IN RE: WORLDCOM, INC., Debtor. INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, Appellant, -v.- WORLDCOM, INC., Debtor-Appellee.
Docket No. 12-803
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
Decided: July 22, 2013
August Term, 2012 (Argued: January 11, 2013)
Appeal from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of
BENJAMIN H. TORRANCE (Sarah S. Normand, on the brief), Assistant United Statеs Attorneys, for Preet Bharara, United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, New York, NY, for Appellant.
ALFREDO R. PÉREZ, Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP, Houston, TX, for Debtor-Appellee.
KATZMANN, Circuit Judge:
This case calls on us to decide if the bankrupt telecommunications company WorldCom must pay federal excise taxes on the purchase of a telecommunications service that connected people using dial-up modems to the Internet. Appellant, the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS“), appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Forrest, J.), which upheld the decision of the Bankruptcy Court (Gonzalez, C.J.) to grant
In the late 1990s, WorldCom purchased a service from local telephone companies called “central-office-based remote access,” or “COBRA,” that gave people the ability to use their modems to connect to WorldCom‘s network (and the Internet) over their regular telephone line. The tax code adds a three-percent excise tax to the purchase of a “local telephone service.”
For the reasons set forth below, we hold that WorldCom purchased a “local telephone service” when it paid for COBRA services, and that WorldCom must therefore pay federal communication excise taxes on those transactions. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the district court and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this Opinion.
BACKGROUND
I. Factual Background
The following background is drawn from the bankruptcy court‘s factual findings, adopted
In the late 1990s, WorldCom, originally a long-distance telephone service provider, began building a massive Internet network to provide data services. As part of building that network, WorldCom рurchased a now-obsolete telecommunications service known as “central-office-based remote access,” or “COBRA” from local telephone companies. COBRA allowed local telephone subscribers to connect to the Internet using a dial-up modem.3
In order to connect to the Internet through COBRA, a subscriber‘s modem would call the COBRA access number over the subscriber‘s normal telephone line (the public switched telephone network or “PSTN” line). After dialing the COBRA number, the modem signal traveled over the PSTN, the same network on which traditional telephone calls travel. The signal then passed through a switch at the local telephone company‘s central office that routed the signal over the telephone company‘s COBRA-specific high-capacity telephone lines, known as “primary rate interface” or “PRI” lines. The PRI lines carried the signal to a network access server, which converted the phone signal to an Internet-appropriate format (TCP/IP) using digital signal process (“DSP“) cards. The network access server sent this TCP/IP data signal to a router through another PRI line contained within the network access server, and the router then transmitted the signal, along with other aggregated dial-up data signals, to WorldCom‘s network on a high-speed data line through the egress of the network access server. The system also
WorldCom plugged the output Internet data stream from the local telephone company‘s network access server into its own network, and sold access to the stream to Internet Service Providers (“ISPs“), like AOL, which in turn sold access to the Internet to people with dial-up modems. The PRI lines and all aspects of the network access server up through the egress port where WorldCom plugged in its network were considered COBRA equipment and were used by the local telephone companies as part of providing COBRA service to WorldCom. WorldCom paid the local telephone companies a monthly fee for access to COBRA.
The parties agree that the COBRA system was theoretically capable of transmitting an ordinary telephone call. The PRI lines that carried a modem signal to the network access server could also carry a regular voice communication signal. Instead of connecting to the network access server, those PRI lines could have plugged into a “PBX,” which is a switch that allows for voice communication over PRI lines. The COBRA-specific PRI lines, however, did not include a PBX switch. As purchased by WorldCom, COBRA was not set up for voice communication.
