AmerGen Energy Co. ex rel. Exelon Generation Co. v. United States
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Full Opinion
OPINION
The court now has before it Plaintiffs Motion to Compel Answers to Requests for Admission (Pl.âs Mot.), defendantâs response brief (Def.âs Opp.) and plaintiffs reply brief (Pl.âs Reply).
BACKGROUND
I. Relevant Facts
This is a readjustment of partnership items case under the Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982 (TEFRA), codified at 26 U.S.C. §§ 6221-6234 (2006). Plaintiff is AmerGen Energy Co., LLC (AmerGen), by and through Exelon Generation Co., LLC, AmerGenâs tax matters partner. AmerGen purchased three nuclear power plants and took over their operation in 1998-99.
II. Procedural History
Plaintiff filed its complaint on February 20, 2009. Discovery is underway, but disputes have arisen. The primary dispute before the court at this time concerns plaintiffs requests for admission regarding the PLRs issued to the sellers of the nuclear power plants. In essence, plaintiff asserts that these PLRs are relevant to the issue it must prove to win its case:
These Requests for Admission would demonstrate that the factual and related legal questions regarding whether the decommissioning liabilities at issue in this case were fixed and reasonably determinable at the time they were assumed by [plaintiff and] have already been determined [in the sellersâ PLRs], and would allow the Court to resolve on summary judgment the core legal issue in this case, which is whether [plaintiff] may include in its tax basis of each facility the nuclear decommissioning liability it assumed as part of the purchases, thus avoiding a trial and conserving judicial resources.
PLâs Mot. at 7. In plaintiffs view, the PLRs issued to the sellers of the nuclear power plants constitute evidence that the decommissioning liabilities assumed by plaintiff were fixed and reasonably determinable in amount at the time of the purchases. Id. at 18 (âThe United States has already decided [in the PLRs issued to the sellers] that the nuclear decommissioning liabilities that are at issue in this case are fixed and reasonably determinable.â).
[AJn investigation into the reasons why the IRS did or did not make certain statements in various private letter rulings, as well as any attempt now to interpret and understand the qualifications to those statements, and to compare the much more limited set of (untested) factual representations made to the IRS ten years ago to the actual, and much more complete, record that will be presented here, can have no bearing on the issues in this case.
Def.âs Opp. at 3. As to other requests for admission not related to the PLRs issued to the sellers, defendant argues that responding to those requests cannot proceed until more progress on discovery has been made. Id. at 3-4. Plaintiffs motion appears to address only the requests for admission related to the sellersâ PLRs, Pl.âs Mot. at 7-8, and does not clearly state a position as to other requests for admission.
DISCUSSION
I. Standard of Review
Rule 36 of the Rules of the United States Court of Federal Claims (RCFC) states that âLa] party may serve on any other party a written request to admit, for purposes of the pending action only, the truth of any matters within the scope of RCFC 26(b)(1) relating to: (A) facts, the application of law to fact, or opinions about either; and (B) the genuineness of any described documents.â
If a matter is not admitted, the answer must specifically deny it or state in detail why the answering party cannot truthfully admit or deny it. A denial must fairly respond to the substance of the matter; and when good faith requires that a party qualify an answer or deny only a part of a matter, the answer must specify the part admitted and qualify or deny the rest. The answering party may assert lack of knowledge or information as a reason for failing to admit or deny only if the party states that it has made reasonable inquiry and that the information it knows or can readily obtain is insufficient to enable it to admit or deny.
RCFC 36(a)(4). A party may also object to a request for admission, but â[tjhe grounds for objecting to a request must be stated. A party must not object solely on the ground that the request presents a genuine issue for trial.â RCFC 36(a)(5).
If the party requesting admissions is not satisfied with the answers or objections provided by the party served,
[tjhe requesting party may move to determine the sufficiency of an answer or objection. Unless the court finds an objection justified, it must order that an answer be served. On finding that an answer does not comply with this rule, the court may order either that the matter is admitted or that an amended answer be served.
RCFC 36(a)(6). Plaintiffs motion is brought under RCFC 36(a)(6), and although styled a motion to compel, is most accurately described as a motion challenging the sufficiency of defendantâs answers and objections to certain requests for admission.
