BNSF RAILWAY COMPANY, fоrmerly The Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Railway Company, as successor by merger to Burlington Northern Railroad Company and The Atchison Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Company, Plaintiff-Appellee v. UNITED STATES of America, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 13-10014.
United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit.
March 13, 2014.
C. Monell Claim
“To hold a municipality liable under
CONCLUSION
We affirm the district court‘s opinion based solely on our examination of the moment when the fatal shooting occurred. We express no opinion regarding the appropriateness of the officers’ conduct that preceded the moment of the shooting in this case.
In summary, the taser video evidencе confirms the district court‘s finding that Brian Harris was holding a knife in a stabbing position at the moment of the fatal shooting. Therefore, the district court properly concluded that the use of deadly force was not unreasonable. Accordingly, we AFFIRM the district court‘s grant of summary judgment for the officers based on qualified immunity. As such, we also AFFIRM the dismissal of the Monell claim against the City of New Orleans.
Ellen Page DelSole, Esq., Trial Attorney, Kenneth L. Greene, Esq., Supervisory Attorney, U.S. Department of Justice, Tax Division, Appellate Section, Washington, DC, Curtis Cutler Smith, U.S. Department of Justice, Tax Division, Dallas, TX, for Defendant-Appellant.
Before HIGGINBOTHAM, OWEN, and HIGGINSON, Circuit Judges.
HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:
BNSF Railway Company (“BNSF“) filed suit seeking refunds of certain taxes that it, and its predecessor companies, paid pursuant to the Railroad Retirement Tax Act (“RRTA“). BNSF claimed that it overpaid when it included (i) Non-Qualified Stock Options (“NQSO“), and (ii) certain moving expenses as taxable compensation. The parties stipulated to the facts and, on cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court granted summary
I
BNSF is a rail carrier1 that operates an international railroad system consisting of approximatеly 32,000 miles of rail throughout the Western United States and Canada. BNSF was formed by the 1996 merger of The Atchison Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Company with the Burlington Northern Railroad Company.2 At issue in this case are (i) Burlington Northern Railroad Company‘s 1993, 1994, and 1995 tax years; (ii) The Atchison Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Company‘s 1994 and 1995 tax years; and, (iii) BNSF‘s 1996, 1997, and 1998 tax years.
As a rail carrier, BNSF and its employees are subject to the Railroad Retirement Tax Act (“RRTA“).3 BNSF now seeks a refund of the employer and employee portions of taxes paid on the exercise of NQSOs and certain moving expenses.
A
During the tax years at issue, BNSF offered salaried employees and executives a combination of Incentive Stock Options (“ISO“)4 and NQSOs. The stated purpose of the stock option plans was to provide employees with a competitive compensation package.5 At the time the stock option plans were adopted, BNSF paid its employees and executives salaries that were below industry average, but because of the stock option plans, provided an overall compensation package that was above industry average.6 Each year, BNSF‘s Board of Directors determined the number of stock options to grant.7 Once the number was determined, BNSF awarded stock options in part as compensation for services rendered by employees and in part as an award for job performance.8 These options were then awarded as either ISOs or NQSOs.9 Additionally, BNSF‘s Board of Directors determined the final deadline for exercising the options and the vesting period for each option grant.10
When an employee exercised a NQSO, the employee would pay the price for the share that was the market price on the day the option was granted (the “strike price“).11 Approximately 90-95% of the time, the employee would then sell the share at the same timе, such that the employee would only receive the difference between the strike price and the exercise
NQSOs were exercised in one of two ways: (i) non-executive employees exercised their NQSOs through BNSF‘s transfer agent,14 and (ii) executive employees were permitted to use their private brokers to exercise their NQSOs.15 Non-executive employees would either fax or hand-deliver an exercise notification sheet to BNSF‘s compensation department, who would then authorize BNSF‘s transfer agent to exercise the option.16 The transfer agent would then either forward the stock certificate to the employee or disburse the net gain amount on the sale of the stock. For executives, the transfer agent would directly transfer the purchased shares to the executive‘s private broker.17
BNSF did not directly pay cash or send the stock certificate to the employee, but it did record all transaction information into a stock option tracking system. BNSF would calculate the amount of RRTA taxes due and would inform the transfer agent of the amount of tax to be withheld.18
During the years at issue, 3,192 BNSF employees exercised NQSOs, representing $348,805,183.03 total spread on exercise.19 BNSF and its employees paid a total of $16,432,583.01 in RRTA taxes on exercised NQSOs.20
B
From 1994 to 1996, many BNSF employees were required to relocate as a result of the consolidation and restructuring of operations, the merger, and employee promotions and transfers.21 Whenever BNSF asked an employee to move, it would pay a substantial portion of the moving expenses.22 In total, BNSF paid approximately $135,000,000 in еmployee moving expenses during the period at issue.23
