of authority in the Tax Court, [
Footnote 2/7] in the District Courts, [
Footnote 2/8] and in the Courts of Appeals,
[
Footnote 2/9] until the Fourth
Circuit, under the Government's persistence and by a divided vote,
concluded otherwise. [
Footnote
2/10]
Mutual Assurance
Page 429 U. S. 55
Soc. v. Commissioner, 505 F.2d 128 (1974). [
Footnote 2/11] Where, a here, we are
concerned with technical and what the Government calls "the highly
detailed provisions of Section 172," Brief for United States 6, the
Tax Court's expertise is at its most valuable level, and should be
sought out and accorded deference.
See the comment of Mr.
Justice Jackson, dissenting, in
Arrowsmith v.
Commissioner, 344 U. S. 6,
344 U. S. 12
(1952), concerning the Tax Court's competence and "steady
influence" in "a field beset with invisible boomerangs." [
Footnote 2/12] But the Court accords no
deference to the Tax Court's consistent position on the technical
problem before us.
The reasoning in
Chartier Real Estate Co. v.
Commissioner, 52 T.C. 346 (1969),
aff'd, 428 F.2d 474
(CA1 1970), and the several cases that followed it, accommodates
the respective congressional purposes behind the capital gain and
the "carry" provisions. In
Chartier, the Government's dual
position -- seeking to prevent the application of the loss
carryback to the earlier year's capital gain, and also claiming
that the carryback nevertheless was absorbed by the capital gain --
sought the best of two worlds. Its first proposition
Page 429 U. S. 56
was upheld. Its second proposition was rejected, and properly
so, because the acceptance of the former precluded acceptance of
the latter if congressional policy were to be recognized.
No effort was made in Congress to change the statutes in order
to overcome the judicial interpretation that was uniform until
1974. That, for me, as Judge Russell pertinently observed in
dissent in
Mutual Assurance, 505 F.2d at 138, "is a
persuasive testimonial that those decisions set forth the proper
construction of the statutes." And the Government acknowledged at
oral argument that the Internal Revenue Service sought no
clarifying legislation in the Congress. Tr. of Oral Rearg.
18-20.
5. The legislative history reflects a proper concern for
achieving a tax structure that operates fairly on income that
fluctuates. Amelioration provisions are not new and, in fact,
appeared in the income tax law as early as the Revenue Act of 1918.
§ 204(b) of that Act, 40 Stat. 1061. Since 1939 the periods
for carrybacks and carryovers have been expanded [
Footnote 2/13] from the two-year carryover of 1939
until, in 1958 and lasting until 1976, a structure of a three-year
carryback and a five-year carryover was erected. [
Footnote 2/14] It was said later that, for "most
companies," this period "is long enough to absorb all of their
losses against income." S.Rep. No. 1881, 87th Cong., 2d Sess., 129
(1962).
6. The Court today accepts the Government's contention
Page 429 U. S. 57
that the meaning of the critical § 172(b)(2) [
Footnote 2/15] is clearly and
unambiguously against the taxpayer. It is said that the phrase "to
which such loss may be carried" obviously modifies "each of the
prior taxable years," rather than "taxable income." [
Footnote 2/16] That the language of the
statute is not clearly in favor of the Government is demonstrated,
if by no other means, by the existing conflict among the Circuits
and by the decisions of the Districts Courts and of the Tax Court,
cited above in nn. 7, 8, and 9, that have run so uniformly against
the Government. If the language were as clear and unambiguous in
the Government's favor as is contended, it hardly could have been
read otherwise by so many capable and experienced judges. And the
clear meaning which the Court now perceives does not, and
cannot,
Page 429 U. S. 58
comport with the underlying purpose of the carryback and
carryover provisions.
7. The definition of § 172(c), [
Footnote 2/17] to the effect that a taxable year does
not result in a net operating loss when capital gain of that year
exceeds any deficit in ordinary income, does not defeat the
taxpayer. Congress was definite and specific in its definition of
"net operating loss" for "carry" purposes in a tax year of that
kind. But we are not concerned here with such a year and such a
definition. We are concerned, instead, with 1968 where this
taxpayer had a "net operating loss" and no capital gain or loss.
That net operating loss is established and is available for
"carry." The definitional restriction of § 172(c) obviously
has no application to 1968 for this taxpayer.
Nor is § 172(d)(2)(b) contrary to the taxpayer's position.
