Nestlé Holdings, Inc. (“Nestlé”) appeals from the Tax Court’s determination of tax deficiencies. See Nestlé Holdings, Inc. v. Commissioner,
Nestlé petitioned the Tax Court for review of the Commissioner’s determination. However, the Tax Court largely adopted the Commissioner’s valuations and concluded that Nestlé had realized a capital gain. Nes-tlé appeals. We agree that Nestlé realized a capital gain but reject the Tax Court’s relief-from-royalty method of determining the fair market value of Nestlé’s trademarks.
BACKGROUND
This dispute arises from a tender offer by Nestlé for the stock of Carnation Company. Nestlé’s initial plan was to finance its acquisition of Carnation with a capital contribution of $525 million from NSA and a $2.5 billion loan from outside sources. Ultimately, this plan was revised, and the acquisition was financed by commercial loans of $1.6 billion and related-party loans of $1.325 billion. NSA provided some of these related-party loans but made no capital contributions to Nestlé. The tender offer succeeded and, in January 1985, Carnation became a consolidated subsidiary of Nestlé. After the acquisition, Nestlé made requisite interest and principal payments to the related parties and deducted the interest payments as expenses on its tax returns.
As a result of the acquisition, Nestlé became the owner of Carnation’s intangible assets. Because NSA’s policy was for it to own all of the trademarks and trade names used by Nestlé companies, Nestlé
• On its 1985 tax return, Nestlé declared that the sale of the intangibles had caused it to realize a capital loss of $10,206,300.
The Commissioner challenged this claimed capital loss. In particular, the Commissioner disputed Nestlé’s valuation of the acquired intangible assets. The Commissioner ultimately valued Carnation’s trademarks and trade names at $150,300,000 and its technology at $21,204,000 but agreed to the valuation of Carnation’s patents at $4,612,000. The Commissioner assigned Nestlé’s acquired intangibles an aggregate basis of $163,556,000.
Nestlé petitioned the Tax Court for a rede-termination of its deficiency. Nestlé first argued that, as a matter of law, it had not realized a capital gain on the sale but rather had received a capital contribution from NSA. According to Nestlé, when a related party pays more or less than fair market value for an asset, the excess or shortfall is attributable to the parties’ relationship and should be reclassified accordingly. In this case, the 'relationship between the parties was that of shareholder-corporation, so the excess over fair market value NSA had paid to Nestlé was, under .this argument, a capital contribution. The Tax Court rejected this argument, holding that allowing the excess purchase price to be treated as a capital contribution would impermissibly “allow petitioner retroactively to convert debt into equity, without any adverse tax consequences.” Nestlé,
Nestlé next argued that, even if there were a capital gain, the Commissioner had overestimated the tax deficiency by undervaluing the fair market value of the trademarks and trade names that Nestlé had sold to NSA and thus understating their basis. Nestlé introduced expert testimony that the fair market value of the trademarks and trade names was really $346,000,000. At this point, the Commissioner abandoned her earlier negative adjustment of the intangibles’ basis, see Note 3, supra, and introduced evidence that the fair market value and basis of the trademarks and trade names was only $146,100,000.
The Tax Court first found that Nestlé was not entitled to claim a second-tier step-up in basis. See id.
On appeal, Nestlé does not dispute the Tax Court’s finding that it was not entitled to claim a second-tier step-up in basis. All parties therefore agree that the basis in the intangibles should have been their fair market value. However, Nestlé challenges two aspects of the Tax Court’s opinion. First, it contends that the Tax Court failed to recognize that, as a matter of law, any excess over fair market value received on the sale of the intangibles was a capital. contribution by NSA, not a capital gain by Nestlé. Second, it contests the fair market value, and thus the basis, assigned by the Tax Court to the intangibles. The Commissioner cross-appeals from the Tax Court’s characterization of NSA’s loan to Nestlé as bona fide, an issue that arises only in the event we hold that the cancellation of this debt was a capital contribution.
DISCUSSION
We review de novo questions 'of law concerning the tax consequences of Nestlé’s sale to NSA. See Follum v. Commissioner,
Nestlé claims that the excess of price over fair market value paid by NSA for the intangibles should be treated as a capital contribution. However, such treatment would constitute a retroactive change in the form of the transaction with NSA. When it initially structured this transaction, Nestlé believed that it would be able to step up the basis of the intangibles to an amount in excess of their fair market value, and then claim a capital loss on the sale to NSA. Now that the second-tier step-up has been denied — a decision that Nestlé does not challenge on appeal' — and it faces a capital gain, Nestlé seeks to recharacterize a portion of its transaction with NSA as a capital contribution.
