The predecessor of A.E. Staley Manufacturing Company and Subsidiaries (“Staley”) paid investment bankers in connection with an unsuccessful effort to defeat a hostile tender offer. On its federal income tax return, the company claimed a deduction for the fees paid to the bankers. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue disallowed the claimed deduction and issued a notice of deficiency. Staley’s predecessor then filed a petition in the United States Tax Court challenging the disallowance. The Tax Court agreed with the Commissioner and held that the expenses were capital expenditures which cannot be deducted. Staley now appeals the Tax Court’s judgment, and we reverse and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I
BACKGROUND
A. Facts
Staley, the petitioner in this case, was an affiliated group of corporations, formerly named Staley Continental, Inc. and Subsidiaries (“SCI”). The predecessor of both petitioner and SCI was A.E. Staley Manufacturing Co. (“AES”). From its organization in 1906 until November 1984, AES’ primary business consisted of storing, marketing, milling, processing and refining corn and soybeans. AES employed a process called corn wet milling to produce sweeteners, starches, oils and other ingredients for the food and beverage industry. AES’ principal product was high fructose corn syrup. By the mid-1980s, high fructose corn syrup had become *484 the leading sweetener in the country’s food and beverage market, especially in the soft drink industry.
Because AES believed that the market had matured for its product, in 1984 its board of direсtors made the long-term strategic decision to enter into the food service business. AES diversified into this area by acquiring other companies, including CFS Continental, Inc., one of the country’s leading suppliers in the food service industry. SCI was formed and became the parent company of AES and CFS Continental, Inc. Using the revenues it earned from corn wet milling, SCI began to pursue growth in the food service business.
When an investment banker threatened to acquire SCI in 1986, SCI began to fear the possibility of a hostile takeover. SCI hired a law firm in response, which advised SCI to adopt antitakeover devices. SCI followed this advice and adopted some antitakeover measures. SCI also hired the First Boston Corporation and Merrill Lynch Capital Markets (collectively, “investment bаnkers”) to prepare SCI for, and to advise and assist SCI in the event that another company were to attempt, a hostile takeover. SCI also agreed to hire the investment bankers to represent SCI in the event an offer was made.
In March 1987 Merrill Lynch made presentations to SCI’s management and board of directors, in which it recommended that SCI take certain actions to prepare for any unsolicited takeover attempts. SCI implemented many of these proposals and, at the suggestion of Merrill Lynch, set up a defense team of attorneys, investment bankers and SCI executives.
Because Merrill Lynch also suggested that SCI identify friendly “white knight” investors to acquire enough stock in SCI to block any future takeover attempt, SCI sought out Tate & Lyle and discussed the possibility of Tate & Lyle’s acquiring a 20% interest in SCI. Some casual conversation occurred about the possibility of merging the two companies. Tate & Lyle began purchasing SCI stock on the open market in April 1987; it soon acquired about 4% of the company. SCI soon feared Tate & Lyle, though, because Tate & Lyle would not sign a “standstill agreement,” which would limit the amount of stock that Tate & Lyle would purchase. When Tate & Lyle filed a Hart-Scott-Rodino notification to acquire up to 25% of SCI’s stock, SCI feared that this action would put SCI up for sale and decided to resist additional purchases of its stock.
On April 8, 1988, Tate & Lyle made a public tender offer directly to SCI’s stockholders to purchase shares for $32 per share. On that same day, Tate & Lyle also sued SCI to enjoin the use of SCI’s antitakeover devices and the application of various states’ antitаkeover statutes. Tate & Lyle’s chairman of the board of directors and chief executive officer, Neil M. Shaw, wrote Donald E. Nordlund, who held the same positions at SCI, stating that if Tate & Lyle were successful in its bid to acquire SCI, it would cancel SCI’s diversification policy by selling CFS Continental, Inc. and would return SCI back to its core business, corn syrup. The management, board of directors and investment bankers of SCI considered Tate & Lyle’s tender offer to be hostile because it was made without their consent or knowledge. On April 9 the defense team of SCI held an emergency meeting at which it decided that the tender offer was not in the best interests of the company or its shareholders because Tate & Lyle had no capital, marketing or research and development to offer. However, because the board recognized that it had a duty to evaluate the merits of the tender offer, it hired First Boston and Merrill Lynch on April 12 to advise and assist it with respect to the offer. The agreements provided that the investment bankers’ fees for their services would be (1) $500,000 in cash; (2) an additional fee of 0.40% of the value of the transaction if Tate & Lyle or another company acquired at least 50% of SCI’s stock; (3) an additional fee of 0.40% of the recapitalization if SCI effected a recapitalization; and (4) additional quarterly fees of $500,000 for four quarters if no fees were paid under (2) or (3). SCI and the investment bankers then began to consider alternatives to the tender offer, including a recapitalization, a leveraged buy-out аnd a sale to a white knight.
