The eternal tension between form and substance is the topic of this tax appeal. In
Glass v. Commissioner,
To understand the legal issues, one must understand the transactions. (For background see Black & Scholes, The Pricing of Options and Corporate Liabilities, 81 J.Pol.Econ. 637 (1973); Black, Fact and Fantasy in the Use of Options, 31 Fin.Analysts J., July-August 1975, at 36.) A call option is a right, for a limited time, to buy a commodity at the price fixed in the option (the “strike price”). In the first stagé of the transactions involved in this case, the investor sold an option, receiving as consideration what is called a premium; it is the price of the option, as distinct from the strike price. The sale (or, as it is sometimes called, the grant) of an option is a *496 risky business. If the price of the commodity risés above the strike price, the buyer will exercise the option and the seller will be out the difference between the market price and the strike price, minus the premium. If the price of the commodity declines or stays the same, or even if it rises but not above the strike price, the option will not be exercised and the seller of the option will therefore profit to the full extent of the premium.
The seller can limit his risk. See
Taman v. Bache & Co. (Lebanon) S.A.L.,
The investor need not close out the transaction by exercising his option and waiting for the buyer to exercise his option, or by waiting for the options to expire. In the transactions in this case, shortly after the option straddle was put on it was closed out by the purchase and sale of identical offsetting positions. The investor was shown as buying an option for the same quantity, strike price, and delivery date as the option he had sold and as selling an option for the same quantity, strike price, and delivery date as the option he had bought, and these offsetting positions were cancelled on the books of the broker handling the transactions.
Why would anyone engage in such a roundabout transaction? The beginning and in this ease perhaps the end of the answer is that at the time these transactions occurred, the Treasury Department took the position that any loss incurred оn a granted option was a loss deductible from ordinary income, while any loss incurred on a purchased option was a capital loss; and so with the gains on these transactions. So if the premium that the investor paid to buy an option that would close out his granted option was greater than the premium he had received for the grant, the resulting loss was deductible from the investor’s ordinary income. This loss would imply a corresponding gain from granting an option to close out his purchased option, a gain resulting from the rise in the premium after the option straddle had been put on, and realized by closing the second “leg” of the straddle, the purchase leg. And this gain would be capital gain. Congress has since eliminated the disparate tax treatment of granted and purchased options. See 26 U.S.C.A. § 1234 (West Supp.1984).
The next step was to convert the short-term capital gain on the second “leg” of the straddle into a long-term capital gain in order to take advantage of the fact that long-term capital gains were at the time taxed at a lower rate than short-term capital gains (which were taxed as ordinary income); hence a deduction from ordinary income equal in amount to a capital gain would yield a net tax saving. This conversion was done as follows. At the same time that the option straddle was put on, a forward contract straddle was also put on. A forward contract is a contract to buy or sell goods for delivery in the future at a price fixed in the contract. (On the mechanics of forward and futures contracts see
United States v. Dial,
Well, what is wrong with all this? It is not clear that anything is wrong — so far. There is no rule against taking advantage of opportunities created by Congress or the Treasury Department for beating taxes. “Any one may so arrange his affairs that his taxes shall be as low as possible; he is not bound to choose that pattern which will best pay the Treasury; there is not even a patriotic duty to increase one’s taxes.”
Helvering v. Gregory,
Many transactions are largely or even entirely motivated by the desire to obtain a tax advantage. But there is a doctrine that a transaction utterly devoid of economic substance will not be allowed to confer such an advantage. In the
Gregory
case, cited above, the ownеr of a corporation that had certain assets which she wished to sell created a new corporation, transferred the assets in question from the old corporation to the new one, and three days later dissolved the new corporation, with the result that she received the assets as a liquidating dividend; she then sold them. She claimed that the transfer of the assets from the old to the new corporation was a “reorganization” within the meaning of the tax statute and that the liquidating dividend was therefore a distribution “in pursuance of a plan of reorganization.” If so, her gain from the sale of the assets would be taxable as a capital gain, whereas if the old corporation had distributed the assets to her directly, the distribution would have been a simple dividend, taxable to her as ordinary income in an amount equal to the full value of the assets. See Blum,
The Importance of Form in the Taxation of Corporate Transactions,
54 Taxes 613, 615-16 (1976). The Tax Court accepted Mrs. Gregory’s position but the Second Circuit reversed and was affirmed by the Supreme Court. In Judgе Hand’s words, “the transactions were no part of the conduct of the business of either or both companies; so viewed they were a sham, though all the proceedings had their usual effect.”
Gregory v. Helvering
is different from the myriad instances where the taxpayer times the sale of an asset to offset a capital gain or to take advantage of a capital loss. See, e.g.,
Doyle v. Commissioner,
In another well-known case the Second Circuit upheld the denial of an interest deduction where the taxpayer had “borrowed funds in order to engage in a transaction that has no substance or purpose aside from the taxpayer’s desire to obtain the tax benefit of an interest dеduction: and a good example of such purposeless activity is the borrowing of funds at 4% in order to purchase property that returns less than 2% and holds out no prospect of appreciation sufficient to counter the unfavorable interest rate differential.”