As other courts have noted, the purpose of requests for admission is to eliminate issues over facts that are not in dispute, and to narrow issues to be tried before the court. See, e.g., Stockdale v. Stockdale, No. 4:08-CV-1773 CAS, 2009 WL 5217001, at *1 (E.D.Mo. Dec.30, 2009) (âRequests for admission are ... intended to save costs by establishing uncontested facts without the time, trouble and expense of proving these facts through discovery.â) (citation omitted). A distinction between requests for admission and discovery requests must be made however: ârequests for admission are not designed to obtain discovery of the existence of facts, but rather are intended to establish the admission of facts about which there is no real dispute.â Id. at *2. One ground, among many, that can justify an objection to a request for admission is that the request for admission seeks an admission that is irrelevant to the case being tried. See, e.g., Estate
II. Which Objections by Defendant Are Challenged by Plaintiff?
Plaintiff attached a copy of its First Requests for Admission to its motion, a document which apparently was served on defendant on February 3, 2010.
One such list of challenges, which apparently is meant to be comprehensive, cites defendantâs responses numbered 10-16, 18-22, 24-25, 27, 33-39, 41-45, 47-48, 50, 56-62, 64-68, 70-71, 73. Pl.âs Mot. at 1-2 (Motion Summary Pages). Another list references the same numbered responses, through a listing of ârelevantâ requests for admission submitted to defendant. Pl.âs Mot. at 7. On the same page, however, plaintiff references other requests for admission not implicated in the original list of challenges, requests for admission numbered 17 (included in requests â10-21â), 49, 63 and 74. Id. On the next page of plaintiffs motion, plaintiff references requests for admission numbered 28-29, 40, 46, 51-52, 69 and 75, none of which are implicated in plaintiffs original list of ehal-lenges. Id. at 8. In plaintiffs reply brief, in addition to some of defendantâs responses challenged in plaintiffs motion, plaintiff apparently challenges response numbered 23 (included in a citation to requests for admission â12 through 24â), which had heretofore not been referenced as an insufficient response by defendant. Pl.âs Reply at 17. After consulting plaintiffs motion and its reply brief, the court has no specific indication of defendantâs responses that are being challenged. A regrettable amount of judicial resources has been expended attempting to discern the scope of plaintiffs motion.
Despite these failings, three themes emerge from plaintiffs briefing of its motion. First, plaintiff apparently believes that various private letter rulings issued by the IRS to other taxpayers are relevant to this case. Second, plaintiff apparently believes that authenticating those PLRs, and getting admissions as to the truth of certain statements in those PLRs, is a proper use of RCFC 36(a). Third, plaintiff apparently believes that the IRS is free to divulge information contained in those PLRs and in underlying documents that defendant believes it cannot divulge. For these reasons, plaintiff asserts that defendantâs objections to most of its requests for admission are insufficient. Plaintiffâs arguments are not persuasive.
III. Relevance of Private Letter Rulings to This Case
The parties clearly disagree as to the relevance of a private letter ruling, issued by the IRS to one taxpayer, to the litigation of a different tax claim brought by another taxpayer. Plaintiffs argument is founded on assumptions that the court cannot endorse. First, plaintiff states that â[t]he Court of Federal Claims ... has ruled repeatedly that PLRs can be relevant to ongoing litigation, and many cases have explicitly considered PLRs as evidence.â Pl.âs Mot. at 8. This statement does not give a full picture of this courtâs, or other courtsâ, consideration of PLRs in tax cases.
