OPINION
The issues presented in this court, with one exception, were thoroughly treated in
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the trial court’s opinion filed by Judge Seto, reported at
Taxpayer, an accrual basis taxpayer, is a self-insurer of its medical care plan. It deducted, as an expense on its federal income tax return, an estimate of its liability to pay for medical care for employees who had obtained treatment but whose claims had either not yet been filed or had not been processed at the end of the taxable year in issue. The Claims Court found that taxpayer’s claimed deduction met the “all events” test for deduction of an expense by an accrual basis taxpayer. An accrual basis taxpayer is entitled to deduct an expense in the taxable year in which all the events have occurred to establish the fact of the liability for the expense and fix the amount thereof with reasonable accuracy. Treas.Reg. § 1.461-1(a)(2) (1984).
The government argues that even though the Claims Court decision may be supported by the law of another circuit,
Kaiser Steel Corp. v. United States,
With regard to the first prong of the “all events test/’ the government emphasizes that it is the law in this circuit “that the
fact of liability
is measured on an item by item basis, rather than as an overall estimate.”
Eastman Kodak,
The statement extracted by the government from that opinion, in context, related to the analysis as to whether for each employee the fact of liability is certain and not subject to future events. In the case at bar the Claims Court held that the last event necessary to fix the fact of liability was the occurrence of the insured event, the receipt of covered medical services. As the court explained, taxpayer was “not predicting the happening of future events; rather, [it was] estimating the amount of fixed liability for events which had already occurred.”
With regard to the second prong, the government argues that
Eastman Kodak
requires that the reasonable accuracy of the amount deducted be based on each claim, reminding us that “[t]he test must be applied to each employee on an individual basis.”
Eastman Kodak,
In the light of the foregoing, we believe the judgment of the Claims Court is not contrary to our precedent. Accordingly, we affirm that judgment on the basis of the Claims Court opinion.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. In
South Corp. v. United States,
. Counsel for the government, although aware that a panel of this court is bound by prior precedential decisions unless and until overturned
in banc,
overlooks the fact that "statements in opinions of this court must be read harmoniously with prior precedent, not in isolation.”
Kimberly-Clark Corporation v. Fort Howard Paper Company,