WorldCom also could not reconfigure the PRI lines, which, along with the other COBRA equipment, were controlled by the local telephone companies. It could access COBRA only remotely to disable a modem if it was malfunctioning or make limited software changes. Accordingly, within the system provided by the COBRA service, once the network access server converted a telephone signal from a modem into Internet-friendly TCP/IP packets (the
II. Procedural History
WorldCom filed its Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition on July 21, 2002, and the bankruptcy court confirmed the reorganization plan on October 31, 2003. In re WorldCom, Inc. (WorldCom I), 371 B.R. 19, 24-25 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2007). After the court confirmed the plan, the IRS filed a proof of claim requesting that the Debtors pay $16,276,440.81 in excise taxes on WorldCom‘s purchase of COBRA services. WorldCom I, 371 B.R. at 25. The Debtors objected to the IRS‘s claim and additionally moved for a refund of the $38,297,513 in excise taxes WorldCom had already paid on COBRA.
The bankruptcy court (Gonzalez, J.) held an evidentiary hearing on February 1, 2006. By opinion dated June 1, 2007, the bankruptcy court ruled in favor of the Debtors, granting both the refund motion and their objection to the IRS‘s proof of claim. WorldCom I, 371 B.R. at 32. The IRS appealed WorldCom I to the district court. On August 7, 2009, the district court (Jones, J.) concluded that the bankruptcy court erred in ruling that
On remand, the parties submitted additional proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law, and on June 15, 2011, the bankruptcy court again ruled in favor of the Debtors. In re WorldCom, Inc. (WorldCom III), 449 B.R. 655 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2011). The bankruptcy court concluded that the only service WorldCom had purchased was the ability to plug into the high-speed Internet data stream provided by the local telephone companies, i.e., the egress from the network access server. Because that data stream could not support “telephonic quality communication,” which, in the bankruptcy court‘s interpretation, meant regular phone calls, and because WorldCom could not reconfigure COBRA to provide it with telephonic quality communication, the bankruptcy court concluded that WorldCom had not purchased a “local telephone service” as defined by the statute. The court distinguished WorldCom‘s purchase of COBRA services from other cases finding that similar Internet services were taxable. See USA Choice II, 522 F.3d at 1341; Comcation, Inc. v. United States, 78 Fed. Cl. 61, 65 (2007). In those cases, the taxpayer purchased a service that provided it with the raw telephone signals, which the company itself converted to an Internet signal. According to the bankruptcy court, because the companies in those cases had access to the telephone lines, they were provided with signals capable of “telephonic quality communication.”
The district court further concluded that COBRA did not provide the ability to communicate with “substantially all persons” who are part of “such [asserted] telephone system” as required by statute. Id. at *7 (brackets in original). The court determined that COBRA was distinct from the local telephone system, and because it “[wa]s a self-contained service” within the telephone company‘s facility, there was no way for any “person” to access the telephonic quality communication that the COBRA PRI lines could theoretically support. Id. Even though COBRA interfaced with the normal local telephone network—which the court delineated as a separate “service“—people who used their modems to connect to the Internet through COBRA could not communicate with the COBRA system, nor could WorldCom communicate with them.
DISCUSSION
Because neither party disputes the bankruptcy court‘s factual findings or the district court‘s adoption of those findings, we address only the legal conclusions of the district court. Our review of those conclusions is de novo. In re CBI Holding Co., 529 F.3d 432, 449 (2d Cir. 2008). Fеderal tax assessments are presumed to be correct and constitute prima facie evidence of liability. See Welch v. Helvering, 290 U.S. 111, 115 (1933); United States v. McCombs, 30 F.3d 310, 318 (2d Cir. 1994). The taxpayer bears the burden to prove that the assessment was incorrect. McCombs, 30 F.3d at 318. This burden applies within bankruptcy proceedings. Raleigh v. Ill. Dep‘t of Revenue, 530 U.S. 15, 26 (2000).
I. Local Telephone Service
Federal law imposes a three-percent excise tax on amounts paid for three kinds of “communications services“: “local telephone service“; “toll telephone service“; and “teletypewriter exchange service.”
(1) the access to a local telephone system, and the privilege of telephonic quality communication with substantially all persons having telephone or radio telephone stations constituting a part of such local telephone system, and
(2) any facility or service provided in connection with a service described in paragraph (1).
