Santander argued that, although its tax shelter lacked economic substance -- i.e., was bullshit -- it should be able to avoid the accuracy related penalty. Well, basically, the district court held that that argument too lacked substance -- was bullshit. The opinion is short and, I think, predictable, so I forego addressing it further.
However, the district court did include a quote from the Court of Appeals' decision that I had included in my prior write up but was in a larger quote so that I had not focused on it. The district court did focus on it as follows. This is the quote (cleaned up):
When a transaction is one designed to produce tax gains not real gains—such as when the challenged transaction has no prospect for pre-tax profit—then it is an act of tax evasion that, even if technically compliant, lies outside of the intent of the Tax Code and so lacks economic substance.The district corut did not quote the whole paragraph from the Court of Appeals which includes "tax evasion" twice, so I offer the whole paragraph (cleaned up):
The economic substance doctrine is centered on discerning whether the challenged transaction objectively lies outside the plain intent of the relevant statutory regime. A transaction fails the economic substance test if, though it actually occurred and technically complied with the tax code, it was merely a device to avoid tax liability. Courts may disregard the form of transactions that have no business purpose or economic substance beyond tax evasion. In other words, when a transaction is one designed to produce tax gains not real gains -- such as when the challenged transaction has no prospect for pre-tax profit -- then it is an act of tax evasion that, even if technically compliant, lies outside of the intent of the Tax Code and so lacks economic substance.Readers of this blog will recognize the term "tax evasion." At least in this blog and in other authorities on criminal tax matters, tax evasion is a term of art. Narrowly, it means the specific tax evasion crime in § 7201, but is often used to cover the panoply of tax crimes where tax was evaded (e.g., the Sentencing Guidelines require that for a tax loss as the first step in the sentencing calculation). But, the term usually does connote conduct that is criminal. See e.g., the Wikipedia entry for Tax Evasion, here.
Tax evasion is the illegal evasion of taxes by individuals, corporations, and trusts.I don't know whether that was the intent of the Court of Appeals. The Court does also use the word "avoid," so it may have not distinguished the two. I do note, however, that the Government apparently did not charge Santander with the crime of tax evasion or the civil fraud penalty, § 6663. But still, Santander chose to engage in a transaction without economic substance. Still, the 20% accuracy related penalty may not be that significant as the cost for Santander to play the audit lottery; it might have won the audit lottery and avoided both the tax and the penalty (and, of course, interest on both).
In contrast, tax avoidance is the legal use of tax laws to reduce one's tax burden
The docket entries in the case as of today are here (this includes only the entries in the last 90 days, specifically the opinion above, but does list the counsel involved).
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