Legal
EXPERT GUEST ARTICLE: Withers On Japan's Supreme Court Guidance On Foreign Funds

Treatment of foreign-based investment funds and their tax arrangements has come up as an issue in Japan, following a recent significant ruling. Withers, the law firm, goes into the detail.
Japan is renowned for being a relatively difficult market for non-domestic businesses and that has traditionally applied to wealth management as well as certain other sectors. It is therefore of note that a top-level court in the country has recently given guidance on how to treat foreign funds, such as those registered in the Cayman Islands or Delaware, that are investing into the Asian country. The issues are, inevitably, complex.
The comments here come from Eric Roose of Withers, the international law firm. The editors are pleased to share these views with Withers’ permission and invite readers to respond.
Japanese Prime Minister Abe’s plan for economic growth and the selection of Tokyo as the site for the 2020 Summer Olympics have created strong demand for real estate in Japan, attracting billions of dollars of investment by global investors in the past few years.
Amongst those investors are global investment funds targeting real estate. Many such global funds use foreign limited partnerships established in the Cayman Islands and Delaware as their collective investment vehicle. In the absence of written guidance in the tax rules, Japanese tax practitioners have historically characterised foreign limited partnerships as transparent entities for income tax purposes.
However, a recent decision of the Japan Supreme Court rejected that view in the case of a Delaware limited partnership, holding that the entity should be considered a foreign corporation for Japan income tax purposes. The decision has significant tax consequences to foreign funds and their investors investing into Japan.
Global fund structures
Global investment funds investing in private equity and real
estate frequently establish their collective fund vehicles in the
legal form of limited partnerships in jurisdictions where
investors are most comfortable with the legal and regulatory
regimes. For US investors, Delaware is a popular choice for
establishing the fund's limited partnership. For non-US investors
(who are fearful of having a US tax nexus), Luxembourg and the
Cayman Islands are favoured jurisdictions. A common tax
characteristic of such collective investment vehicles is that
they do not pay income tax in the jurisdiction of their
formation, and are generally treated as pass-through entities by
the investor’s own tax jurisdictions. How the tax
jurisdiction the fund invests in characterises the fund
vehicle for purposes of domestic taxation is also of key
importance to the foreign investors.
If the investment jurisdiction views the fund vehicle as tax transparent, fund investors may find themselves with a permanent establishment in Japan. The tax treatment is also important to fund investors who wish to rely upon their own home jurisdiction tax treaties for capital gain exemptions and reduced withholding taxes.
Japan foreign entity classification rules
Japan tax law does not have a comprehensive body of foreign
entity tax classification rules. The National Tax Administration
has issued formal guidance on the classification of limited
liability companies established in the US, determining that such
LLCs are treated as foreign corporations for Japan income tax
purposes. However, there is no written guidance on the
classification of limited partnerships.
In the absence of guidance, the approach used by Japanese tax practitioners has been to analogise the legal rights and obligations of the partners under the foreign governing law to those of partners in a Japanese civil law partnership, known as a Ninen-Kumiai (NK).
The NK is treated as tax transparent for Japan tax purposes, with the partners subject to Japan income taxation on their respective share of profits and gains of the NK business. Under the Japan civil law, partners in an NK are liable for the debts and obligations of the NK business, legal title to assets acquired by the NK business are recorded in the names of the individual partners, and the NK is not able to bring legal action or be sued in its own name.
Under such approach, the practice in Japan has been to analogise foreign general partnerships, such as a Delaware general partnership, to an NK, comparing rights and obligations of the partners and characteristics under the law to the NK civil law. If the entity is sufficiently similar, the entity is generally treated as a pass-through for Japan income tax purposes. The same analytical approach has been used in the classification of foreign limited partnerships, with practitioners analogising the rights and obligations of the entity under local law to those of an NK versus a corporation under Japanese law.
That approach has historically led to the view by most Japan tax practitioners that a Delaware limited partnership, as well as limited partnerships established in the Cayman Islands and Bermuda, are treated as pass-through entities for Japan tax purposes.
Global funds using foreign limited partnerships as their collective investment vehicle have relied on the view that the foreign limited partners would be entitled to pass-through treatment for Japan tax purposes in making hundreds of billions of dollars of investments into Japan. The NTA seemed to not be interested in challenging that characterisation of the partnerships, in the context of foreign investment funds investing in Japan.
However, the view of the NTA towards such vehicles dramatically
changed when Japanese taxpayers began using foreign limited
partnerships as collective investment vehicles for the purpose of
making investments outside of Japan which generated tax losses
claimed by Japanese fund investors back home.
Japan tax shelter funds
In the early 2000s, funds marketed to wealthy Japanese
individuals (subject to income tax rates as high as 55 per cent)
began to attract the attention of the NTA. These funds invested
in foreign real estate which threw off tax losses created by
depreciation deductions (playing on the Japan tax rules allowance
of depreciation of used structures in as little as a few years).