Such a recharacterization is contrary to the rule that “a taxpayer is free to organize his affairs as he chooses, [but] once having done so, ... he must accept the tax consequences of his choice, whether contemplated or not.” Commissioner v. National Alfalfa Dehydrating & Milling Co.,
The chosen form of the transaction between Nestlé and NSA was a sale of assets. The Tax Court found that this choice of form was not a sham, and the Commissioner does not argue otherwise. Accordingly, because the NSA transaction was structured as a sale, any gain realized by Nestlé must be treated as a capital gain. See I.R.C. §§ 1001, 1221-22.
We therefore affirm the Tax Court’s characterization of any gain that Nestlé may have realized on the sale of its intangibles to NSA as a capital gain. In view of this disposition, we need not consider the cross-appeal and dismiss it as moot.
B. Valuation of Nestle’s Intangibles
The Tax Court found that Nestlé’s evidence concerning the fair market value of its trademarks was flawed and adopted the valuation proffered by the Commissioner’s expert. The expert estimated the fair market value of Nestlé’s acquired trademarks using the relief-from-royalty valuation method. Underlying this methodology is the view that the only value a purchaser of a mark receives is relief from paying a royalty for its use. Using this model, the fair market value of a trademark is derived by calculating the net present value of the stream of royalty payments from which the purchaser of a mark is
In our view, the relief-from-royalty method necessarily undervalues trademarks. The fair market value of a trademark is the price a willing purchaser would have paid a willing seller to buy the mark. See American Soc’y of Composers, Authors & Publishers v. Showtime/The Movie Channel, Inc.,
Royalty models are generally employed to estimate an infringer’s profit from its misuse of a patent or trademark. See generally 35 U.S.C. § 284; Panduit Corp. v. Stahlin Bros. Fibre Works, Inc., 575 F.2d 1152, 1157-58 (6th Cir.1978). Resort to a royalty model may seem appropriate in such cases because it estimates fairly the cost of using a trademark. But cf. Sands, Taylor & Wood v. Quaker Oats Co.,
However, use of a royalty model in the case of a sale is not appropriate because it is the fair market value of a trademark, not the cost of its use, that is at issue. A relief-from-royalty model fails to capture the value of all of the rights of ownership, such as the power to determine when and where a mark may be used, or moving a mark into or out of product lines. It does not even capture the economic benefit in excess of royalty payments that a licensee generally derives from using a mark. Ownership of a mark is more valuable than,a license because ownership carnes with it the power and incentive both to put the mark to its most valued use and to increase its value.- A licensee cannot put the mark to uses beyond- the temporal or other limitations of a license and has no reason to take steps to increase the value of a mark where the increased value will be realized by the owner. The Commissioner’s view, therefore, fundamentally misunderstands the nature of trademarks and the reasons why the law provides for exclusive rights of ownership in a mark. Given the shortcomings of the relief-from-royalty methodology, the Tax Court erred when it adopted the Commissioner’s trademark valuations. The Tax Court is instructed to examine alternate methods of determining the fair market value of the trademarks in question.
For these reasons, we vacate the Tax Court’s valuation of Nestlé’s trademarks and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion. We dismiss the cross-appeal as moot.
Notes
. The term “Nestlé” is used hereafter to refer to Nestle Holdings, Inc. and its consolidated subsidiaries, including Carnation.
. Nestlé deferred this loss pursuant to Section 267 of the Internal Revenue Code.
.This aggregate basis was lower than the aggregate fair market value of the assets due to a "negative basis adjustment” that was ultimately repudiated by the Commissioner.
. Nestlé asks us to infer from the rule that a constructive dividend is imposed on an owner of a corporation whenever it purchases a corporate asset for less than its fair market value, see Treas. Reg. § 1.301 — 1 (j), the converse rule that a corporate owner makes a capital contribution whenever it purchases a corporate asset for more than its fair market value. This inference, Nestlé argues, is consistent with the symmetrical tax treatment of non-fair-market-value sales of corporate assets to shareholders. In support of this inference, Nestlé relies on a number of cases and a proposed treasury regulation. See, e.g., Prop. Treas. Reg. § 1.1012-2, 51 Fed.Reg. 12022, 12046 (1986); Investors Diversified Servs., Inc. v. Commissioner,
In effect, Nestlé is arguing that an exception should be carved into the general rule that a taxpayer is bound by the chosen form of its transaction when such taxpayer is a corporation selling property to a shareholder at a price that exceeds the property's fair market value. Under the circumstances of this case, we decline to create such an exception to the long-standing rule established in National Alfalfa,
