Appellant Abbott Laboratories (“Abbott”) appeals from the dismissal of its suit in the United States Court of Federal Claims.
Abbott Labs. v. United States,
BACKGROUND
Generally, the government must assess any taxes owed within three years of the date the taxpayer filed its return. 26 U.S.C. § 6501(a). However, 26 U.S.C. § 6501(c)(4) permits the government and the taxpayer to agree to an extension of the assessment period. If the government receives the benefit of additional time in which to assess any taxes owed, under 26 U.S.C. § 6511(c)(1) the taxpayer receives six months from the end of the assessment period in which to file any claim for a refund.
At the time of the tax years at issue in this case (1987-89), certain provisions of the U.S. Code permitted a U.S. parent company to create a “foreign sales corporation,” or FSC (pronounced “fisc”), and by so doing exempt a portion of the parent company’s foreign sales income (about 65% of the FSC’s profits) from U.S. corporate income tax.
See
26 U.S.C. §§ 921-927 (repealed 2000). A FSC could be classified as a “buy/sell FSC,” meaning that the parent company sold product to the FSC for resale abroad, or a “commission FSC,” meaning that the parent paid a commission to the FSC when the FSC made a foreign sale.
See id.
§ 925;
Abbott Labs.,
In addition to the tax exemption benefit, the parent company (called the “related supplier”) and the FSC also had the option of choosing among various transfer pricing methods to select the one that would yield the largest tax exemption. 26 U.S.C. § 925(a). While the FSC and its related supplier selected a transfer pricing method prior to filing a tax return, in certain circumstances they could request a redeter-mination of tax liability after filing if they found that an alternative method would have been more beneficial. Temp. Treas. Reg. § 1.925(a)-lT(e)(4). It is the regulation authorizing this redetermination, Temporary Treasury Regulation § 1.925(a)-lT(e)(4), that is at the heart of the dispute in this case.
Abbott created a wholly owned commission FSC named Abbott Trading Company, Inc. (“ATCI”). Abbott and ATCI were “treated as separate taxpayers, filing separate returns.”
Abbott Labs.,
The government denied Abbott’s refund claim because although both Abbott and ATCI’s refund periods under § 6511 remained open, ATCI’s assessment period under § 6501 had long since expired. Thus, if the government processed and paid Abbott’s refund claim, it could not offset that refund by assessing and collecting additional tax revenues from ATCI. In its view, the government had authority to deny Abbott’s claim under Regulation § 1.925(a)-lT(e)(4). The relevant portion of Regulation § 1.925(a)lT(e)(4) reads:
[ 1] The FSC and its related supplier would ordinarily determine under section 925 and this section the transfer price or rental payment payable by the FSC or the commission payable to the FSC for a transaction before the FSC files its return for the taxable year of the transaction.... [4] In addition, a redetermination may be made by the FSC and related supplier if their taxable years are still open under the statute of limitations for making claims for refund under section 6511 if they determine that a different transfer pricing method may be more beneficial.... [6] Any re-determination shall affect both the FSC and the related supplier.
Temp. Treas. Reg. § 1.925(a)-lT(e)(4) (emphasis and bracketed numerals added). At issue here is the sixth sentence, which the government relied upon in denying Abbott’s claim. The government interpreted that sentence to require that the § 6501 assessment period must be open for both Abbott and ATCI, since “[t]he inability to assess a deficiency against either FSC or related supplier, as the offset to the claim for refund, clearly prevents the redetermination from ‘affecting’ both parties.”
Abbott then took its request for a refund to the Court of Federal Claims. The court ultimately denied Abbott’s motion for partial summary judgment and granted the government’s motion for summary judgment, concluding that “amended returns reflecting a redetermination had to be filed while the statute of limitations for assessment was open as to the entity whose income would be increased by the redeter-mination.”
Abbott Labs.,
DISCUSSION
This court reviews grants of summary judgment by the Court of Federal Claims de novo.
Nat’l Am. Ins. Co. v. United States,
As explained above, the government interpi*ets .Regulation § 1.925(a)-lT(e)(4) as imposing two conditions that must be satisfied prior to receiving a rede-
*1331
termination. First, the government argues that the party requesting redetermi-nation must file a request within the § 6511 refund periods for both the FSC and its related supplier. This condition was discussed at length by the U.S. Tax Court in
Union Carbide Corp. v. Commissioner,
The regulation does not specify the manner in which the redetermination must “affect” both parties. Indeed, although the plain language might conceivably cover a limitless range of effects, even Abbott does not contend that an entirely unrelated effect is contemplated.