These payments were made pursuant to a written policy in BNSF‘s relocation manuals for non-union employees and pursuant to collective bargaining agreements for union employees.24 Typically, BNSF paid moving expenses in one of two ways: (i) by direct payment to the service providers, or (ii) by a lump sum payment to employees, who could generally keep any excess payment over expenses actually incurred and who were not required to provide substantiation.25 When BNSF paid a lump sum, it typically did so through a third-party agent hired by BNSF to administеr the moving-expenses benefit program.26 The lump sum payments were calculated by
BNSF considered certain moving expenses to be properly excluded moving expense payments and reimbursements under
C
From 1993 to 1998, BNSF, and its predecessors-in-interest, filed refund claims for both the employer and employee portions of the RRTA tax paid on NQSOs exercised during that time period.32 Additionally, BNSF filed formal refund claims for the employer portion of tax paid on moving expenses for 1994 through 1998,33 as well as the employee portion for 1994, 1995, and 1998.34 The Internal Revenue Service (“IRS“) granted the refund claims for the employer portiоn of the RRTA tax paid on moving expenses for 1996 through 1998, and although the IRS now claims those refunds were in error, the IRS does not seek recovery of those refunds as the relevant statute of limitations has expired.
With respect to the employee portions of tax paid on moving expenses for 1996 and 1997, BNSF did not file a formal refund claim.35 When BNSF amended its federal railroad retirement tax returns (Form CT-1) for tax years 1996 and 1997, it included an attachment stating that BNSF “is not requesting refund of the employee with this Form CT-1 ... [h]owever, [BNSF] is separately filing a claim for refund of the employee taxes over-collected with respect to the abovе-described payments on a Form 843.”36 Yet, BNSF never filed a formal claim for refund of these employee taxes on a Form 843 for either 1996 or 1997 prior to the filing of this suit.
On June 30, 2011, BNSF brought this suit in the district court, seeking refunds
II
“We review a district court‘s grant of summary judgment de novo and apply the same standards as the district court.”37 Accordingly, “[s]ummary judgment is proper if the pleadings and evidence show there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”38
III
Our resolution of the NQSO issue is informed by a brief history of the RRTA. Unlike most American employers and employees, rail carriers and their employees
Like FICA, the RRTA imposes a tax on both employers and employees to fund the RRA‘s retirement and disability benefits.44 Unlike FICA, there are two tiers of taxes and benefits under the RRTA and RRA. Tier I provides benefits and taxes in a manner almost identical to FICA and, in essence, is the social security analog for railroad workers; indeed, the Tier I rates are statutorily linked to FICA.45 Tier II functions like a private pension plan and is essentially an extension of the system of railroad pension plans that then existed when the RRA and RRTA were enacted in the 1930s.46 The Tier II benefits are tied to an employee‘s “earnings and career service.”47
The Govеrnment argues that the term “compensation” and the phrase “any form of money remuneration” as used in the RRTA is inherently ambiguous. Thus, the Government argues that the Treasury Regulation definition for “compensation“, that is, that it should have the same meaning as “wages” under FICA, should be awarded Chevron51 deference. The Government notes that this definition supports the remedial purposes of the RRTA, and avoids rendering superfluous statutory exclusions from RRTA compensation. Thus, in the Government‘s view, NQSOs are “compensation” because they qualify as “wages” under FICA.
In contrast, BNSF argues that “compensation” and “any form of money remuneration” are not ambiguous. BNSF explains that the plain language meaning of “any form of money remuneration” is any form of “payment or compensation in cash or other medium of exchange authorized by governmental authorities.”52 BNSF thus argues that NQSOs cannot qualify as money because they are not cash or other medium of exchange authorized by governmental authorities, and therefore, are not “compensation” under the RRTA.
To this end, the district court held that NQSOs are not “compensation” under the RRTA. The district court explained that:
The common accepted meaning of the words ‘any form of money remuneration’ could reаsonably be thought to include cash (whether coin or paper money or a combination of the two), or a paycheck drawn on an account of the employer at a financial institution, or a wire transfer of pay check funds to the employee‘s bank account, or script issued to an employee by an employer for use as the employer‘s company store.... There is no ‘ordinary, contemporary, common meaning’ of the words ‘money remuneration’ that would include receipt by such an employee of an NQSO or the financial gain realized by such an employee from a later exercise of the option.53
We disagree. Analysis properly begins with Chevron, as the Supreme Court has made clear that IRS regulations may receive Chevron deference.54 Under Chevron, we “first ask whether Congress has directly spoken to the precise question
Here we find that “compensation” and “any form of money remuneration” are inherently ambiguous. Although the district court‘s definition is within the realm of possible definitions, it is not the ordinary, common-sense definition compelled by the plain language of the RRTA; indeed, there is no such ordinary, common-sense definition. To begin with, we are unaware of any other federal statute, nor have the parties identified any such statute, that uses “any form of monetary remuneration” to define compensation, nor has any Court of Appeals defined “any form of monetary remuneration.”