Private letter rulings, like certain other written determinations issued by the IRS, âmay not be used or cited as precedent.â 26 U.S.C. § 6110(k)(3) (2006). Most courts, therefore, do not find private letter rulings, issued to other taxpayers, to be of prece-dential value in deciding the tax claims before them. See, e.g., Lucky Stores, Inc. & Subsidiaries v. Commâr, 153 F.3d 964, 966 n. 5 (9th Cir.1998) (âTaxpayers other than those to whom such rulings or memoranda were issued are not entitled to rely on them.â) (citations omitted); Liberty Nat. Bank & Trust Co. v. United States, 867 F.2d 302, 304-05 (6th Cir.1989) (noting that âprivate letter rulings are directed only to the taxpayer who requested the ruling [and] ... may not be used or cited to as precedentâ); David R. Webb Co. v. Commâr, 708 F.2d 1254, 1257 n. 1 (7th Cir.1983) (stating that âprivate letter rulings ... may not be used or cited as precedentâ) (citation omitted); Fla. Power & Light Co. v. United States, 56 Fed.Cl. 328, 332 (2003) (Florida Power I) (stating that âprivate letter rulings have no precedential value in that they do not represent the IRSâs position as to taxpayers generally and thus are irrelevant in the context of litigation brought by other taxpayersâ) (citations omitted), aff'd, 375 F.3d 1119 (Fed.Cir.2004) (Florida Power II); Abdel-Fattah v. Commâr, 134 T.C. No. 10, 2010 WL 1687673, at *8 (Apr. 27, 2010) (declining to consider private letter rulings offered by the plaintiff in support of his tax claim). But see Glass v. Commâr, 471 F.3d 698, 709 (6th Cir.2006) (acknowledging that under section â6110(k)(3), a Private Letter Ruling cannot be used as precedent,â but nonetheless commenting that âa recent Lprivate letter] ruling provides persuasive authority for refuting the Commissionerâs argumentâ in that case); Thom v. United States, 283 F.3d 939, 943 n. 6 (8th Cir.2002) (âAlthough private letter rulings have no precedential value and do not in any way bind this court, 26 U.S.C. § 6110(k)(3), we believe they are an instructive tool that we have at our disposal.â); ABC Rentals of San Antonio, Inc. v. Commâr, 142 F.3d 1200, 1207 n. 5 (10th Cir.1998) (âWhile private letter rulings are not binding authority, they may be cited as evidence of administrative interpretation.â) (citations omitted); Taproot Admin. Servs., Inc. v. Commâr, 133 T.C. 202, 237 n. 10, 2009 WL 3098090- (2009) (permitting the submission of a âprivate letter ruling as evidence of the practice of the Commissionerâ). This court in Vons Cos. v. United States, 51 Fed. Cl. 1 (2001) (Vons I), modified in pari by Vons Cos. v. United States, No. 00-234T, 2001 WL 1555306 (Fed.Cl. Nov.30, 2001), examined section 6110(k)(3) and relevant case-law and noted that the use of PLRs in tax litigation is limited.
The Vons I court provided an excellent summary of relevant caselaw regarding
Private letter rulings and technical advice memoranda, in accordance with section 6110(k)(3) of the Code, may not be used or cited in any precedential way and thus, a fortiori, may not be used to support, in any fashion, an argument that one interpretation of the Code is more authoritative than another. Rather, such rulings and memo-randa may be relied upon not for their substance, but only as indication: (i) of the IRSâ administrative practice (i.e., that it has issued rulings regarding a particular subject); or (ii) that, under the IBM decision, the Commissioner has abused his discretion under [26 U.S.C. § 7805(b) (2006) ] in issuing different rulings to two directly competing taxpayers. More extensive use or citation of such rulings not only flatly ignores the plain language of section 6110(k)(3), but also threatens the careful compromise struck by the Congress in enacting that section-one that recognizes the functional relationship between allowing the IRS to use a streamlined review process to issue such rulings and memoranda on a relatively expedited basis in exchange for assurances that those documents will have no precedential impact except as to the taxpayers to which they are issued.
Vons I, 51 Fed.Cl. at 12 (citing Intâl Bus. Machs. Corp. v. United States, 170 Ct.Cl. 357, 343 F.2d 914 (1965) (IBM)). To summarize the impermissible uses of PLRs identified in Vons I, which are really variations on a single theme, PLRs cannot be used or cited as precedent; they cannot be used to advance a particular interpretation of the Internal Revenue Code (I.R.C. or Code); and they cannot be used âfor their substance.â Id. For the sake of simplicity, the court refers to such impermissible uses of PLRs as the use of PLRs as precedent. To summarize the permissible uses of PLRs identified in Vons I, PLRs may be used as evidence of the administrative practice of the IRS, and may, in certain instances, be used in abuse of discretion cases governed by IBM.
Assuming that the court understands plaintiffs arguments, plaintiff does not seek to use the private letter rulings in question to establish the administrative practice of the IRS, one of two permissible uses of PLRs.