Many of these funds invested in US real estate, and utilised
Delaware limited partnership as the form of collective investment
vehicle. Japanese investors in these funds began claiming losses
on their individual Japan income tax returns, leading the NTA to
challenge loss deductions. One theory used by the NTA to disallow
losses was that the foreign limited partnership is treated as a
corporation for Japan tax purposes, thereby precluding the
Japanese partner from claiming any losses on its individual
return.
Delaware limited partnership cases
Taxpayers began to litigate the NTA’s disallowance of their tax
losses in the courts throughout Japan, leading to a series of tax
cases tried in Tokyo, Nagoya, and Osaka courts examining the
Japan tax treatment of Delaware limited partnerships. The cases
ultimately resulted in the trial courts, and the intermediary
high courts reviewing those decisions on appeal, being split on
how they characterised the Delaware LP for Japan tax purposes.
The courts holding in favour of the taxpayer generally took the
view that under Delaware limited partnership law it was not clear
that a limited partnership should be considered to have the
status of a juridical person, and therefore should be treated as
tax transparent. A trial court in Nagoya decision that the
taxpayer’s claiming of losses was proper on the grounds that a
Delaware limited partnership should be treated as a pass-through
was upheld on appeal to the Nagoya High Court. The NTA appealed
that decision to the Supreme Court of Japan. In an eagerly
awaited decision, the Supreme Court overturned the Nagoya High
Court decision, holding that a Delaware limited partnership is
treated as a foreign corporation for Japan tax purposes.
The Court’s decision is significant for it not only overturns the historical long-held practice of treating a Delaware LP as a pass-through, but provides guidance on how other foreign entities are to be classified for Japan tax purposes. In testing whether a foreign entity should be treated as a foreign corporation for tax purposes, the Court stated that it was important to first determine whether the foreign entity under its own jurisdiction laws has the status of a “juridical person” equivalent to a corporation under Japanese laws. If it does, the Court held the entity should be treated as a foreign corporation for Japan tax purposes. However, if it is not clear under the foreign law that the entity is a juridical person, the Court instructed that the inquiry is to then focus on whether or not the entity, under the laws and legislative history of its own jurisdiction, has legal rights and obligations.
Upon examining the Delaware limited partnerships law the Court noted that it could not clearly conclude that a Delaware limited partnership had the status of a legal person equivalent to a Japanese corporation. The Court went on to examine what legal rights and obligations a limited partnership possesses under the Delaware Limited Partnership Act. Specifically citing Sections 17-106(b) and 17-701, the Court concluded that a limited partnership was entitled to legally and validly carry on business and act in its own name, and held that the entity should be treated as a foreign corporation for tax purposes.
Impact of decision on foreign investment
funds
A fund established as a Delaware LP investing in Japan is to
be treated as a corporation for Japan tax law purposes. That
treatment suggests that partners in such funds would not be
entitled to claim pass-through treatment with regard to home
country treaty benefits which would reduce its Japan taxation
burden. That is certainly true in the case of non-US taxpayer
partners (e.g., a Singapore investor in such a Delaware LP fund
would not be entitled to claim a reduced withholding tax rate
under the Japan - Singapore Double Tax Agreement).
However, US taxpayer partners should be entitled to claim benefits under the US – Japan Double Taxation Agreement (US-Japan treaty) as if the Delaware LP was treated as a pass-through for Japan tax purposes. In the case of the US-Japan treaty, article four states that an item of income derived from a contracting state through an entity that is organised in the other contracting state and treated as the income of the beneficiaries, members or participants of that entity under the tax laws of that other contracting state, shall be eligible for the benefits of the convention. As a Delaware limited partnership by default is treated as a partnership for US income tax purposes, US partners should be entitled to claim the benefits of the US – Japan treaty. The tax treaties between Japan and the UK and the Netherlands contain provisions similar to the US – Japan treaty. Thus, for example, if a Delaware LP is treated as a pass-through for UK tax purposes, it should be treated similarly for treaty purposes.
How a fund established as a Cayman limited partnership is treated for Japan tax purposes is an open legal question. Following the approach set out by the Supreme Court, the analysis suggests that a Cayman limited partnership should be treated as a pass-through for Japan tax purposes.The view that a Cayman limited partnership is treated as a pass-through for Japan tax purposes also finds support indirectly by reference to another tax shelter fund lower court decision involving a Bermuda limited partnership that was appealed to the Supreme Court by the NTA at the same time as the Delaware LP case. The Bermuda LP case involved another real estate tax shelter fund. In that case, the Japanese individual taxpayer won at the lower trial level and appellate courts, which led to an appeal by the NTA to the Supreme Court on the grounds that a Bermuda limited partnership should, like a Delaware LP, be treated as a corporation for Japan tax purposes.
The Supreme Court denied the NTA’s appeal, causing some commentators to interpret the rejection of the appeal as the Supreme Court agreeing with the lower court's decision. If that interpretation is correct, it is important to note that the Bermuda Limited Partnership Act (BLPA) is in many respects similar to the Cayman Limited Partnership Act.