Allegheny Energy, Inc. v. Virginia Electric & Power Co.

70 F. Supp. 2d 607, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15882, 1999 WL 824643
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedOctober 13, 1999
DocketNo. Civ. Y-98-1786
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 70 F. Supp. 2d 607 (Allegheny Energy, Inc. v. Virginia Electric & Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allegheny Energy, Inc. v. Virginia Electric & Power Co., 70 F. Supp. 2d 607, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15882, 1999 WL 824643 (D. Md. 1999).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

JOSEPH H. YOUNG, Senior District Judge.

I. Factual Background

Allegheny Energy, Inc. [“Allegheny”] and Virginia Electric and Power Company [“Virginia Power”] are electric utilities operating in several states in the Mid-Atlan[609]*609tic. In June 1981, the two companies entered into a Project Construction and Purchase Agreement [“Project Agreement”] whereby Allegheny became an equity investor in the Bath County Pumped Storage Generating Station [“Bath County Project”]. Allegheny agreed to purchase a 20% interest in the Bath County Project with an option to increase its interest in the future. In addition to construction and capital costs, Allegheny promised to pay funds to compensate Virginia Power for federal and state income taxes resulting from the sale. At the closing in 1982, Allegheny paid $16 million to cover these taxes. Because these payments factored into the formula at a 50% ownership ratio, Allegheny’s actual ownership interest on the closing date was 21.21%.

Allegheny later decided to increase its ownership interest to 40%. The two companies executed the “Increased Participation Transaction” [“IPT”] in 1985, which required Virginia Power to convey to Allegheny a 16.95% interest in the Bath County Project. The parties intended this conveyance to bring Allegheny’s ownership interest to roughly 40%.

To provide for the uncertain tax consequences of the IPT, the parties entered into a written agreement — the “Tax Indemnification Agreement” [“TIA”] — on June 1, 1985. Paragraph 12 of the TIA provides that:

In the event that Virginia Power shall receive a refund of any income taxes paid by reason of a reversal of an earlier determination of a tax liability asserted with respect to [the IPT] and [Allegheny] previously ha[s] paid to Virginia •Power the amount of the earlier tax payment under the terms of this agreement, Virginia Power shall, within 30 days after its receipt of such refund, pay over to [Allegheny] ... the amount of such refund, inclusive of any interest or refund of additions to tax, fines, and penalties that may have been included in such refund, together with interest....

TIA ¶ 12. Under Paragraph 9, Allegheny promised to pay the “Tax Effect on VEPCO,” as defined in the Project Agreement, plus interest within 30 days of receiving notice from Virginia Power that it had paid taxes related to the IPT. Id. ¶ 9. Paragraph 4 required Virginia Power to notify Allegheny in the event that tax authorities “examine into or dispute the treatment” of any “Increase” in ownership, such as the IPT. Id. ¶ 4. Finally, Paragraph 5 obligated Virginia Power to include Allegheny in negotiations with taxing authorities over ownership increases. Id. ¶ 5.

Virginia Power’s 1985 federal tax return reported a capital gain of $107,564,127 attributable to the IPT. This capital gain resulted in a tax burden of approximately $30.1 million. Allegheny agreed to Virginia Power’s initial determination to treat the IPT as taxable, with the understanding that Allegheny would later ask Virginia Power to file a refund claim. Accordingly, Allegheny paid Virginia Power $30,138,914 plus interest as its Tax Effect payment.

In 1987, the parties adjusted this amount in a “true-up.” They agreed that Virginia Power’s actual gain from the 1985 sale was only $101,144,688 and expected that this lower gain figure would result in a lower tax burden for Virginia Power. Allegheny had promised to pay the Tax Effect on Virginia Power under Paragraph 9 of the TIA, but because Allegheny had already paid over $30 million to Virginia Power, Virginia Power returned over $1 million to Allegheny. The net effect was that Allegheny paid Virginia Power $28,-526,027.

In 1989, IRS completed an examination of Virginia Power’s tax returns regarding the initial 1982 sale. Virginia Power had protested IRS’s treatment of that sale because it had reflected only a 20% ownership transfer when it should have reflected a transfer of 21.21%. IRS eventually accepted the 21.21% figure and settled on a compromise that reduced the reported gain attributable to the 1982 sale from [610]*610approximately $48 million to $38 million. This $10 million reduction resulted in a tax benefit to Virginia Power of roughly $2.7 million. Under the terms of the 1981 Agreement, Allegheny received no benefit from the adjustment.

IRS and Virginia Power agreed to a second tax adjustment in February 1991. This “interim audit adjustment” was intended to modify Virginia Power’s 1985 tax return to reflect the previous adjustments to the 1982 return. Because the 1982 sale had been adjusted to 21.21% and Allegheny owned 40% of the project after the 1985 sale, IRS concluded that Allegheny had purchased only a 18.79% ownership interest in the 1985 sale. As a result, Virginia Power’s capital gain for the 1985 sale increased to $104,672,798, and the corresponding tax burden increased to $29,521,-066. This new tax burden, however, was $995,039 more than Allegheny had paid after the 1987 adjustment. The federal tax portion of this sum — $924,219—is the principal amount in dispute at this time.

The current controversy arose in 1997 when Virginia Power received a refund from IRS. The parties had reached a settlement with IRS that reduced Virginia Power’s tax liability associated with the 1985 sale to $19,690,853. Consequently, IRS issued a refund to Virginia Power on September 25, 1997. The total amount of the refund was $25,672,393, representing $9,759,393 in principal and $15,913,000 in accumulated interest. Virginia Power forwarded $22,759,812 of the refund to Allegheny by wire transfer, but retained $2,912,581. The amount retained by. Virginia Power had three components: $924,219 in tax; $1,446,611 in interest on that amount; and $531,751 in “deficiency interest.”

Virginia Power contends that it was entitled under the TIA to retain part of the refund. Because Allegheny had previously paid Virginia Power $28,526,027 to cover the tax effects of the IPT, Virginia Power simply reimbursed Allegheny for the difference between that amount and the IRS settlement, plus interest.1 Allegheny takes a somewhat different view of this event, claiming that Virginia Power withheld $2,912,581 of the refund, all of which should have been paid to Allegheny. The parties agree that the $924,219 plus associated interest is at the crux of the controversy.

Allegheny bases its claim against Virginia Power on several breach of contract theories. First, Allegheny claims that Virginia Power breached Paragraph 12 of the TIA by failing to pay Allegheny the full amount of the 1997 refund, claiming it was never obligated to pay the $924,219 in question because it had already paid “the amount of the earlier tax payment under the terms of this agreement” as required by Paragraph 12. Allegheny reasons that by 1987, it had paid taxes on the 40% sale, regardless of subsequent adjustments. Second, Allegheny argues that it should be relieved from paying the disputed sum because Virginia Power never notified it of the interim audit adjustment negotiations with IRS in 1991. This lapse, claims Allegheny, breached Paragraphs 4 and 5 of the TIA. Finally, Allegheny contends that Virginia Power waived its claim to the $924,-219 because it knowingly relinquished its right to recover these funds.

Virginia Power responds by denying that a breach occurred in the first place. It adds that even if a breach did occur, Allegheny failed to prove that the breach caused Allegheny to incur damages.

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70 F. Supp. 2d 607, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15882, 1999 WL 824643, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allegheny-energy-inc-v-virginia-electric-power-co-mdd-1999.