Judge Emin (“Eminent”) Toro, having disposed of deemed distributions, now ascends to the heights hereinabove set forth at the head hereof, as my Grey-Goose-guzzling former colleagues might say, as he does the numbers for Varian Medical Systems, Inc. And Subsidiaries, 166 T. C. 8, filed 4/8/26.
For the mise-en-scène, see my blogpost “We Don’t Need No Stinkin’ Distributions,” 8/26/24. This was an unscramble of the gyrations which TCJA imposed to try to territorialize our worldwide tax system for CFCs by imposing modest tax on stashes of post-1986 offshore E&P, both cash and noncash varieties.
But now the numbers, brushing aside both parties’ arguments that their calculations raise issues conceded because never before raised.
“In particular, the parties agree that the Deemed Paid Foreign Tax Credits should be the amount of Varian’s deemed paid foreign taxes after reduction by section 965(g)(1)—i.e., after the reduction that corresponds to the section 965(c) deduction. Similarly, the parties agree that the section 78 gross-up should be the amount of Varian’s gross-up under section 78 after reduction by section 965(g)(4)—again after the reduction that corresponds to the section 965(c) deduction.
“The parties disagree, however, on the meaning of the ‘net section 965 inclusion.’ Varian argues that it should equate to the section 965(a) inclusion amount (the earnings determined under section 965(a) less the E&P deficits determined under section 965(b)).
“The Commissioner contends that, consistent with the other amounts in the formula, the net section 965 inclusion should take into account the section 965(c) deduction. In other words, the Commissioner argues that the net section 965 inclusion should equal the section 965(a) inclusion amount reduced by the section 965(c) deduction.
“The Commissioner is correct.
“Returning to the text of the statute, the point of the formula is to identify ‘taxes paid or accrued (or treated as paid or accrued) with respect to any dividend for which a deduction is allowed under [section 245A].” I.R.C. § 245A(d)(1). In other words, the point of the formula is to allocate foreign taxes to the underlying earnings that were subject to foreign tax and identify the portion of those taxes that were attributable to a deductible dividend (here, the section 78 dividend).” 166 T. C. 8, at p. 28. (Footnotes omitted).
As Mark Twain remarked, “Well you’ve got to admire men that deal in ideas of that size and can tote them around without crutches.”