See
Appellant’s Br. 30 (interpreting the “shall affect” language to require “that income and expense must be correspondingly and accurately reflected on the books of both the related supplier and the FSC”). We conclude, therefore, that the sixth sentence’s “shall affect” requirement is ambiguous. Accordingly, deference is appropriate if the government’s interpretation of the regulation’s “shall affect” language is not “plainly erroneous or inconsistent with the regulation.”
Cathedral Candle,
We agree with the Court of Federal Claims that the government’s interpretation of the “shall affect” language in Regulation § 1.925(a)-lT(e)(4) is not plainly erroneous or inconsistent with the regulation. First, as the government notes, the FSC provisions were passed after an earlier set of tax provisions, which created an entity called a Domestic International Sales Corporation (“DISC”), were criticized as “an illegal export subsidy in violation of’ the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (“GATT”). Thus, of necessity the FSC provisions were intended to “pass muster” under the GATT. Appellee’s Br. 25. As the Court of Federal Claims pointed out, however, Abbott’s interpretation “would grant tax benefits far greater than those afforded by the supplanted DISC provisions” because it “would exempt not some, but
all
the income shifted to the FSC via the redeter-mination, and do so for any taxpayer that had agreed to extend the statute of limitations on assessment.”
Abbott,
Most importantly, Abbott interprets the “shall affect” language in Regulation § 1.925(a)-lT(e)(4) to require only that the FSC and related supplier accurately reflect their income and expenses on their books. As the government points out, however, Abbott’s interpretation renders the sixth sentence of Regulation § 1.925(a)-lT(e)(4) superfluous, as this effect is already mandated under Temporary Treasury Regulation § 1.925(a)-lT(e)(5). Even Abbott seems to recognize this point, noting that “a pervasive theme throughout section 1.925(a)-lT, and specifically within the subsections immediately surrounding (e)(4), is that income and expenses must be correspondingly and accurately reflected on the books of both the related supplier and the FSC.” Appellant’s Br. 30 (emphasis added).
Finally, we are not persuaded by Abbott’s argument that we owe less deference to the government’s interpretation because that interpretation is at odds with its position in
Union Carbide,
According to the government, the statement in its
Union Carbide
brief was made “in the context of refuting the taxpayer’s argument that the dual § 6511 requirement of the fourth sentence of Treas. Reg. § 1.925(a)-lT(e)(4) could be
supplanted
by satisfying the § 6501 limitations period on assessment. Contrary to the taxpayer’s assertion, the Commissioner did not ‘oppose an additional requirement under section 6501.’ ” The Court of Federal Claims agreed, finding that Abbott took the government’s language “out of context” and that “a fair reading of the Commissioner’s brief indicates that the entire focus thereof was on the portion of the regulation that required that the refund limitations period of section 6511 be open for both entities and not on the portion requiring that a redetermination ‘affect’ both such entities.”
Abbott,
We agree that the government did previously state in its
Union Carbide
brief that “the regulation does not require that the limitations period for assessing a tax under section 6501 be open with respect to” the FSC. But the
Union Carbide
case involved only interpretation of the fourth sentence and did not directly involve the question presented here — the interpretation of the sixth sentence of the regulation. Union
Carbide,
Comments by government litigating counsel on appeal addressing peripheral issues are not entitled to deference. 1 *1333 While agency positions articulated in litigation briefs may be entitled to deference, such deference is earned only if the brief represents the agency’s considered position and not merely the views of litigating counsel. In other words, we owe deference only to those considered agency judgments as to the issue directly involved in the litigation, not to the views of litigation counsel. If the issue is not directly involved, it is unlikely that the agency has made any determination, much less a considered determination, as to the correctness of the position. Because the construction of sentence six was not directly at issue in Union Carbide, no deference was due the government counsel’s offhand comment as to the overall scope of the regulation.
Thus, the interpretation adopted by the government here does not clearly contradict an earlier interpretation that was entitled to deference. And while it is certainly true that a longstanding interpretation is entitled to greater deference,
see United States v. Cleveland Indians Baseball Co.,
In sum, the requirement that “[a]ny re-determination shall affect both the FSC and the related supplier” is ambiguous. As a result, we owe deference to the government’s interpretation “so long as it is reasonable.”
Hyatt v. Dudas,
AFFIRMED
Notes
.
See Bowen v. Georgetown Univ. Hosp.,