Whether COBRA constitutes a “local telephone service” is a question of statutory interpretation. In interpreting any statute, we start with its text, Auburn Hous. Auth. v. Martinez, 277 F.3d 138, 143 (2d Cir. 2002), giving the language its ordinary meaning, Taniguchi v. Kan Pac. Saipan, Ltd., 132 S. Ct. 1997, 2002 (2012).
A. Access to a local telephone system
We begin with the element of “access to a local telephone system.” Although we have not previously addressed the proper interpretation of
The Federal Circuit‘s definition of access was adopted by thе district court in this case, see WorldCom II, 2009 WL 2432370, at *3, and is undisputed by the parties. We agree. “Access to a local telephone system” simply means a service that provides a connection to a local telephone system.
With this understanding of “access” in mind, we conclude that COBRA provided WorldCom with access to a local telephone system. The connection between a dial-up user and
B. The privilege of telephonic quality communication
With access defined, we turn to the second—and more hotly contested—element of local telephone service: whether COBRA provided WorldCom with “the privilege of telephonic quality communication with substantially all persons having telephone or radio telephone stations constituting a part of such local telephone system.”
We must therefore define “telephonic quality communication.” Starting with
Next, because
However, “[a] provision that may seem ambiguous in isolation is often clarified by the remainder of the statutory scheme—because the same terminology is used elsewhere in a context that makes its meaning clear.” United Sav. Ass‘n of Tex. v. Timbers of Inwood Forest Assocs., Ltd., 484 U.S. 365, 371 (1988). Here, comparing the definition of “local telephone service” to the related provision of
If we define “quality” in the context of “telephonic quality communication” as meaning an “attribute, property, or characteristic,” we would make “quality” redundant with “telephonic.” Saying that a communication that has the “property” or “characteristic” of being telephonic is no different from simply calling a communication telephonic. See also 2 The Compact Edition of the Oxford English Dictionary 3252 (defining “telephonic” in part with “of the nature of“). On the other hand, applying the alternate dictionary definitions of “quality” as meaning “the degree or grade of excellence” or “a particular class, kind or grade of anything, as determined by its quality,” gives meaning to “quality” by broadening the scope of telephonic communications to those communications in the same “class, kind or grade” as a communication by telephone.
Our interpretation not only gives substance to the word “quality,” but is also supported by another provision of
After defining what a “teletypewriter exchange service” is,
From this, we conclude that a data communiсation transmitted by a modem is a telephonic quality communication. In this case, both the government‘s witness and the Debtors’ witness agreed that modems transmit data from a computer over telephone lines using “the same exact [frequency] range” as the human voice, J. App‘x 493; accord id. at 506. The Debtors’ expert also agreed that a modem connection “requires a telephonic quality grade telephone line.” Id. at 496. Indeed, both the district court and bankruptcy court found that the parties agreed that up until the modem signal reached the network access server there existed “telephonic quality communication.” WorldCom IV, 2011 WL 6434007, at *6; WorldCom III, 449 B.R. at 658. Similarly, the Federal Circuit in USA Choice II noted that “a successful connection between one of USA Choice‘s server modems and another subscriber‘s modem required telephonic quality.” USA Choice II, 522 F.3d at 1341. And in Comcation, the Court of Federal Claims explained that, “once a call was established [to Comcation‘s network] on the PRI