B. Private Letter Rulings Cannot Be Used as Precedent in This Case
Plaintiffs motion could be read as an attempt to present a case for using certain private letter rulings as precedent, although plaintiff disavows such an intent. See Pl.âs Reply at 9 (asserting that plaintiff âhas not cited the PLRs as legal precedentâ). Plaintiff justifies its requests for admission by citing âat least 47 PLRs,â and asserts that every PLR cited found nuclear power plant decommissioning liabilities to be fixed and reasonably determinable at the time of sale. Pl.âs Mot. at 4-6. Plaintiff suggests that the PLRs âwould allow the court to resolve the
C. The PLRs Are Not Evidence Relevant to This Case
1. IBM
Plaintiff strives mightily to squeeze this case into the factual pattern provided by IBM. Pl.âs Mot. at 19 (â[Plaintiff] is in the same position as IBM.â). To the extent that IBM survives as precedent binding on this court, see Florida Power II, 375 F.3d at 1124-25 & n. 10 (limiting the holding in IBM to its facts, and noting, but not deciding, the question of whether IBM had been âeffectively overruledâ by Dickman v. Commâr, 465 U.S. 330, 343, 104 S.Ct. 1086, 79 L.Ed.2d 343 (1984)), the facts of this case do not resemble IBM and IBM is thus of no avail to plaintiff. IBM concerned fundamental inequities in the conduct of the IRS toward two competing sellers of large computers. One corporation was relieved of excise taxes on the large computers it sold for six and a half years, whereas IBM was required to pay such taxes for the same period, despite having sought a favorable private letter ruling relieving it of the excise tax within a few months of the issuance of such a letter to its competitor. 343 F.2d at 915-17. There was no dispute that the I.R.C. required the payment of the excise taxes in question. Id. at 917.
The issue before the Court of Claims was whether the competitor should reap the comparative advantages of an erroneous private letter ruling along with the IRS delays that prevented IBM from obtaining a similar ruling, so that the competitorâs excise tax liability was applied only prospectively, while IBM had to suffer the comparative disadvantages of a retroactive application of its excise tax liability. In those circumstances, the court stated that âLejquality of treatment is so dominant in our understanding of justice that discretion [to apply tax liabilities retroactively], where it is allowed a role, must pay the strictest heed.â Id. at 920. The IBM court held that it was an abuse of discretion to thus favor the competitor over IBM, and that the provision of the I.R.C. that allowed retroactive application of the tax laws, 26 U.S.C. § 7805(b), did not permit such unfettered discretion. 343 F.2d at 920 (stating that the IRS âdoes not have carte blancheâ). In the IBM case, the Court of Claims found âa manifest and unjustifiable discrimination against the taxpayerâ and ordered the IRS to refund IBMâs excise taxes for the relevant period. Id. at 923, 925.
To summarize IBM, then, a taxpayer plaintiff who (1) learns of a favorable private letter ruling issued to its direct competitor, (2) promptly attempts to secure a similar letter, (3) encounters significant delay in obtaining a ruling from the IRS, (4) pays taxes for a lengthy period during which time its competitor is relieved from paying the same taxes due to an erroneous private letter ruling, (5) sues once that competitorâs favorable ruling has been revoked only prospectively whereas its own tax liability has been applied retroactively, would likely be able to show that the IRS abused its discretion under I.R.C. § 7805(b). Cf. Florida Power II, 375 F.3d at 1124-25 & n. 12 (recounting most of these facts, and noting in particular the delays encountered by IBM in obtaining its private letter ruling). Here, there is no allegation that the private letter rulings issued to the sellers of the nuclear power plants were erroneous (indeed, they are reputed to be just the opposite), or that unfair retroae-
2. Oshkosh
Plaintiff also relies extensively on Oshkosh Truck Corp. v. United States, 123 F.3d 1477 (Fed.Cir.1997). Plaintiff quotes this statement from Oshkosh: â[U]nless there is a rational reason for different treatment, similarly-situated taxpayers should be treated similarly.â Id. at 1481. Oshkosh concerned the unfavorable tax treatment of Oshkoshâs sales of trucks to the government, when the sales of certain trucks and trailers by other manufacturers received more favorable tax treatment. The United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit held that the IRS abused its discretion by applying its own regulations differently to similarly-situated taxpayers. Id.
