The Commissioner of Internal Revenue (the “Commissioner”) appeals from the Tax Court’s grant of summary judgment to Telecommunications, Inc. (“TCI”), and its subsidiaries, and other affiliated corporations (collectively, “Taxpayers”). In the underlying lawsuit, Taxpayers brought an action in the Tax Court seeking a redetermination of deficiencies in income tax as calculated- by the Commissioner for taxable years 1978, 1979, 1980 and 1981. Taxpayers filed a motion for partial summary judgment arguing that pursuant to former section 334(b)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code (the “Code”) 1 the full amount of section 1245 depreciation recapture recognized upon the liquidation of a subsidiary should be used to determine the parent corporation’s basis in the assets received in the liquidation. The Tax Court held that the full amount of such depreciation recapture should be taken into account and granted Taxpayers’ motion for partial summary judgment. 2 We affirm.
I.
For purposes of the present appeal the facts are not in dispute. TCI is a cable television operator and the parent corporation of a consolidated group. In August 1980, one of TCI’s wholly owned subsidiaries, CTCI of Ohio, Inc. (“CTCIO”), purchased 100 percent of the stock of Wheeling Antenna Co. (‘Wheeling”) for cash in the amount of $12,600,000. Wheeling and its two wholly owned subsidiaries, Wellsburg Cable Company, Inc. (‘Wellsburg”) and Brooke Cable Company, Inc. (“Brooke”), were engaged in the cable television business in several states.
CTCIO acquired the Wheeling stock with the intent to liquidate Wheeling, Wellsburg, and Brooke in accordance with the provisions of section 334(b)(2) then in effect. On No *1231 vember 2, 1981, Wheeling liquidated Wells-burg and Brooke, and, in turn, Wheeling was liquidated by CTCIO. As a result of Wheeling’s liquidation, Wheeling was required, pursuant to section 1245 of the Code, to include an amount of depreciation recapture in its taxable income. CTCIO calculated the depreciation recapture to be $2,407,119. At the time Wheeling was liquidated, CTCIO had held the Wheeling stock for approximately 15 months.
Under section 334(b)(2), CTCIO treated its acquisition of the Wheeling stock and subsequent liquidation of Wheeling as a purchase of Wheeling’s assets. Pursuant to section 334(b)(2), CTCIO’s basis in the assets received from Wheeling in the liquidation was equal to the amount that CTCIO paid for the Wheeling stock, as adjusted pursuant to the applicable regulations. Treas. Reg. 1.334-l(e)(4)(v) requires an increase in stock basis equal to the amount of Wheeling’s earnings and profits for the interim period between the date that CTCIO acquired the Wheeling stock and the date that Wheeling was liquidated. See Treas. Reg. § 1.334r-l(c)(4)(v)(a)(2).
On their income tax return, Taxpayers computed the basis of the assets that CTCIO received upon the liquidation of Wheeling by including in Wheeling’s interim earnings and profits depreciation recapture in the amount of $2,407,119. This resulted in an increase of $2,407,119 to CTCIO’s basis in its Wheeling stock and a corresponding increase in the basis of the assets that CTCIO received upon the liquidation of Wheeling. The Commissioner determined that only depreciation recapture attributable to depreciation allowable after August 1980, or $286,030, was includa-ble in Wheeling’s interim earnings and profits for purposes of computing the upward adjustment in CTCIO’s adjusted basis in its Wheeling stock. Thus, the Commissioner reduced CTCIO’s basis in the assets it received on the liquidation of Wheeling.
Taxpayers disputed the Commissioner’s determination and filed a motion for partial summary judgment in the Tax Court below. Taxpayers’ motion presented the question whether, for purposes of determining CTCIO’s basis in the assets distributed to it upon the liquidation of Wheeling pursuant to section 334(b)(2) and Treas. Reg. 1.334-l(c)(4)(v)(a)(2), the full amount of depreciation recapture income recognized by Wheeling, pursuant to section 1245, should be included in .Wheeling’s “earnings and profits” for the period during which CTCIO held the Wheeling stock.
In the Tax Court, the Commissioner asserted that Treas. Reg. § 1.334-l(e)(4)(v) requires that stock basis be increased only for earnings and profits of a subsidiary during the interim period between acquisition of the stock of the subsidiary and its liquidation. The Commissioner argued, in her brief below, that this provision of the regulations should not be interpreted to allow an increase in interim earnings and profits attributable to the recapture of depreciation that was allowable to Wheeling prior to CTCIO’s acquisition of the Wheeling stock. The Commissioner further contended below that her construction of this provision “is more consistent with the purpose of the regulation than [the taxpayers’].” Resp. Reply Br. at 4. This contention was supported with a two page example demonstrating how the opposing constructions worked in practice. The Commissioner also “attach[ed] considerable significance to the fact that Treas. Reg. 1.334 — 1(c)(4) was promulgated in its present form in 1955, some seven years prior to the enactment of Section 1245.” Id. at 7.