*485 On April 18 the investment bankers indicated to SCI that their evaluation had revealed that $32 per share was below the true value of SCI’s stock. They also discussed the different alternatives to the tender offer that were available to SCI: the sale of SCI in its entirety, the sale of a division, a recapitalization, a leveraged buy-out, a placement of blocks of stock, a spin-off, a public offering and the commencement of an offer to acquire Tate & Lyle (“pac-man” defense). On April 20 SCI’s board voted unanimously to reject Tate & Lyle’s tender offer. The investment bankers then discussed with other corporations the possibilities of a friendly purchase of SCI and of a loan for a recapitalization. To assist in this regard, the investment bankers prepared a selling book for prospective buyers that contained information about SCI.
On April 29 Tate & Lyle raised its offering price to $35 per share. On May 2 SCI’s board determined that the offer was still inadequate and should be rejected. Again the board resolved, and the investment bankers continued, to investigate alternatives. Once again SCI urged its shareholders to reject the tender offer. On May 10 the investment bankers informed SCI that they had been unable to find an alternative to Tate & Lyle’s offer that would persuade SCI’s shareholders not to sell. In response, SCI’s board instructed its attorneys to negotiate with Tate & Lyle while the investment bankers continued to look for alternatives. On May 13 Tate & Lyle increased its tender offer to $36.50 per share; the investment bankers informed SCI that this was a fair offer and that no alternatives had been found. SCI’s board then determined that the price was fair and recommended that its stockholders should accept it. After the sale, Tate & Lyle replaced SCI’s management, terminated 104 executives, closed the company’s headquarters, fired the clerical staff and moved the executive offices. SCI’s entire board of directors resigned. Tate & Lyle then sold CFS Continental, Inc. and changed SCI’s name to A.E. Staley Manufacturing Company.
SCI paid $6,238,109 to First Boston and $6,272,593 to Merrill Lynch (and $165,318 to Charles P. Young for printing) for services in connection with SCI’s response to Tate & Lyle’s tender offers. It deducted these costs as business expenses on its tax return. The Commissioner disallowed all of the fees paid to First Boston аnd Merrill Lynch and $50,-000 of the printing costs. 1
B. Tax Court Proceedings
The full Tax Court held, with five judges dissenting, that neither the investment bankers’ fees nor the printing costs were deductible.
See A.E. Staley Mfg. Co. v. Commissioner,
The majority held further that the investment bankers’ fees could not be deducted as costs associated with abandoned transactions under I.R.C. § 165. The court held that, to be allowed a deduction under § 165, the taxpayer must be able to allocate the fees to
*486
separate and distinct proposals that wеre abandoned. In this case, the court noted, “[t]he bulk of the fees paid the investment bankers was pegged to a completed stock sale, not an abandoned recapitalization or other abandoned transaction.”
Judge Beghe concurred and wrote separately to advance another theory for the nondeductibility of the fees. Under this alternate theory, the advice of the investment bankers benefited the shareholders of SCI by helping them obtain a higher price for their shares. In Judge Beghe’s view, those fees allocable to benefiting the shareholders should not be deductible.
Judge Cohen, the trial judge in the case, dissented. She noted initially that the primary focus of
INDOPCO
was the rejection by the Supreme Court of the taxpayer’s contention “that separate and distinct assets must be created or enhanced by the expenditures in order to be capitalized under section 263.”
Judge Laro also dissented. In his view, the purpose of an expenditure is a relevant consideration under INDOPCO. He distinguished this case from INDOPCO on the basis that the present case involves a hostile takeover. Moreover, Judge Laro maintained, the majority had failed to identify any significant benefit to SCI as a result of the Tate & Lyle acquisition. He concluded that “[defensive measures are not intended to produce any lasting improvements; their goal is merely to preserve the status quo, to enable the target to continue its business operations in the same manner as before the threat emerged.” Id. at 220 (Laro, J., dissenting). Because the majority disregarded SCI’s purpose in incurring the costs and because, in his view, SCI’s costs were incurred “to prevent, not facilitate, a change in corporate structure,” Judge Laro would have allowed the deduction. Id.
II
DISCUSSION
Staley submits that the fees SCI paid the investment bankers are a deductible business expense under I.R.C. § 162(a). Staley, as the taxpayer, bears the burden of showing a right to the business deduction.