We recognize, however, that there is one authority that may be contrary to our interpretation. In a revenue ruling from 1979, the IRS was asked to evaluate whether a data processing and transmission service that used modems and local telephone lines was taxable, and whether the equipment provided to the business in connection with that service was likewise taxable. See Rev. Rul. 79-245, 1979-2 C.B. 380. Although the IRS found that the service could be taxed as a “local telephone service” under
We do not think this revenue ruling overcomes the text of the statute. The deference owed to IRS revenue rulings is presently an unsettled area of law. See United States v. Cleveland Indians Baseball Co., 532 U.S. 200, 220 (2001) (declining to decide whether revenue rulings are entitled to Chevron deference). Prior to the Supreme Court‘s opinion in United States v. Mead Corp., 533 U.S. 218 (2001), we afforded “great deference” to IRS revenue rulings, and explained that they are “presumеd to have the force of legal precedent unless unreasonable or inconsistent with the provisions of the Internal Revenue Code.” Weisbart v. U.S. Dep‘t of Treasury, 222 F.3d 93, 98 (2d Cir. 2000) (internal quotation marks omitted). We have recognized, however, that this standard was potentially undermined by the Supreme Court‘s holding in Mead that administrative rulings are not entitled to deference unless they carry the “force of law.” See Reimels v. Comm‘r, 436 F.3d 344, 347 n.2 (2d Cir. 2006); see also Fortis, Inc. v. United States, 420 F. Supp. 2d 166, 178-79 (S.D.N.Y. 2004). We now hold, consistent with every other circuit
“[A]dministrative implementation of a particular statutory provision qualifies for Chevron deference when it appears that Congress delegated authority to the agency generally to make rules carrying the force of law, and that the agency interpretation claiming deference was promulgated in the exercise of that authority.” Mead, 533 U.S. at 226-27. But, “[u]nlike treasury regulations, the IRS does not invoke its authority to make rules with the force of law when promulgating revenue rulings.” Kornman, 527 F.3d at 454 (citing
Although not entitled to Chevron deference, particular revenue rulings may be given deference to the extent that they are persuasive—in other words, we will afford them Skidmore deference. See Mead, 533 U.S. at 234-35 (citing Skidmore v. Swift & Co., 323 U.S. 134, 139-40 (1944)); accord WorldCom I, 371 B.R. at 30-32 (rejecting Chevron deference and evaluating
The IRS‘s one-page legal analysis makes no effort to interpret the word “quality.” Nor does it attempt to square “telephonic quality communication” in the local telephone service definition with either “telephonic communications” in the toll telephone service definition or the teletypewriter definition‘s exclusivity rule. The ruling “contains no analysis of text or legislative history or any other relevant interpretive guidance.” Fed. Nat‘l Mortg. Ass‘n v. United States, 379 F.3d 1303, 1308 (Fed. Cir. 2004). Similarly, the ruling “neither elucidates nor invokes support for its conclusion” that modems do not qualify as conveying telephonic quality communication. Id. By contrast, other courts that have squarely addressed the issue of whether dial-up Internet services similar to COBRA are taxable hаve concluded that modems do engage in telephonic quality communication by communicating over telephone lines. See USA Choice II, 522 F.3d at 1334, 1341; Comcation, 78 Fed. Cl. at 64. We therefore give Revenue Ruling 79-245 no weight, in accord with our sister circuits that have declined to defer to similarly cursory revenue rulings. See Fed. Nat‘l Mortg. Ass‘n, 379 F.3d at 1308-09; O‘Shaughnessy v. Comm‘r, 332 F.3d 1125, 1130-31 (8th Cir. 2003).9
To be of telephonic quality a communication must use “a communication channel over which it is possible to have a two-way conversation with the use of telephones,” USA Choice II, 522 F.3d at 1341 n.2 (alteration omitted). The local telephone and PRI lines used by modems are such a channel. Therefore, data communication through a modem over telephone lines is “telephonic quality communication.”