Although the cited comment in Oshkosh implies that inconsistent rulings issued to similarly-situated taxpayers might be additional grounds for overturning an IRS ruling on tax liability in some circumstances, Oshkosh should not be read too broadly. The result in Oshkosh restrained the Department of the Treasury from frustrating the intent of Congress, as that intent was expressed in one section of the Code. 123 F.3d at 1481. A Treasury regulation had exempted certain sales from the increased taxes imposed in that code section. Because the sales by Oshkosh âdid not involve the problem that Congress intended to reachâ with the increased taxes required by that code section, the exemption of other manufacturersâ sales, but not Oshkoshâs sales, was arbitrary and unsupportable. Id. The lesson of Oshkosh is that âdrawing an arbitrary distinction between similarly-situated taxpayersâ may not survive judicial review, Florida Power II, 375 F.3d at 1125 n. 13, if the distinction is not supported by the Code. Oshkosh nowhere discusses private letter rulings, and cannot be interpreted to support plaintiffs motion.
Plaintiff interprets Oshkosh as placing a general ban on inconsistent rulings in similar cases, and states that it âis entitled to explore the possibility that it is being subjected to unequal treatment.â Plâs Reply at 12; see also Pl.âs Mot. at 18 (citing Computer Scis. Corp. v. United States, 50 Fed.Cl. 388 (2001) (Computer Sciences), for the proposition that âit [iJs improper for the IRS to treat similarly-situated taxpayers differently without a rational basis for the differenceâ). As this court said in Vons I, however, âthe manifest weight of precedent rejects a âleast common denominatorâ notion of federal taxation, in which the law that the Congress actually enacts can be short-circuited and disregarded any time the IRS has afforded a single taxpayer or even a group of taxpayers treatment more favorable than the law provides.â 51 Fed.Cl. at 10 n. 10. If plaintiff is entitled to the tax treatment it requests in this suit, that entitlement will come from the Code, not from a comparison with private letter rulings issued by the IRS. See Oshkosh, 123 F.3d at 1481 (rejecting the governmentâs position because its interpretation of the relevant tax provision was inconsistent with the intent of Congress). If plaintiff is not entitled to the tax treatment it requests, a comparison with PLRs, correct or erroneous, is irrelevant. See Vons II, 55 Fed.Cl. at 718 (noting that ânothing prevent[s] the IRS from âchangingâ its position, provided that its ânewâ view is supported by the [relevant taxj statuteâ); see also Def.âs Opp. at 9-10 (citing cases disregarding PLRs as precedent). Plaintiffs reliance on Oshkosh does not further its contention that PLRs are relevant to this case.
Plaintiff also suggests that âthe PLRs [cited by plaintiff] are likely binding on Defendant in this action.â PLâs Mot. at 8. This statement is not supported by the weight of authority consulted by the court.
Plaintiff relies, in support of its contention that defendant is bound by PLRs issued to other taxpayers, on decisions by this court which rely on IBM and Oshkosh. See Pl.âs Mot. at 18 (citing Computer Sciences, 50 Fed.Cl. at 388; Bunce v. United States, 28 Fed.Cl. 500, 509 (1993), aff'd, 26 F.3d 138, 1994 WL 118048 (Fed.Cir.1994) (table)). The court notes that decisions in other cases before this court are not binding in this proceeding. See W. Coast Gen. Corp. v. Dalton, 39 F.3d 312, 315 (Fed.Cir.1994) (âCourt of Federal Claims decisions, while persuasive, do not set binding precedent for separate and distinct cases in that court.â) (citations omitted). To the extent that plaintiffs reading of Computer Sciences asserts that defendant is bound by PLRs issued to other taxpayers, this court agrees with the Vons I court that such a reading goes against binding precedent. See Vons I, 51 Fed.Cl. at 10 n. 10. Bunce, on the other hand, discussed IBM only in the particular context of the IRSâs discretion in reaching settlements with taxpayers, and has no applicability to the facts of this case. Thus, plaintiff, despite its citations to Computer Sciences and Bunce, has not overcome strong contrary authority in Florida Power I, Vons I and Vons II which indicates that the government is not bound in this case by PLRs issued to other taxpayers.
