The trustees of both a multiemployer pension plan trust and an annuity plan trust appeal a judgment from the district court. The court held that during 1986, 1987, and 1988, when the plans had failed to meet the requirements of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (“ERISA”) and Internal Revenue Code (“I.R.C.”) § 401(a), the trusts could not qualify as exempt from taxation as “labor organizations” under I.R.C. § 501(c)(5). We affirm.
BACKGROUND
The Plumbing, Pipe Fitting and Heating Contractors Association of Brockton and Vicinity (the “Employers”) and the Local Union 276 of the United Association of Journeymen and Apprentices of the Plumbing and Pipe Fitting Industry of the United States and Canada (the “Union”) entered into collective bargaining agreements in 1959 and 1983 providing for the creation of a defined benefit pension plan and a money purchase annuity plan respectively (the “plans”). According to the plans, half of the trastees of each plan trust are appointed by the Employers and half by the Union. The trustees are currently John F. Tupper, Robert S. Norvish, Raymond F. Brierly, Louis M. Colombo, Edward F. Cruz, and Dennis J. Cruz (the “trustees”). The trusts are funded entirely by employer contributions and exist solely to provide pension and annuity benefits for plan participants and beneficiaries.
In 1974, after the pension plan had been in existence for fifteen years, ERISA was passed. See Pub.L. No. 93-406, 88 Stat. 829. ERISA resulted from a Congressional finding that pension benefits promised to employees were not being adequately protected. See ERISA § 2(a). Congress created a sys *446 tem of tax incentives and penalties in order to ensure protection of these funds. Pursuant to ERISA, a form containing certain information about a pension plan must be filed annually with the IRS in order to qualify the fund for tax exemption under I.R.C. § 401(a). See IRS Form 5500. The plans at issue in this case submitted these forms for 1986,1987, and 1988.
An Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) audit for those three years revealed that the documents of the plans failed to meet the requirements of I.R.C. § 401(a) and found that the pension trust was not being operated in compliance with its plan. Consequently, the trustees paid over $450,000 in back taxes and then filed claims in federal court for refund, claiming entitlement to a tax exemption under various theories. All of those theories were eventually dismissed by the trustees’ stipulation, save one somewhat novel claim which was the object of the district court’s order and this appeal. The only question at issue in this case is whether the trusts, failing to meet ERISA standards, alternatively qualified for a tax exemption under I.R.C. § 501(c)(5) as “labor organizations.”
The District Court of Massachusetts rejected a magistrate judge’s recommendation that summary judgment be granted in favor of the trusts on this question, granting summary judgment in favor of the United States. This appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
An award of summary judgment is reviewed
de novo. See United Nat’l Ins. Co. v. Penuche’s, Inc.,
It is tautological that, when asked to interpret a statute, a court first looks to the text of that statute.
See Strickland v. Commissioner, Maine Dep’t of Human Services,
Thus, we begin our analysis with I.R.C. § 501(c)(5), which provides a tax exemption for “labor organizations.” However, this term is not defined in the statute.
1
Fur
*447
thermore, the legislative history regarding this provision offers no insights into whether a pension trust established pursuant to collective bargaining and controlled jointly by the union and the employers was meant to be exempt from taxation.
See Stichting Pensioenfonds Voor de Gezondheid v. United States,
We next turn to the Treasury Department’s Regulations that have been adopted in order to elaborate upon the definition of the term “labor organization” in 501(c)(5). These regulations provide as follows:
The organizations contemplated by section 501(e)(5) as entitled to exemption from income taxation are those which:
(1) Have no net earnings inuring to the benefit of any member, and
(2) Have as their objects the betterment of the conditions of those engaged in such pursuits [i.e., labor], the improvement of the grade of their products, and the development of a higher degree of efficiency in their respective occupations.
26 C.F.R. § 1.501(e)(5)-l(a) (1997). If these regulations were applied consistently by the IRS, this case could be decided on the definition provided therein. Clearly the pension funds do not improve the grade of the workers’ products or develop a higher degree of efficiency in the plumbing and pipefitting professions. However, while we accord due deference to all reasonable agency interpretations of a statute,
see Strickland,
In its Revenue Rulings, the IRS has held that “[a]n organization which is engaged in activities appropriate to a labor union, even though technically not a labor union itself, may qualify for exemption under § 501(c)(5).” Rev. Rul. 75-473, 1975-
The trustees urge this court to consider General Counsel Memoranda (“GCMs”) in order to establish that, pursuant to § 501(c)(5), the IRS has exempted entities similar to the plan trusts. GCMs are legal memoranda from the Office of Chief Counsel to the IRS prepared in response to a formal request for legal advice from the Assistant Commissioner (Technical).