Now that we have defined the “privilege of telephonic quality communication,” we must decide if COBRA provides it. The IRS argues that by routing a dial-up user‘s modem signal over PRI lines that were capable of carrying a phone call, COBRA provided WorldCom with the privilege of telephonic quality communication. But the Debtors claim that because COBRA transformed that modem signal into an Internet-compatible, non-voice quality TCP/IP data stream within the network access server, and becаuse WorldCom had access to only the data stream, COBRA did not provide the privilege of telephonic quality communication. The Debtors contend that “all [the] requirements [of
Despite the certainty of the Debtors’ assertion, they cite no portion of the statute, nor any relevant case law, that supports such an interpretation. The plain language of
But before we do so, we address the government‘s contention that we do not need to look beyond the plain text because COBRA is clearly taxable when
We disagree for several reasons. First, we think the IRS misreads the applicability of USA Choice II and Comcation. The IRS contends that because those courts found similar services taxable, we can shoehorn COBRA into that finding as providing a little “more.” But this mistakes the holdings of USA Choice II and Comcation for agreement with the IRS‘s reasoning. Those courts did not address the issue of whether the “service” changes when the customer does not have access to the PRI lines. See USA Choice II, 522 F.3d at 1341 (“USA Choice‘s decision
Although the plain text of the statute does not answer whether a service must provide “telephonic quality communication” throughout the entirety of the system in order to be taxable, “Congress passes legislation with specific purposes in mind. When the ordinary tools of statutory construction permit us to do so, we must attempt to discover those purposes . . . .” N.Y.C. Health & Hosps. Corp. v. Perales, 954 F.2d 854, 862 (2d Cir. 1992). Keeping in mind that “[s]tatutory construction is a holistic endeavor,” United Sav. Ass‘n of Tex., 484 U.S. at 371, we may “look at legislative histоry to determine the intent of Congress,” Auburn, 277 F.3d at 143-44.
The history of the communications excise tax is long and turbulent. Congress first imposed a tax on the purchase of communications services shortly after the Spanish-American War, twenty years after the invention of the telephone. See OfficeMax, 428 F.3d at 585-86 (tracing legislative iterations of the tax). Although initially designed as a temporary tax passed to finance the deficit caused by the War, Congress repeatedly reenacted and extended the tax, adjusting the scope of its coverage and changing the rates applicable to various services, before
The most recent substantive change to the definitions of taxable services occurred in 1965, when Congress enacted the Excise Tax Reduction Act of 1965, Pub. L. No. 89-44 § 302, 79 Stat. 136, 145. See Am. Online, 64 Fed. Cl. at 578. As is most relevant here, the 1965 Act enacted the current definitions of local telephone service, toll telephone service, and teletypewriter exchange service. See Trans-Lux Corp., 696 F.2d at 967. The definitions were “likely . . . updated and modified in order to reflect and to meet the changing technology and market conditions of the industry . . . [,] in order ‘to make it clear that it is the service as such which is being taxed and not merely the equipment being supplied.‘” Id. (quoting H.R. Rep. No. 89-433, at 30 (1965); S. Rep. No. 89-324, at 35 (1965)).10 This history suggests that Congress intended to tax any communication service as a “local telephone service” so long as it connected a customer to a local telephone system and allowed that customer to use the telephone lines to communicate with the subscribers to that system, regardless of whether the service also used non-telephonic equipment to accomplish that communication.
Although the bankruptcy and district courts acknowledged this congressional purpose, they misapplied it when evaluating the service that COBRA provided. By focusing solely on the part of the COBRA system that WorldCom connected to and had control over—the data stream
What COBRA provided, as made clear by the bankruptcy court‘s factual findings, was a communication pathway between local telephone customers and WorldCom‘s network. COBRA allowed WorldCom to connect dial-up modem users to the Internet through those users’ regular telephone lines. And in order to connect them to the Internet, the part of that pathway that used modems required telephonic quality communication.
That WorldCom connected its equipment to the COBRA system only after the local telephone company converted the modem signals to a high-speed data stream does not change the fact that the service relied on modem signals being carried over PRI lines that afforded telephonic quality communication. Without PRI lines there would be no COBRA service and nothing for WorldCom to resell to the ISPs. As other courts have noted, the statutory definition of local telephone service shows that Congress intended to tax those users who rely on the traditional telephone system for whatever reason. See USA Choice II, 522 F.3d at 1341 (noting the tax applies to customers who use their phone lines, regardless of whether to make phone calls or to plug in a fax machine). Accordingly, because COBRA relied on telephonic quality PRI lines to allow WorldCom‘s network to communicate with dial-up subscribers, COBRA provided WorldCom with the “privilege of telephonic quality communication.”