The Tax Court rejected the Commissioner’s argument, noting that it had rejected precisely the same contention in two previous cases,
R.M. Smith, Inc. v. Commissioner,
In the instant case, the Commissioner “do[es] not concede the correctness of the [Tax C]ourt’s reasoning, [she] do[es] not contest that aspect of the Tax Court’s decision on this appeal.” Br. of Appellant at 18 n. 8. Rather, the sole basis of the Commissioner’s current appeal can be found in the penulti *1232 mate paragraph of brief she submitted to the Tax Court, 3 which paragraph states in its entirety:
In the alternative, respondent contends that earnings and profits for the interim period must be computed by using the so-called substituted basis rules found in Treas. Reg. 1.334-l(c)(4)(vi). Those regulations require that, for purposes of computing interim period earnings and profits, gain or loss from sales or exchanges of property held by the acquired corporation on the date, of purchase, as well as “any other items determined by reference to basis of such property” shall be computed by substituting for such basis a new basis equal to the portion of the adjusted basis of the acquired stock allocable to such property. Treas. Reg. 1.334-l(c)(4)(vi)(a). Section 1245 recapture income constitutes an item determined by reference to the basis of property held on the date of acquisition. The substituted basis rules require that property giving rise to depreciation recapture must receive a new, substituted basis at liquidation equal to its relative fair market value at acquisition. Application of the substituted basis rules, therefore, effectively eliminates pre-acquisition depreciation and, of necessity, Section 1245 recapture income.
Id. at 8-9. In one paragraph of an eleven page order, the Tax Court summarily rejected this passing contention and held that subdivision six applies only to property held by the subsidiary on the date its stock was purchased with respect to which a gain or loss “from sales or exchanges” has been incurred, and that the provision therefore had “no application to the instant case.”
II.
Summary judgment is appropriate where there is no genuine issue as to any material fact, See
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
We review the Tax Court’s summary judgment decision
de novo. See Housing Auth.v. United States,
III.
Generally, an appellate court will not consider an issue raised for the first time on appeal.
Tele-Communications, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
This rule is particularly apt when dealing with an appeal from a grant of summary judgment, because the material facts are not in dispute and the trial judge considers only opposing legal theories.
Anschutz Land and Livestock Co., Inc. v. Union Pac.
*1233
R.R. Co.,
IV.
In
Lyons,
we determined “what kind of specificity is required in the trial court in order to preserve an issue for appeal.”
There is no general rule regarding whether a party should be allowed to raise a question for the first time on appeal.
Singleton,
a bald-faced new issue ... [;] a situation where a litigant changes to a new theory on appeal that falls under the same general category as an argument presented at trial ... [;] a theory that was discussed in a vague and ambiguous way ... [;] issues that were raised and then abandoned pretrial ... [; and] an issue raised for the first time in an untimely motion.... These are all different aspects of the same principle that issues not passed upon below will not be considered on appeal. As such, they are governed by the same law.
Id.
Other circuit courts are in accord when presented with similar facts.
See, e.g., McCoy v. Massachusetts Inst. of Tech.,
In the present case, the Commissioner’s brief to the Tax Court contains only a single paragraph addressing the issue raised in this appeal. Only the final three sentences in this paragraph make any argument whatsoever. On appeal, this fleeting contention be *1234 comes ten pages of argument, replete with examples and citations to purportedly relevant legislative history, regulatory intent and case law, none of which was presented to the Tax Court below.
Furthermore, the cursory statement below fails to address the previous decision by the Tax Court in
R.M. Smith, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
[i]t should be apparent that the recapture provisions of section 1245 would have been applied no differently in this case had the subsidiary been liquidated immediately upon the acquisition of its stock by petitioner. Since the section 1245 recapture in this case is not affected by the delay in liquidation, there is no logical justification for claiming that the application of that section should bring into play the basis rules of section 1.334-l(c)(4)(vi), Income Tax Regs. That provision of the regulations is intended to equalize events which occur during the interim period by having all calculations made with reference to the same point in time — the date of the stock acquisition.
Id. at 327-28. In her opening brief on appeal to this Court, the Commissioner assails the reasoning of the Tax Court’s opinion in R.M. Smith. Appellant’s Opening Br. at 25. The Commissioner, however, never indicated to the Tax Court that she now views the substituted basis rules differently from the position she took in R.M. Smith. The perfunctory presentation of the substituted basis argument in the Tax Court deprived that court of the opportunity to analyze and rule on this issue now raised in detail for the first time on appeal.
We confronted similar circumstances in
United States v. Immordino,
While the Commissioner briefly stated an alternative theory in her brief to the Tax Court, she failed to develop that theory prior to this appeal. The Commissioner’s substituted basis argument is “a theory that was discussed in a vague and ambiguous way” below.
Lyons,
For the reasons set forth above, we uphold the Tax Court’s grant of partial summary judgment to TCI.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Unless • otherwise indicated all references in this opinion are to sections of the Code as in effect for the taxable years in issue here. Pursuant to the Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982 and the Tax Reform Act of 1986, section 334(b)(2) was amended in its entirety such that the language at issue in this appeal is no longer in effect.
. All remaining issues not addressed in the motion for partial summary judgment below were resolved by stipulation of the parties.
. In her opening brief on appeal, the Commissioner states that "[i]n the Tax Court, the Commissioner argued, inter alia, that the amount of depreciation recapture includable in Wheeling’s interim earnings and profits under subdivision five of the regulation must be computed using the substituted basis rules of subdivision six.” Appellant's Opening Br. at 17. The Commissioner then adds a footnote stating that she "also contended, in the alternative, that the phrase ‘earnings and profits' in subdivision five ... should be read to refer only to earnings and profits properly attributable to the interim peri-od_” Id. at 17 n. 8 (emphasis added). By referring to her previous argument in chief in a footnote, while advancing a new argument in chief in the text, the Commissioner does not fairly depict her prior position in this case.