Section 172(d)(2) is restricted in its application to "a taxpayer
other than a corporation." Corporate and individual taxpayers
frequently are treated differently in our income tax structure, and
I find little of assistance, even by way of inference, in §
172(d)(2)(B) for resolving the issue before us in connection with a
corporate taxpayer.
8. "Taxation is a practical matter."
Harrison v.
Schaffner, 312 U. S. 579,
312 U. S. 582
(1941). To do what the Court does today is to ignore that wise
precept. What the Government urges -- and the Court does --
promotes inequality of treatment between taxpayers experiencing
like economic gains over the "carry" period, whenever a capital
gain happens to be present in one taxpayer's taxable year but
happens to be absent in
Page 429 U. S. 59
the same year for another taxpayer. A provision intended to
equalize to a great extent the tax burdens as between corporations
with fluctuating income and those with stable income should not be
used to render that goal unattainable or to introduce
irrationalities.
I would affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals.
[
Footnote 2/1]
I use the term "capital gain" to mean the excess of net
long-term capital gain over net short-term capital loss.
[
Footnote 2/2]
See Weil v. Commissioner, 23 T.C. 424 (1954),
aff'd, 229 F.2d 593 (CA6 1956);
Chartier Real Estate
Co. v. Commissioner, 52 T.C. 346, 350-356 (1969),
aff'd, 428 F.2d 474 (CA1 1970).
[
Footnote 2/3]
Tr. of Oral Rearg. 8.
[
Footnote 2/4]
The parties agree that the carryback served to erase the
taxpayer's small net operating income for fiscal 1966.
[
Footnote 2/5]
The Court of Appeals, in the present case, also aptly described
this policy:
"The basic purpose behind the net operating loss carry back
provisions of section 172 is to ameliorate the harsh tax
consequences that can result from the necessity of accounting for
certain exceptional economic events within the confines of an
arbitrary annual accounting period."
500 F.2d at 1232.
[
Footnote 2/6]
Judge Raum, in my view, stated it correctly:
"The computation under the 'regular' method was merely
tentative, to determine whether the 'regular' method would produce
a smaller tax. Since it did not produce a smaller tax, it was in
effect not employed at all as a measure of petitioner's 1962 tax,
and under the actual computation used (the 'alternative' method),
only $1,115.57 of the net operating loss was absorbed, leaving the
remaining $10,342.64 to be carried forward to 1965. This result is
required by a proper interpretation of the provisions dealing with
carrybacks and carryovers."
"
* * * *"
"We think it is to exalt form over substance to contend that,
since a 'regular' computation was made in order to determine
whether the amount of tax resulting therefrom was greater than that
produced by the 'alternative' method of computation, and since the
net operating loss was deducted in full in the 'regular' method,
the entire loss was therefore taken into account in the tax
computation, even though the 'alternative' method, to which only
$1,115.57 was applied, ultimately produced petitioner's actual tax
liability."
Chartier Real Estate Co. v. Commissioner, 52 T.C. at
357, 358.
[
Footnote 2/7]
Chartier Real Estate Co. v. Commissioner, 52 T.C. at
356-358 (Judge Raum);
Mutual Assurance Soc. v.
Commissioner, 32 TCM 839, � 73,177 P-H Memo TC (1973)
(Judge Quealy);
Axelrod v. Commissioner, 32 TCM 885,
� 73,190 P-H Memo TC (1973) (Judge Featherston);
Continental Equities, Inc. v. Commissioner, 33 TCM 812,
� 74,189 P-H Memo TC (1974) (Judge Tannenwald).
See Lone
Manor Farms, Inc. v. Commissioner, 61 T.C. 436 (1974),
aff'd, 510 F.2d 970 (CA3 1975).
[
Footnote 2/8]
Olympic Foundry Co. v. United States, 72-1 USTC
� 9299 (WD Wash.1972);
Naegele v. United States,
73-2 USTC � 9696 (Minn.1973),
appeal docketed, No.
73-1921 (CA8);
Data Products Corp. v. United States, 74-2
USTC � 9759 (CD Cal.1974).
[
Footnote 2/9]
Chartier Real Estate Co. v. Commissioner, 428 F.2d 474
(CA1 1970);
Olympic Foundry Co. v. United States, 493 F.2d
1247 (CA9 1974);
Foster Lumber Co. v. United States, 500
F.2d 1230 (CA 1974) (case below);
Data Products Corp. v. United
States, No. 74-3341 (CA9, Dec. 27, 1974),
cert.
pending, No. 74-996.
