IRS stands down in research tax credit case

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Garden, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

IRS stands down in research tax credit case

The IRS has agreed not to contest a motion which would allow a company to exclude amounts accrued from controlled foreign subsidiaries (CFS) that were members of its controlled group in calculating its research credit.

The IRS has agreed not to contest a motion which would allow a company to exclude amounts accrued from controlled foreign subsidiaries (CFS) that were members of its controlled group in calculating its research credit.

Hewlett Packard, a US technology company, filed a motion in the Tax Court in the case of Hewlett-Packard Co v Commissioner, for summary judgment on the intercompany gross receipts issue. Although the IRS did not object to the characterisation of the CFS aspect of the issue, the agency is still opposed to the portion of HP's motion that relates to the definition of gross receipts, and specifically whether gross receipts should include dividends, interest, rents, royalties and other income.

Recently there has been significant litigation surrounding the computation of research credits. The courts are beginning to address the ambiguity in the statutory language of section 41 of the Internal Revenue Code, which governs issues pertaining to research credits.

In July 2010, the US District Court for the Southern District of Ohio ruled in favour of the taxpayer in Procter & Gamble Co. and Subsidiaries v United States, a case that stood for the proposition that all members of a controlled group should be conceived of as a single taxpayer when calculating the research credit.

Tax practitioners praised the outcome of the cases, and the willingness of courts to hear the arguments and issue rulings that will provide helpful guidance to taxpayers.

The IRS has also released settlement guidelines on research credit cases. The Appeals Office is continuing to coordinate the issue.

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

As recent surveys suggest a disconnect between AI adoption and employee engagement, the big four risk digging themselves into a strategic hole
Almost three-quarters of surveyed tax professionals are concerned about inaccurate AI outputs; in other news, Dentons hired a partner from CMS to lead its Belgian tax team
Long-running, high-value and complex enquiries are a significant reason for HM Revenue and Customs’s increased TP yield, experts suggest
Landmark legal updates in India have led companies to prioritise specialised tax advisers over accountants, ITR has found
Brazil’s shift to a nationwide consumption tax is more than conceptual; it fundamentally transforms municipal revenue, enforcement, and administrative disputes
While some advisers praised the ruling’s definition of a ‘voucher’ for VAT purposes, a UK partner said the case left unanswered questions
While pillar two has been enacted on paper in Brazil, companies are encountering a range of practical compliance issues, ITR has heard
Moore, founding partner of the Chicago tax boutique which bears her name, shares her career wisdom for ITR’s new Women in Tax interview series
But partners at the firm admit that jumping ship to the US would not be as easy as some believe
Governments are rewriting tax policy for the AI era, deploying digital taxes, tailored incentives and algorithmic enforcement that redefine where value is created
Gift this article