The only other case extensively cited by plaintiff is Corelli v. Commâr, 66 T.C. 220, 1976 WL 3603 (1976). Pl.âs Mot. at 11, 18; Pl.âs Reply at 4-8. Corelli is cited by plaintiff as support for the proposition that the sellersâ PLRs are relevant to this case, and for the proposition that the government is bound by the sellersâ PLRs. Corelli also held that requests for admission concerning a PLR issued to another taxpayer must be answered by the IRS. Because Corelli is often cited by plaintiff, the court has examined this case for its persuasive value. See, e.g., Southland Royalty Co. v. United States, 22 Cl.Ct. 525, 530 (1991) (âAlthough Tax Court decisions are not binding on [this] Court, the court will follow these decisions if the underlying rationale is persuasive.â) (citation omitted).
The court notes first that no other court has relied upon Corelli to hold that PLRs are relevant or binding, or that requests for admission regarding PLRs must be answered by the IRS. In fact, Corelli has been cited only once by a court, as support for this phrase: âeven if the private letter rulings [sought by the petitioner in that case] can be viewed as potentially relevant.â Davis v.
Mr. Corelli sought discovery and admissions related to a private letter ruling issued to another taxpayer as part of his defense against a negligence penalty for underpayment of income taxes. Corelli, 66 T.C. at 221. The private letter ruling was issued to an accounting firm, and discussed the contractual relationships between Mr. Corelli, the Metropolitan Opera, and foreign corporations which appear to have been agents or impresarios arranging for Mr. Corelli to perform âpersonal servicesâ for the Metropolitan Opera.
The unique facts of Corelli might present some corollaries if this were a case of negligence penalties that might or might not be justified, depending on the contents and circumstances of a private letter ruling issued to one of the parties to an employment arrangement. As it is, however, Mr. Corelliâs circumstances are distinguishable from this case, and, in any event, Corelli does not provide persuasive authority as to the relevance or binding nature of the sellersâ PLRs in this action. For these reasons, the court rejects plaintiffs reliance on Corelli, for any purpose, including its ruling compelling the IRS to answer requests for admission regarding a PLR issued to another taxpayer.
4. Plaintiffâs Status, as an Interested Party or as a Buyer, Does Not Render the PLRs Relevant
Plaintiff argues that its status as an interested party in the transactions that were the subject of the PLRs somehow makes those PLRs relevant to its tax claims in this suit. Pl.âs Mot. at 16; Pl.âs Reply at 10. Plaintiff relies solely on private letter rulings, issued in entirely different contexts, as support for this contention. As stated supra, private letter rulings are not precedential and this court accords them no precedential weight. Furthermore, plaintiff has not convinced the court that its status as an interested party in other taxpayersâ requests for PLRs renders the PLRs issued to those taxpayers relevant to this case.
Plaintiff next contends that â[sjection 6110(k)(3) does not bar reliance on a PLR by a taxpayer whose tax liability is directly involved in a ruling.â Pl.âs Reply at 8. In essence, plaintiff argues that AmerGenâs status as the buyer of nuclear power plants renders the PLRs issued to the sellers of those nuclear power plants relevant, because the sellersâ PLRs implicate the transaction involving AmerGen. Pl.âs Mot. at 12-13, 18-19; Pl.âs Reply at 8. Plaintiff relies on a variety of authorities for this proposition, none of which are binding on this court and all of which appear to be distinguishable on their facts. None of these eases persuades the court that the PLRs in question have any relevance to the issues to be decided in this case. Those PLRs cannot, in these circumstances and under binding precedent, determine the result in this case and are thus irrelevant. See, e.g., Florida Power I, 56 Fed.Cl. at 334 (stating that âplaintiff cannot claim entitlement to a particular tax treatment on the basis of a ruling issued to another taxpayerâ (citing Hanover Bank, 369 U.S. at 686, 82 S.Ct. 1080)).
IV. Proper Use of Requests for Admission
The court has found that the facts of this case are not within the factual bounds of the ruling in IBM. In addition, the court has found that the PLRs issued to the sellers of the nuclear power plants are irrelevant to the subject matter. In these circumstances, it is clear that requests for admission related to the sellersâ PLRs are objectionable. See,