[
Footnote 2/10]
Scholarly commentary, however, has not been uniform.
See Hawkins, Mechanics of Carrying Losses to Other Years,
14 W.Res.L.Rev. 241, 250-251 (1963), and D. Herwitz, Business
Planning 844 (1966), both pre-
Chartier. Compare
Note, 8 San Diego L.Rev. 442 (1971), Note, 55 B.U.L.Rev. 134
(1975), and May, Net Operating Losses and Capital Gains -- a
Deceptive Combination, 29 Tax Lawyer 121 (1975),
with
Branda, Net Operating Losses and Capital Gains -- Some Bizarre
Consequences of the Alternative Tax Computation, 28 Tax Lawyer 455
(1975). In the last article, the author concludes:
"
Chartier and its progeny . . . despite strained
reliance on the language of section 172(b)(2). . . are more soundly
based on the policy underlying the favorable treatment of capital
gains. . . ."
"The reversals of the Tax Court by the Fourth and Sixth Circuits
. . . are unconvincing."
Id. at 470.
See also Pratt & Scolnick, The
Net Operating Loss Deduction: Disagreement Among Circuit Courts
Creates Confusion, 53 Taxes 274 (1975); Nagel, Planning to Avoid
Wastage of NOL Carryovers: A Lesson from Chartier Realty, 42 J.
Taxation 26 (1975).
[
Footnote 2/11]
Subsequently, the Sixth Circuit, in a case concerning individual
taxpayers, agreed with the Fourth Circuit.
Axelrod v.
Commissioner, 507 F.2d 884 (1974).
[
Footnote 2/12]
See also Remarks of MR. JUSTICE STEWART at the
Dedication of the New Courthouse of the United States Tax Court, 28
Tax Lawyer 451, 453 (1975)
[
Footnote 2/13]
Revenue Act of 1939, § 211(b) (adding § 122 to the
Internal Revenue Code of 1939), 53 Stat. 867; Revenue Act of 1942,
§ 153(a), 56 Stat. 847; Revenue Act of 1950, § 215(a), 64
Stat. 937; Internal Revenue Code of 1954, § 172(b), 68A Stat.
63; Technical Amendments Act of 1958, § 203(a), 72 Stat.
1678.
[
Footnote 2/14]
The Tax Reform Act of 1976, § 806(a), 90 Stat. 1598, adds
to § 172(b)(1)(b) of the Code, as amended, a sentence
providing that, for any taxable year ending after December 31,
1975, a net operating loss may be carried over for seven years
following the loss. This thus increases the carryover period from
five to seven years.
[
Footnote 2/15]
Until the Tax Reform Act of 1976, § 172(b)(2) read:
"Except as provided in subsections(i) and (j) [not pertinent
here], the entire amount of the net operating loss for any taxable
year (hereinafter in this section referred to as the 'loss year')
shall be carried to the earliest of the taxable years to which (by
reason of paragraph (1)) such loss may be carried. The portion of
such loss which shall be carried to each of the other taxable years
shall be the excess, if any, of the amount of such loss over the
sum of the taxable income for each of the prior taxable years to
which such loss may be carried. . . ."
Section 1901(a)(29)(C)(iv) of the 1976 Act, 90 Stat. 1769,
replaced the phrase "subsections (i) and (j)" with" subsection
(g)."
The words "to which such loss may be carried" first appeared in
the 1954 Code. 68A Stat. 63. Apparently there is no committee or
other legislative commentary on the addition of these words to
§ 172(b)(2).
[
Footnote 2/16]
The Government's -- and now the Court's -- argument that the
phrase "to which such loss may be carried" must modify "each of the
prior taxable years," and is confined in its modification to that
phrase, is surely wrong as a matter of routine statutory
construction. This is so because that analysis renders the
modifying phrase useless and redundant. The preceding §§
172(a) and (b)(1) already have directed that the loss be carried,
and in the prescribed order, to specified taxable years. There is
no additional need for § 172(b)(2) to recite a limitation of
the years to which the loss may be carried.
[
Footnote 2/17]
Until the Tax Reform Act of 1976, § 172(c) read:
"For purposes of this section, the term 'net operating loss'
means (for any taxable year ending after December 31, 1953) the
excess of the deductions allowed by this chapter over the gross
income. Such excess shall be computed with the modifications
specified in subsection (d)."
The parenthetical expression was eliminated by § 1901(a)
(29)(b) of the 1976 Act, 90 Stat. 1769.