See INDOPCO,
Nevertheless, Staley’s burden is not an insurmountable one. To qualify for deduction under § 162(a), “an item must (1) be ‘paid or incurred during the taxable year,’ (2) be for ‘carrying on any trade or business,’ (3) be an ‘expense,’ (4) be a ‘necessary’ expensе, and (5) be an ‘ordinary’ expense.”
Commissioner v. Lincoln Sav. & Loan Ass’n,
*487
We do not understand the Commissioner’s position to be that defending against takeovеr attempts is or was an unusual activity. Instead, the Commissioner submits that, under
INDOPCO, supra,
SCI’s expenses should be classified as nondeductible capital expenditures.
See
I.R.C. § 263(a)(1) (“No deduction shall be allowed for ... [a]ny amount paid out for new buildings or for permanent improvements or betterments made to increase the value of any property or estate.”);
Tellier,
Distinguishing between expenses that can be deducted under § 162 and those that must be capitalized under § 263 is not an easy task. As the Supreme Court has noted, “the cases sometimes appear difficult to harmonize,” and “each ease ‘turns on its special facts.’ ”
INDOPCO,
Here, indeed, as so often in other branches of the law, the decisive distinctions are those of degree and not of kind. One struggles in vain for any verbal formula that will supply a ready touchstone. The standard set up by the statute is not a rule of law; it is rather a way of life. Life in all its fullness must supply the answer to the riddle.
Welch,
We begin our pragmatic assessment with the well-worn notion that expenses incurred in defending a business and its policies from attack are necessary and ordinary — and deductible — business expenses. For example, in
Commissioner v. Heininger,
It is plain that respondent’s legal expenses were both “ordinary and necessary” if those words be given their commonly accepted meaning. For respondent to employ a lawyer to defend his business from threatened destruction was “normal”; it was the response ordinarily to be expect *488 ed____ [T]he expenses incurred in defending the business can also be assumed appropriate and helpful, and therefore “necessary.”
Id.
at 471,
Other courts within the federal judiciary have applied this principle in similar contexts. Most notably, in
Locke Manufacturing Companies v. United States,
The foregoing line of authority was neither abrogated nor indeed even addressed by
INDOPCO, Inc. v. Commissioner,
The determination we must make, therefore, is whether the costs incurred in this case are more properly viewed as costs associated with defending a business or as costs associated with facilitating a capital transaction.
6
See Woodward v. Commissioner,
Of course, it is the nature of the services performed by the investment bankers that determines the proper tax treatment of the costs of those services.
Honodel v. Commissioner,
None of these tasks served to facilitate the Tate & Lyle acquisition. Instead, objectively assessed, the tasks performed by the investmеnt bankers frustrated the occurrence of the merger that eventually took place. Moreover, in substance, most of the services the investment bankers performed consisted of failed attempts to engage in alternative capital transactions. Section 165(a)
7
permits a deduction for costs associated with abandoned capital transactions.
See Sibley, Lindsay & Curr Co. v. Commissioner,
In urging that the investment bankers’ fees are related to the Tate & Lyle acquisition, the Commissioner points to the parties’ fee arrangement, which provided that the investment bankers would be paid if a merger took place. That arrangement also provided, however, that payment would be forthcoming if a recapitalization occurred or if no merger occurred. The purpose of such an arrangement is clear: The investment bankers were to be paid whether or not they were successful in their endeavor to defeat Tate & Lyle’s tender offer. We agree that the form of the fee arrangement is a relevant consideration, but the substance of the transaction, not its form, is controlling.
See Clark Oil & Refining Corp. v. United States,
The investment bankers admittedly did perform some facilitative tasks. First, when they were initially hired on April 12, the investment bankers prepared an evaluation of the true value of SCI’s stock. That evaluation, objectively speaking, eventually served thе function of facilitating the merger because it was used to determine that Tate & Lyle’s final offer was fair and should be accepted. As we noted earlier, and as the Supreme Court reaffirmed in
INDOPCO,.
the costs incurred in evaluating and investigating a completed capital transaction — such as a merger or other change in corporate structure — must be capitalized.
See INDOPCO, Inc. v. Commissioner,
We conclude that the bulk of costs at issue in this case related to SCI’s defense of its business and its corporate policy and is therefore deductible under § 162(a).
8
Those costs properly allocable to the efforts to engage in an alternate transaction are also deductible under § 165. The Commissioner’s contrary position rests upon a strained view of the “origin” of the fees in this case. Her logic runs as follows: The investment bankers would not have been hired and paid if there had not been a takeover; their fees therefore have their “origin” in the Tate & Lyle acquisition; the Tate & Lyle acquisition was a capital transaction with long-lasting effects; so the investment bankers’ fees, having their origin in a capital transaction, must
*492
be capitalized.