Goldstein v. Commissioner,
The economic substance doctrine is sharply criticized in Isenbergh,
Musings on Form and Substance in Taxation,
49 U.Chi.L.Rev. 859, 863-84 (1982). The author argues that not only the doctrine’s articulation (the focus of the criticism by Gunn,
Tax Avoidance,
76 Mich.L.Rev. 733 (1978)), but also the outcomes of such classic “form-substance” cases as
Gregory
and
Goldstein,
are incorrect — the consequence of judicial ambition or impatienсe. Yet in both cases
(Gregory
more clearly than Goldstein) the taxpayer was trying to take advantage of a loophole
inadvertently
created by the framers of the tax code; in closing such loopholes the courts could not rightly be accused of having disregarded congressional intent or overreached. Nor were they cases like
Crane v. Commissioner,
None of the cases cited so far involved the deduction of losses, which is governed by a provision of the Internal Revenue Code that expressly requires that the transactions giving rise to the losses have been “entered into for profit.” 26 U.S.C. § 165(c)(2). This provision can be viewed *499 as codifying the economic substance doctrine for loss deductions, thus placing it beyond the power of judicial reexamination -not that we are empowered to reexamine doctrines approved by the Supreme Court. A transaction not "entered into for profit" is, аt the least (a relevant qualification, as we shall see), a transaction that lacks economic substance. Its only rationale is tax avoidance.
The option transactions in this case as we have described them had economic substance, but the Tax Court did not commit a clear error in holding that as they actually occurred they lacked economic substance. (The question whether a particular transaction has economic substance, like other questions concerning the applicatiоn of a legal standard to transactions or events, is governed by the clearly erroneous standard. Levin v. Commissioner, supra,
Although such transactions have economic substance еven when the investor would not have engaged in them but for the tax advantages they offer, losses incurred in them are deductible from ordinary income oniy if they also satisfy the express statutory test applicable to loss deductions from ordinary income. The transactions must have been entered into "for profit," a term that has been interpreted to require that the "nontax profit motive predominates." Miller v. Commissioner,
The option straddle as we described it, in contrast to the option straddle in which the Tax Court found these taxpayers actually to have engaged, is a transaction combining market risks and tax opportunities. Consider just two possibilities. The first is that the price of the commodity doesn't change while the option granted by the investor is in force. As the expiration date draws nearer, the premium for an *500 identical option will fall since with eаch passing day the seller's risk (that price will soar) declines. If the investor tries to generate a loss on the sale leg of the straddle by closing that leg through the purchase of an option, he will fail because the premium he will pay will be lower than the premium he received on the grant of the option. He will have an ordinary-income gain on that leg, and a capital loss on the purchase leg. Even if he succeeds in generating a loss on the sale leg, he will fail to beat taxes if commodity prices don't rise in the period required to generate a long-term capital gain from the short-term capital gain produced by closing the purchase leg of the straddle through the grant of an option. There is thus a potential for market losses as well as tax losses, arising from the fact that the legs of the forward contract straddle are not closed out simultaneously. There is always market risk in a genuine option straddle, because the two legs have different delivery dates; and commodity price changes between those dates can make thе straddle a loser (or winner) quite apart from any tax consequences-which as we have said are uncertain.
But that is a genuine straddle; and here we have a fake straddle (or so the Tax Court found, and the finding is not clearly erroneous). Two senses of fake must be distinguished. In the simpler, there are no transactions. The broker simply scribbles prices in an account book which generate the desired pattern of losses and gains, and the investor reports these accordingly. Brown v. Commissioner,
The London Metal Exchange is (in sharp contrast to American commodity exchanges) essentially unregulated. Brokers can prеtty well do what they please-act as principals, not require margin, etc. A group of enterprising brokers on the London Metal Exchange decided to market to American taxpayers a scheme for taking advantage of the Internal Revenue Service's disparate treatment of granted and purchased options without subjecting the taxpayer to any of the uncertainties of commodities trading. They promised-explicitly in some instances, implicitly in others (but it doesn't matter which)-that they would arrange things so that the investor would obtain an ordinary-income loss and no capital gain in the first year and, provided commodity prices kept rising, as they were expected to do, a long-term capital gain in the second year. The brokers' compensation for this service was the deposit they required each investor to make; this they kept along with any trading profits accidentally obtained. If any trading losses were accidentally incurred (other than failure to obtain a long-term capital gain), the brokers would swallow them. As a result, the only money that ever passed between the parties was the deposit made by the investor with the broker. No money ever passed the other way-no margin calls were issued requiring the investor to supplement his initial deposit. The accounts were "zeroed out." The investor was at no risk. (The analogy to nonrecourse promissory notes as tax shelters, on which see,
*501
e.g., Saviano v. Commissioner,
The petitioners argue that "zeroing out" is consistent with investors' placing stop-loss orders. It is true that through such оrders a commodities investor can try to limit his risk of loss to the amount of money in his account. The tactic sometimes fails, because the broker may not be able to find anyone willing to buy at the stop-loss price. Cf. Bosco v. Serhant,
We noted earlier that if price is steady or falling, closing the sale (which is the ordinary-income) leg of an option straddle will not yield a loss. Yet although commodity prices weren't always rising during the relevant period, invariably the sale legs of the option straddles in these consolidated cases were closed at a loss. That made the government suspect that the brokers, taking advantage of the absence of government regulation, were not actually "laying off" the purchase and sale orders they were making on behalf of their American taxpayer customers, that is, finding people who would fulfill those orders, but were (in many though not all instances) just making scratches on their notepads. But it hardly matters. The brokers promised a tax benefit in exchange for the taxpayers' deposits and they delivered on their promise. They were not brokering options trades, because their customers were assuming none of the risks, upside or downside, of such trades. In an inversion of the old-fashioned practice of "tax farming," these brokers were selling tax deductions. Compare Mahoney v. Commissioner, supra,
We consider finally the bearing of section 108 of the Tax Reform Act of 1984, 26 U.S.C.A. § 1092 note (West Supp.1985), which expressly authorizes the deduction of a loss incurred in closing a position in a straddle, provided that "such position is part of a transaction entered into for profit." The precise scope of this provision for a time divided the circuits. Compare Miller v. Commissioner, supra,
AFFIRMED.