Second, we find the dictionary definitions of “money” to be less than helpful. On the one hand, some dictionaries offer narrow definitions that confine “money” to “a medium of exchange,”58 and define “medium of exchange” as “anything generally accepted a payment in a transaction and recognized as a standard of value.”59 On the other hand, other dictionaries define “money” more broadly as “assets or compensation in the form [of] or readily convertible to cash,”60 “[a]ssets that can easily be converted to cash,”61 and “[c]apital that is invested or traded as a commodity.”62 And when “money” is used as an adjective, rather than as a noun, it may carry a different meaning—such as, “of or pertaining to capital or finance”63—or it may simply be superfluous.64
Third, we find that usage of “money remuneration” that is contemporaneous to the passage of the RRTA is not helpful. The phrase only appears in a handful of academic publications in the 1920s-40s, and, at most, we can only draw the conclusion that it was usеd to distinguish between in-kind benefits and benefits of a more monetary nature.65 Accordingly, we
We proceed to the second step of the Chevron analysis and ask whether the IRS‘s definition “is based on a permissible construction of the statute.”66 Treasury Regulation
Moreover, this conclusion finds firm support in the purpose, structure, and legislative history of the RRTA. To begin, it is well-established that the RRTA and FICA are parallel statutes, and courts often look to FICA when interpreting the RRTA.69 Indeed, as courts have noted, the “Railroad Retirement Act is substantially a Social Security Act for employees of common cаrriers.”70 Second, the structure of the RRTA firmly supports a broader interpretation of “compensation.”
Finally, this conclusion finds firm support in the legislative history of the RRTA.
IV
A
We next turn to whether the claimed moving expenses are properly excluded from compensation under the RRTA. We begin with the Government‘s argument that BNSF has failed to perfect its refund claims for the employee tax paid on moving-expense benefits in 1996 and 1997. The Government first argues that BNSF‘s alleged informal claims for these years do not qualify under the informal claim doctrine as informal claims, and second argues that BNSF‘s failure to perfect the refund claims prior to filing suit requires dismissal of these refund claims.
We agree.
If a taxpayer fails to file a formal claim within the statutory time limits, the taxpayer‘s claim may still be pre-
Although the informal claims that BNSF filed for the emрloyee tax paid on moving-expense benefits in 1996 and 1997 may satisfy the informal claim doctrine, it is undisputed that BNSF failed to perfect those claims prior to filing the present suit. Accordingly, BNSF‘s refund claims for those years must be dismissed.
B
We next turn to the merits. The parties agree that certain moving expenses are properly excluded under
[Compensation] does not include ... an amount paid specifically—either as an advance, as reimbursement or allowance—for travelling or other bona fide and necessary еxpenses incurred or reasonably expected to be incurred in the business of the employer[.]
BNSF explains that those moving expenses not excluded under
The district court agreed, holding that “BNSF has satisfied its summary judgment burden to establish that the reloca-
The Government appeals this decision, arguing that because the RRTA provides a specific exclusion from moving expenses in
We agree, informed by two statutory interpretation canons: the specific-general canon and the rule against superfluities. The specific-general canon applies where there is a specific statutory provision that would be subsumed by a general statutory provision.87 Here,
We conclude that a more reasonable interpretation of
C
BNSF argues that even if the disputed moving expenses are not properly excluded under
A review of the record makes clear that these disputed moving-expеnse benefits were paid in various ways, including: direct payment to the service provider, advances to the employee, reimbursements to the employee, and allowances to the employee. A determination will need to be made on an expense by expense basis as to whether the benefit qualifies as “compensation” under the RRTA.
On remand, the district court should parse the disputed moving expenses to determine (i) whether each disputed moving expense qualifies as “compensation” as explicated in Part III of this opinion, and (ii) whether each disputed moving expense may be properly excluded as a traveling expense, or a bona fide and reasonable expense related to travel.
V
For these reasons we REVERSE the district court and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Gary Wayne SUTTON, Petitioner-Appellant, v. Wayne CARPENTER, Warden, Respondent-Appellee.
No. 12-6310.
United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.
March 19, 2014.