To give a more intuitive example (though perhaps dated for some), consider a fax machine. Fax machines transmit data signals over ordinary telephone lines. When a person pushes “start” on a fax machine, the machine scans the piece of paper, converts the image into a signal, and transmits it over a telephone line to the number dialed. The fax machine on the other end of the call receives the signal, converts the signal back into the image originally scanned, and prints a copy. Given that we have defined “telephonic quality” as meaning any communication that relies on a teleрhonic-grade connection, a fax connection is of telephonic quality. But the connection over the telephone lines is not the only thing the fax machine relies on to
Accepting the Debtors’ argument that the connection must remain of telephonic quality through the entirety of the connection, a service that connects fax machines over the local telephone system would not be taxable. We would have to conclude that only the printer/scanner part of the fax machine that the customer uses is the “service,” and that the telephone lines used by the machines are merely “equipment.” But if that is the case, what, other than an ordinary telephone call, could be taxable as a telephonic quality communication? Such an interpretation would bring us back to treating “telephonic quality communication” in sections 4252(a)(1) and (b)(1) as equivalent to “telephonic communications” in subsection (b)(2). We do not think that Congress intеnded the taxability of a “local telephone service” to turn on whether a service that allows a customer to communicate using a telephonic quality connection adds additional services or equipment beyond that connection.
Moreover, to hold that COBRA did not provide the privilege of telephonic quality communication would create a strange result where telecommunication companies that used their own network access servers to convert a phone signal to a data stream, like USA Choice and Comcation, would have to pay the tax, but companies that relied on the local telephone company to convert the signals for them, like WorldCom, would not. This appears at odds with the statute‘s intent for two reasons. First, whether a service is taxable would hinge on what equipment the local telephone company provided, not the nature of the service. See S. Rep. No. 89-324, at 35; H.R. Rep. No. 89-433, at 30.
Second, when Congress enacted the 1965 Act it added the “private communications
Congress enacted the рrivate communication services exemption in order to correct the competitive imbalance that had developed between telephone company-furnished services and subscriber-owned equipment. Under the 1958 Excise Tax Technical Changes Act, a subscriber to the telephone company‘s Centrex or PBX systems (communication systems that allowed both intrapremise and interpremise communication) was subjected to the federal excise tax on his entire payment to the telephone company for service and equipment. But if the subscriber purchased its intercom equipment outright from a communications equipment manufacturer, the equipment was free of the federal excise tax. Because the telephone companies were losing business to companies that provided telephone and microwave equipment that could be purchased and operated by the users themselves, Congress created an exemption to the excise tax on local telephone service.
Trans-Lux Corp., 696 F.2d at 967 (citations omitted); accord W. Elec. Co. v. United States, 564 F.2d 53, 57 (Ct. Cl. 1977) (en banc); H.R. Rep. No. 89-433, at 30-31 (noting inequity of taxing intercom services where telephone comрany owned equipment but not taxing substantially identical service where subscriber owned equipment). The Debtors’ argument would create a similar inequity here, despite the identical purpose and function of the systems, regardless of ownership.
The Debtors also urge us to rely on the canon of statutory interpretation that any doubt as to taxability should be resolved in favor of the taxpayer. That canon‘s validity has been called into question by both the Supreme Court and this Court. White v. United States, 305 U.S. 281, 292 (1938) (“We are not impressed by the argument that, as the question here decided is doubtful, all doubts should be resolved in favor of the taxpayer.“); Wolder v. Comm‘r, 493 F.2d 608, 611 n.4 (2d Cir. 1974). Because the other traditional tools of statutory interpretation lead us to conclude that COBRA is taxable, we decline to rely on the canon here. See Chickasaw Nation v. United States, 534 U.S. 84, 94 (2001) (“[C]anons are not mandatory rules. They are guides
It is somewhat odd to fit Internet technology into a statutory definition that has not been updated since the Mad Men era. Although Congress frequently revised the communications excise tax in the first half of the twentieth century to account for changing technology, the 1965 Act was intended to be the last iteration of the tax before it was phаsed out entirely by 1969. See Am. Bankers Ins. Grp., 408 F.3d at 1333. In light of this history, courts have refused to rewrite the definition of “toll telephone service” to account for changes in how telephone companies charge for long distance service. See, e.g., id. (“[I]f the statutory language no longer fits the infrastructure of the industry, the IRS needs to ask for congressional action to bring the statute in line with today‘s reality. It cannot create an ambiguity that does not exist or misinterpret the plain meaning of statutory language to bend an old law toward a new direction.” (quoting Am. Online, 64 Fed. Cl. at 578)).