See Taxation With Representation Fund v. Internal Revenue Service,
However, under the Treasury Regulations, GCMs do not establish precedent, and taxpayers cannot cite GCMs as authority against the United States in litigation.
See
26 C.F.R. § 1.6661-3(b)(2)(1997)(unlike Revenue Rulings, GCMs are not “authority”). This is precisely what the trustees seek to do. GCMs may be looked to as a research tool by any interested court or party, but they are not authority in this court.
See Stichting,
Finding no definitive resolution of this issue in the text or history of § 501(c)(5), the Treasury Regulations, or precedential Revenue Rulings, we look at congressional treatment of jointly-controlled pension funds under other Internal Revenue Code provisions *449 to see if the trustees’ interpretation of the 501(c)(5) exemption is consistent with pronouncements about the taxation and regulation of such funds. Unfortunately for the taxpayers in this case, it is not.
In the Revenue Act of 1962, Pub.L. No. 87-834, § 25, 76 Stat. 960, Congress enacted a provision that allowed a particular pension plan to qualify retroactively under § 401(a). In so doing, the Senate Finance Committee stated that “[u]nder present law, a pension trust is qualified for income tax exemption only if it meets certain requirements relating to coverage of employees and nondiscrimination of contributions or benefits.” S.Rep. No. 87-1881, at 300,
reprinted in
1962-
Congress again spoke on this issue when enacting ERISA. The House Ways and Means Committee explained that employer-provided plans are “required to comply with the new coverage, vesting, and funding standards in order to qualify for the favored tax treatment [i.e. tax exemption] under the Internal Revenue Code.” H.R. Rep. No. 93-807 at 3, 31, reprinted in 1974-3 C.B. (Supp.) 238, 266. At the very least, these statements reveal that Congress was not anticipating a section 501(e)(5) “end run” around § 401(a)’s requirements for employer-provided pension funds. At most, these statements imply an affirmative intent to exclude these plans from the 501(c)(5) exemption.
Furthermore, IRC sections 413 and 414 specifically include multiemployer-funded pension plans established pursuant to collective bargaining agreements as entities covered under the ERISA regulation. It is hard to imagine that Congress would have painstakingly designed ERISA, choosing to use a conditional tax exemption as the primary incentive to ensure compliance, and at the same time would offer tax exemptions to all jointly controlled pension plans as “labor organizations” under § 501(c)(5). As the Supreme Court has stated, federal courts are “reluctant to tamper with an enforcement scheme crafted with such evident care as the one in ERISA” and we see no need to do so here.
Massachusetts Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Russell,
Presented with no authority which clearly establishes an exemption under 501(c)(5) for the plan trusts at issue, and recognizing that such an interpretation would be at odds with, if not directly contrary to, the statements Congress has made regarding the proper taxation of such entities, we conclude that the trustees have failed to “unambiguously” establish their entitlement to a tax exemption.
See also Stichting,
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated herein, the order of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. Courts routinely look to other statutes when construing a particular statutory term,
see Friends of the Boundary Waters Wilderness v. Robertson,
. In
Stichting,
the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit recently addressed the same question posed here; i.e., whether a jointly-controlled employer-funded pension fund was exempt from taxation under § 501(c)(5) of the Internal Revenue Code. The court concluded that the plaintiff failed to unambiguously establish that such funds were "labor organizations” according to the Code.
. The United States argues that the congressional debates of 1909 do hint at a desire to exempt only representational entities under § 501(c)(5). However, the history does not reveal an "unmistakable expression of congressional intent” on this point.
See Strickland,
. In awarding summary judgment to the United States in
Stichting,
the D.C. District Court recognized a pattern in Revenue Rulings whereby nonrepresentational entities which were not controlled by unions were not exempted under 501(c)(5).
See Stichting Pensioenfonds Voor de Gezondheid v. United States,
. In
Morganbesser v. United States,
. It is worth noting that the Treasury Department Regulations have been amended for taxable periods ending on or after December 21, 1995 to clarify the meaning of "labor organization" under § 501(c)(5). See 62 Fed.Reg. 40,447, 40,449 (1997) (adding 26 C.F.R. § 1.501(c)(5)-l(b)(l)). Under the new regulations, pension funds like the one before the Court are explicitly excluded from the exemption. Thus, the primary dispute in Stichting, Morganbesser, and the present case is definitively resolved for taxable periods ending on or after December 21, 1995.
