B.F. Goodrich Company v. United States Filter Corporation

245 F.3d 587, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 5111, 2001 WL 303536
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 29, 2001
Docket99-4353
StatusPublished
Cited by214 cases

This text of 245 F.3d 587 (B.F. Goodrich Company v. United States Filter Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
B.F. Goodrich Company v. United States Filter Corporation, 245 F.3d 587, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 5111, 2001 WL 303536 (6th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

*589 OPINION

BOGGS, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff B.F. Goodrich Co. (“Goodrich”) appeals the district court’s decision granting summary judgment in favor of defendant United States Filter Corp. (“Filter”) upon cross-motions for summary judgment in a diversity action for breach of a stock purchase agreement governed by New York law. For the following reasons, we reverse and remand for trial.

I

This case concerns competing interpretations of a single provision of a Stock Purchase Agreement (the “Agreement”). Goodrich and Filter entered into the Agreement on February 27, 1995. Pursuant to the Agreement, Goodrich conveyed to Filter 100% of the issued and outstanding shares of common stock of Arrowhead Industrial Water, Inc. (“Arrowhead” or “AIW”), then a Goodrich subsidiary. Section 8.2(g) of the Agreement provides that:

Buyer [Filter] covenants to compensate Seller [Goodrich] for any Income Tax paid by Seller with respect to income accrued and included in Seller’s taxable income, but not paid to Seller prior to Closing. 1

After the closing, Goodrich demanded reimbursement of certain tax payments from Filter, pursuant to Section 8.2 of the Agreement, and Filter refused. This simple description, however, belies a much more complex chain of events.

Both Goodrich and Filter had experience in negotiating similar transactions when they entered into negotiations regarding the Agreement. Goodrich drafted Section 8.2(g) of the Agreement. Although four versions of the Agreement were drafted, Filter’s representatives never discussed or proposed any modification to Section 8.2(g) and it remained unchanged throughout the course of negotiations over the Agreement.

Both Goodrich’s principal negotiator, Steven Esakov, and its principal tax advis- or, George Sherwood, testified that Section 8.2(g) was intended to deal with the problem of taxes on accrued but unpaid income, such as receivables. The Agreement called for the buyer to acquire Arrowhead on a going-forward basis. Thus, any cash received by Arrowhead after the closing would belong to the buyer — Filter. Both Arrowhead and Goodrich were consolidated, accrual taxpayers at the time of the sale, however. As a result, Goodrich included any income accrued by Arrowhead prior to closing in Goodrich’s consolidated tax returns, even though Goodrich would *590 never receive the cash pertaining to that accrued income since it would be received by Arrowhead after Filter’s purchase of Arrowhead. Therefore, Goodrich claims it included Section 8.2(g) in the Agreement because, according to Sherwood, it was “fair” to ask Filter to “pay the taxes that came as a result of income that Goodrich had accrued (as part of its consolidated tax returns) but for which it had not received cash.” Goodrich included the section in the Agreement after such a provision had been proposed by the seller in another agreement in which Goodrich was the buyer. Goodrich assumed that Filter understood Goodrich’s interpretation of Section 8.2(g) and anticipated some discussion of the section during negotiations or questions from Filter if Filter did not understand the provision.

The transaction closed on April 28, 1995. After closing, an issue remained concerning a purchase price adjustment, resulting in implementation of an audit process. The issue was resolved over the course of nine months and with four amendments to the Agreement. Section 8.2(g) was not discussed by the parties during this process.

In mid-1996, Goodrich was in the process of finalizing its tax returns for 1995 (including tax returns for Arrowhead, a member of its consolidated group for the first part of 1995). On July 11, 1996, Sherwood, Goodrich’s Vice President of Tax Administration, informed Kevin Spence, Filter’s Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, that in accordance with Section 8£(g) of the Agreement, Filter was “required to compensate” Goodrich for “any Income Tax paid by Seller with respect to income accrued and included in Seller’s taxable income, but not paid to Seller prior to Closing.” The letter estimated that Filter owed Goodrich $2.9 million on account of tax on “accrued but uncollected income at April 30, >1995 (the accounts receivable).”

On October 15, 1996, Sherwood sent a second letter to Spence. This time Goodrich included an invoice representing “the billing for the federal and state income tax paid” by Goodrich. Goodrich claimed that such “income accrued” amounted to roughly $7 million dollars in Arrowhead accounts receivable that Goodrich included in its gross income from 1995, resulting in payment of $2,943,942 in income tax.

Filter returned correspondence denying that it owed any money to Goodrich pursuant to Section 8.2(g) of the Agreement. Filter interprets Section 8.2(g) as pertaining not to accounts receivable, but to money that Arrowhead owed Goodrich for inter-company services rendered prior to closing of the sale. The first time Filter offered this interpretation of Section 8.2(g) was during Spence’s deposition in this case. The interpretation was not raised in Filter’s letters responding to Goodrich’s correspondence or in Filter’s Answer to the Complaint, all of which stated other reasons for Filter’s refusal to pay.

The term “accounts receivable” is not included in Section 8.2(g) and was never used by Goodrich as a term in the drafting of Section 8.2(g). In addition, Section 8.2(g) does not mention Arrowhead. Other sections of the Agreement placed tax obligations on Goodrich, in particular, Section 1.3(a) and Section 11.1(b)(i). Goodrich’s Sherwood asserted that Section 8.2(g) was a “carve out” from Goodrich’s retention of all tax liabilities, but Filter notes that no “carve-out” language was used in Section 8.2(g), or in any of the other relevant sections concerning tax liabilities.

Filter maintains that Goodrich’s own records showed that Arrowhead had operated at a loss and generated no taxable income, but nevertheless Goodrich de *591 manded an amount equal to roughly one-fifth of Goodrich’s entire corporate tax payment, claiming that it paid this amount as income taxes solely on the accounts receivable income from Arrowhead.

II

Goodrich filed its complaint on December 4, 1997. On February 4, 1998, a Case Management Plan was entered, placing the case on an expedited track with discovery to be completed by May 6, 1998. Counsel were directed to confer and prepare “written stipulations” as to “uncontested facts” to be considered on cross-motions for summary judgment. If the case could not be brought to a “prompt conclusion” on summary judgment a trial was to be conducted.

The parties submitted a sixty-five-page “Joint Statement of Undisputed Material Facts” (the “Joint Statement”). The Joint Statement was divided into two parts: one highlighting facts in Filter’s favor and the other highlighting facts in Goodrich’s favor. The par-ties stated that they had “different views as to which undisputed facts are material.” In addition, the parties planned for the possibility that summary judgment might be denied, noting that supplementation of the Joint Statement might be required “for purposes of trial.” On the basis of the Joint Statement, both parties filed motions for summary judgment.

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245 F.3d 587, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 5111, 2001 WL 303536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bf-goodrich-company-v-united-states-filter-corporation-ca6-2001.