Blue Cross & Blue Shield United of Wisconsin & Subsidiaries v. United States

117 Fed. Appx. 89, 117 F. App'x 89, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 24130, 2004 WL 2633324
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedNovember 19, 2004
Docket2004-5028
StatusUnpublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 117 Fed. Appx. 89 (Blue Cross & Blue Shield United of Wisconsin & Subsidiaries v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blue Cross & Blue Shield United of Wisconsin & Subsidiaries v. United States, 117 Fed. Appx. 89, 117 F. App'x 89, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 24130, 2004 WL 2633324 (Fed. Cir. 2004).

Opinion

PROST, Circuit Judge.

Blue Cross & Blue Shield United of Wisconsin & Subsidiaries (BCW) appeals from a decision of the United States Court of Federal Claims, Case No. 98-CV-727, in which the court granted summary judgment to the United States regarding the meaning of a provision in a Closing Agreement that settled a prior tax dispute between BCW and the United States. In particular, BCW appeals the court’s decision that the Closing Agreement did not allow BCW to use its actual 1987 data, rather than the estimate it computed at the beginning of 1987, to calculate its “unpaid loss reserve” for 1987. We reverse the court’s grant of summary judgment and remand for consideration of extrinsic evidence. 1

BACKGROUND

In 1993, BCW and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) settled a tax dispute by entering into the Closing Agreement that is now before this court. The details of the dispute resolved by the Closing Agreement are discussed in the Court of Federal Claims’ opinion. See Blue Cross & Blue Shield United of Wisc. & Subsidiaries v. United States, 56 Fed.Cl. 697, 698-99 (2003).

The Closing Agreement contains the following paragraph, with the language most relevant to this appeal underlined:

*90 (3) As of January 1, 1987, the taxpayer was an “Existing Blue Cross or Blue Shield organization” as this term is defined in subparagraph (c)(2) of section 833, Subtitle A, IRC. As such, the following attributes apply to the taxpayer as of that date:
(a) if otherwise in compliance with the terms of THE TREG, the taxpayer may participate in the filing of the “new group election” cited in subparagraph (d)(5)(v) of THE TREG;
(b) the taxpayer’s taxable income will be computed pursuant to the provisions of section 833, Subtitle A, IRC, and the “special rules for Existing Blue Cross or Blue Shield organizations” stated in section 1012(C)(3) of the TRA;
(c) the taxpayer’s taxable income will be computed without the reduction in “unearned premium reserves” otherwise required by section 832, Subtitle A, IRC;
(d) the taxpayer is not — solely because of its becoming, on January 1, 1987, an “Existing Blue Cross or Blue Shield organization” as this term is defined in subparagraph (c)(2) of section 833, Subtitle A, IRC- — subject to the adjustments set forth in section 481, Subtitle A, IRC;
(e) the taxpayer’s January 1, 1987 loss reserve for incurred-but-not-paid claims will be determined in accordance with actual claims paid data for 1987; and
(f) for the purposes of section 1011, Subtitle A, IRC, the adjusted bases of all the taxpayer’s assets shall be the respective fair market value of the individual assets as of January 1,1987.

(emphases added). Further, paragraph (4) of the Closing Agreement states that BCW was “deemed to have the following net operating loss carryovers, no elements of which are deemed to be attributable to any specific loss or deduction”; the enumerated net operating loss carryovers for 1984, 1985, and 1986 sum to $25,000,000.

Pursuant to its interpretation of the Closing Agreement, BCW computed its unpaid loss reserve 2 for 1987 to be $42,267,000, based on the claims it actually paid out during that year. The use of actual claims paid figures was a departure from what the Government contends is the ordinary practice, in which Blue Cross organizations use the estimate generated at the start of a given year to calculate their deductions. See I.R.C. § 846(b)(1) (2000). (For purposes of this appeal, BCW does not challenge the Government’s claim that the Internal Revenue Code ordinarily mandates the use of the estimate.) At the beginning of 1987, BCW had overestimated its unpaid loss reserve by a considerable margin in comparison with the amount it ultimately paid out during that year. Therefore, BCW’s deduction derived from the actual claims paid data was approximately $37,000,000 greater than it would have been based on the estimate. The IRS ultimately ordered BCW to pay the larger amount derived from the use of the estimate.

BCW filed suit in the Court of Federal Claims, seeking, inter alia, a refund of the difference between its tax liability calculated using the estimate and its liability de *91 rived from the actual claims paid figures. Both parties moved for partial summary judgment regarding the method that BCW should use to calculate its losses incurred deduction.

In support of their motions, the parties advanced their respective interpretations of the Closing Agreement. BCW asserted that the Closing Agreement unambiguously permitted the company to use its actual claims paid data to calculate its 1987 deduction under § 882(c)(4). The Government contended that the Closing Agreement had to be viewed in the context of the negotiations that led to its signing, which show that the IRS never agreed to any change in BCW’s § 832(c)(4) deduction.

Holding that the language of the agreement had an unambiguous meaning, the court declined to rely on the extrinsic evidence put forth by the parties. In the court’s view, the provisions of paragraph (3) were a laundry list of characteristics that applied to BCW under § 833 because it was, as the agreement declared, an “existing Blue Cross or Blue Shield organization” as of January 1, 1987. The court reasoned that the words “[a]s such,” which appear after “existing Blue Cross or Blue Shield organization, as this term is defined in subparagraph (c)(2) of section 833, Subtitle A, IRC[,]” indicate that the information that follows is simply a list of attributes of such an organization. According to the court, “[‘as such’] can only be interpreted to mean that, as an entity qualifying under IRC § 833, the plaintiff has the following attributes.” Blue Cross, 56 Fed. Cl. at 714. Moreover, § 833 is the only code section that is mentioned in the introduction to paragraph (3), and, in the court’s view, the other provisions of paragraph (3) all relate to § 833 or Tax Reform Act § 1012, which is the public law that enacted § 833. Thus, the use of “[a]s such,” the mention of § 833 alone in the introduction to paragraph (3), and the apparent relationship of all the other provisions of paragraph (3) to § 833 convinced the Court of Federal Claims that paragraph (3)(e) must have referred to § 833. The court further explained that, specifically, paragraph (3)(e) referred to the “special deduction” available to Blue Cross and Blue Shield organizations under § 833(b). 3

The court entered final judgment against BCW after the company stipulated *92 to dismissal of the remaining issues. BCW filed a timely appeal to this court. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(3).

DISCUSSION

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82 Fed. Cl. 1 (Federal Claims, 2008)
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117 Fed. Appx. 89, 117 F. App'x 89, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 24130, 2004 WL 2633324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blue-cross-blue-shield-united-of-wisconsin-subsidiaries-v-united-cafc-2004.