But although congressional clarity would make our inquiry easier, we cannot simply say the statute is “too old” and decline to apply it to this newer technology. The reasoning in American Bankers does not foreclose us from using the purpose of the statute to resolve an ambiguity; it simply cautions us not create one where the language is clear. Unlike the toll telephone service cases, there is an ambiguity in the definition of “local telephone service” that we must address. And in interpreting Congress‘s purpose at the time the statute was passed, we find that the “privilege of telephonic quality communication” element of locаl telephone service covers any service that makes use of the traditional telephone network for communication, regardless of the form of the communication or whether the service also uses non-telephonic technology to accomplish that communication. COBRA provided this privilege.
C. Communication with substantially all persons constituting a part of such local telephone system
The district court also found in the alternative that because COBRA was merely an “intermediate” step in connecting to the Internet, WorldCom could not use COBRA to communicate with “substantially all persons” in the local telephone system. See
The portion of the statute that requires communication with “substantially all persons” in a local telephone system is part of the “privilege” element of the definition—meaning that it focuses on the capacity of the purchaser to communicate with “substantially all persons,” not whether the purchaser actually does so. See USA Choice II, 522 F.3d at 1341-42 (holding ISP‘s decision to impose a password requirement for connecting to its servers did not deprive it of the privilege to communicate with “substantially all persons” in the local telephone system). The district court reasoned that because WorldCom‘s network was only an intermediate step to the Internet that connected dial-up users to ISPs, WorldCom could not “communicate” with the dial-up users “as an intermediary sitting between any relationship of the end users and the [local telephone companies] and ISPs.” WorldCom IV, 2011 WL 6434007, at *7. The district court
But this ignores that WorldCom chose to resell the COBRA data stream to the ISPs. See WorldCom I, 371 B.R. at 23-24 & n.1 (describing vаrious WorldCom Internet networks, and explaining that WorldCom used COBRA to resell access to smaller regional ISPs). The Debtors cite nothing that prevented WorldCom from acting as an ISP. The district court‘s reasoning falls apart for substantially the same reasons as did the arguments in USA Choice II and Comcation: it “ignore[s] evidence that these . . . restrictions relate solely to . . . self-imposed limitations.” USA Choice II, 522 F.3d at 1341; accord Comcation, 78 Fed. Cl. at 65.
The district court also characterized COBRA as a self-contained service, and concluded that “[t]here is no way for ‘substantially all persons’ within this service to access whatever telephonic quality communication the [COBRA] PRI lines support.” WorldCom IV, 2011 WL 6434007, at *7. But this reasoning conflates the term “local telephone service” under
II. Private Communications Service
Finally, although not addressed by either the bankruptcy or district courts, the Debtors argue that we can affirm the judgment on the alternative ground that COBRA was exempt from taxation as a “private communication service” pursuant to
(1) the communication service furnished to a subscriber which entitles the subscriber—
(A) to exclusive or priority use of any communication channel or groups of channels, . . . regardless of whether such channel, groups of channels, or intercommunication system may be connected through switching with a [local telephone service],
. . . except that such term does not include any communication service unless a separate charge is made for such service.
This argument is meritless. First, we do not think that COBRA constitutes a distinct “communications service” that is separate from the local telephone system. See USA Choice II,
CONCLUSION
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is REVERSED, and the case is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this Opinion.
