In Rawat v. Commissioner, 108 F.4th 891 (D.C. Cir. 2024), DCCir here and GS here, the Court held that the portion of a foreign person’s gain from sale of a partnership interest attributable to partnership inventory taxed under § 751 as other than capital gain is not U.S. sourced and therefore not subject to U.S. tax. The opinion really has nothing to do with tax procedure, except on the picky point that I note at the end of this blog.
As I see the issue (perhaps not from the same literalist reading of the statutes as the Court but as a high level overview of what I think Congress was trying to do), the purpose of recharacterizing what would be capital gain into ordinary income for the underlying appreciated inventory in the partnership is to give the partner treatment as if the partnership had sold the inventory, realized the gain, and allocated it to the foreign partner for U.S. tax. Judge Gustafson in the Tax Court reached that result well within the constraints of the language in the Code. See Rawat v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2023-14 , here. Only by fixating on certain text does the D.C. Circuit panel avoid that result. The whole purpose of all judicial interpretive methodologies is to be the faithful agents interpreting the will or intent of Congress. Foregoing U.S. tax on the gain attributable to inventory certainly was not the intent of Congress.
I post on this case because it seems to me to be of the same genre of resolution as Gitlitz v. Commissioner, 531 U.S. 206 (2001), here, Justice Thomas' infamous literalist / textualist opinion oblivious to the overall design of the Code. I discuss in general terms the interpretive methodologies in the Federal Tax Procedure Book 2024 versions (Student Ed. at pp. 6-11) and (Practitioner Ed. at pp. 8-17). Specifically, in another part of the book (Practitioner Ed. at p. 109 n. 505), I discuss Gitlitz as follows in a footnote regarding the chaos some Supreme Court opinions:
n505Charles I. Kingson, How Tax Thinks, 37 Suffolk U. L. Rev. 1031 (2004) (critiquing two leading Supreme Court cases: Frank Lyon Co. v. United States, 435 U.S. 561 (1978) and Commissioner v. Brown, 380 U.S. 563 (1965)); see also Charles I. Kingson, Confusion Over Tax Ownership, 93 Tax Notes 409 (Oct. 8, 2001) (critiquing the same). I also cite Gitlitz v. Commissioner, 531 U.S. 206 (2001) as a prime example of Supreme Court’s mischief in this area. See RenĂ© Matteotti, Struggling With Words in Tax Jurisprudence -- A Plea for an Equal Treatment Mode of Analysis in Construing Tax Statutes, 2005 TNT 130-30. My quip, not much of an overstatement, is that tax cases are too important to let the Supreme Court decide them.