9
Yet, under any view, most of the fees paid to the investment bankers were not “of value in more than one taxable year.”
United States v. Mississippi Chem. Corp.,
To summarize, the fees associated with the preparation of the evaluation of SCI’s stock and with the few hours of facilitative work performed by the investment bankers at the time of the merger must be capitalized. However, the other fees may be deducted. As Justice Cardozo declared, our Tax Code requires a practical, realistic аssessment. Such an assessment demands that SCI’s costs, associated with genuinely different functions, must be treated differently. We therefore remand for the Tax Court to allocate a sum of the fees for capitalization to the facilitative activities of the investment bank
*493
ers and printer performed in preparing the evaluation of SCI’s stock and in facilitating the merger at the time of its consummation.
See generally Ellis Banking,
Conclusion
The judgment of the Tax Court is reversed. The case is remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Reversed And Remanded.
Notes
. The record does not reveal the reason that a portion of the printing costs was allowed.
.
Accord NCNB Corp. v. United States,
. In
INDOPCO
the acquiring firm, Unilever, was interested in acquiring the taxpayer, National Starch, in a friendly transaction. Prior to the transaction, National Starch hired an investment hanking firm, Morgan Stanley, to evaluate the offer and to assist in the event that a hostile tender offer emerged. Morgan Stanley found the offered price per share to be fair, and National Starch's board of directors approved the deal. After the transaction was consummated, National Starch claimed a deduction for the amounts рaid to Morgan Stanley. The Supreme Court, affirming the Tax Court and the Third Circuit, held that the fees were not deductible and that they instead had to be capitalized.
See
.Prior to
INDOPCO,
some courts had deviated from this principle, requiring that an expenditure must have created or enhanced an asset to be capitalized.
.
See id.
("[T]he mere presence of an incidental future benefit — ‘some future aspect' — may not warrant capitalization ....") (emphasis in original);
Commissioner v. Lincoln Sav. & Loan Ass'n,
. Some costs may rightly be said to be associated with both, such as those involved in a situation in which the target corporation successfully defends against a takeover by merging with a white knight. In such a situation, those expenses related to the evaluation and facilitation of the friendly acquisition might well require capitalization under INDOPCO, General Bancshares and Ellis Banking. Boris I. Bittker & James S. Eustice, Federal Income Taxation of Corporations and Shareholders para. 5.04[4] (6th ed. 1994 & Supp.1996). We need not be detained by that hypothetical situation in this case, though; our taxрayer did not find a suitable white knight with which to merge.
. Section 165(a) provides: "There shall be allowed as a deduction any loss sustained during the taxable year and not compensated for by insurance or otherwise.” I.R.C. § 165(a).
. Because the investment banker fees were incurred to defend a business from attack, they satisfy
Lincoln Savings'
second requirement for deductibility, that the item "be for 'carrying on any trade or business.' "
. As the Commissioner's reasoning shows, in borderline cases, "it is difficult to determine whether the origin of particular litigation [or of costs] lies in the process of acquisition.”
Woodward v. Commissioner,
A majority of my brethren seem to think they can escape this conclusion by going further back in the chain of causation. They say the cause of this legal expense was the gift. Of course one can reason, as my brethren do, that if there had been nо gifts there would have been no tax, if there had been no tax there would have been no deficiency, if there were no deficiency there would have been no contest, if there were no contest there would have been no expense. And so the gifts caused the expense. The fallacy of such logic is that it would be just as possible to employ it to prove that the lawyer’s fees were caused by having children. If there had been no children there would have been no gift, and if no gift no tax, and if no tax no deficiency, and if no deficiency no contest, and if no contest no expense. Hence, the lawyer's fee was not due to the contest at all but was a part of the cost of having babies. If this reasoning were presented by a taxpayer to avoid a tax, what would we say of it? So treacherous is this kind of reasoning that in most fields the law rests its conclusion only on proximate cause and declines to follow the winding trail of remote and multiple causations.
Lykes v. United States,
. See also Bittker & Eustice, supra note 6, para. 5.04[4]:
[E]xpenses paid by the corporation in resisting a hostile tender offer ... should he deductible on the same basis as the cost of defending a proxy fight — that is, the expenses are incurred primarily to protect the business rather than to acquire property and are primarily related to questions of corporate policy.... [A] hostile acquirer in fact almost always wants to change the board, and in many cases the management, and may want to break up the assets and businesses of the corporation, all of which the current board may properly view as inimical to the corporation and the current shareholders.
