Halliburton Company v. KBR, Inc.

446 S.W.3d 551, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 10181, 2014 WL 4493471
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 11, 2014
Docket01-12-00949-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 446 S.W.3d 551 (Halliburton Company v. KBR, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Halliburton Company v. KBR, Inc., 446 S.W.3d 551, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 10181, 2014 WL 4493471 (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

LAURA CARTER HIGLEY, Justice.

This case involves- the arbitration of a dispute in which Halliburton Company claims to have overpaid its share of tax liabilities related to. a corporate separation from its wholly-owned subsidiary, KBR, Inc. The parties agree that the dispute must be arbitrated, but they disagree as to which of two separate arbitration agreements governs certain aspects of the dispute. In this interlocutory appeal, Halliburton presents two issues challenging the trial court’s order denying its application to compel KBR to arbitrate all aspects of the dispute before a single accounting referee, as provided in the parties’ Tax Sharing Agreement. Halliburton also presents a third issue responding to KBR’s motion to dismiss this appeal.

We deny KBR’s motion to dismiss this appeal. We affirm the trial court’s order denying Halliburton’s application to compel arbitration.

Background Summary

In 2007, Halliburton spun off its wholly-owned subsidiary KBR. Before the spinoff, all financial transactions between the companies were recorded in an intercom-pany account as items payable or receivable. At the end of 2004, the account reflected that KBR owed Halliburton $1.2 billion. In October 2005, Halliburton contributed approximately $300 million of the intercompany account balance to KBR’s equity in the form of a capital contribution and converted the remaining balance in the intercompany account into two long-term notes payable to Halliburton subsidiaries.

Preceding the 2007 corporate separation, Halliburton and KBR signed a number of contracts, including the parties’ Master Service Agreement (“MSA”), entered into on November 20, 2006. It states, “[T]he parties intend to set forth in this Agreement, including .. .• the Ancillary Agreements contemplated hereby, the principal arrangements between [Halliburton and KBR] regarding the separation of the KBR Group from the Halliburton Group, the IPO [initial public offering] and certain future transactions.”

One of .the Ancillary Agreements referenced in the MSA is the Tax Sharing Agreement (“TSA”), entered into on November 15, 2006 and amended on February 26, 2007. The TSA provides, “[T]he Parties wish to set forth the general principles under which they will allocate and share various Taxes ... and related liabilities” and further “to provide for the allocation between the Halliburton Group and the KBR Group of all responsibilities, liabilities and benefits relating to all Taxes paid or payable by either group” for the relevant taxable periods.

The MSA and the TSA each contain agreements to arbitrate. Paragraph, 7.1, found in Article VII of the MSA, reads as follows:

7.1 Agreement to Arbitrate. The procedures for discussion, negotiation and arbitration set forth in this Article VII shall be the final, binding and exclusive means to resolve, and shall apply to all disputes, controversies or claims (whether in contract, tort or otherwise) that may rise out of or relate to, or arise under or in connection with: (a) this Agreement and/or any Ancillary Agreement, (b) the transactions contemplated hereby or thereby, including all actions taken in furtherance of the transactions *555 contemplated hereby or thereby on or prior to the date hereof, or (c) for a period of ten years after the IPO Closing Date, the commercial or economic relationship of the parties, in each case between or among any member of the Halliburton Group and the KBR Group....

The arbitration article also provides that the arbitration will be conducted by a panel of three arbitrators from the American Arbitration Association (“AAA”). Paragraph 7.6(b) of the MSA provides that the AAA Panel has the authority to determine issues of arbitrability. It reads,

The arbitrators shall have full power and authority to determine issues of ar-bitrability but shall otherwise be limited to interpreting or construing the applicable provisions of this Agreement, any Ancillary Agreement or any Prior Transfer Agreement, and will have no authority or power to limit, expand, alter, amend, modify, revoke or suspend any condition or provision of this Agreement, any Ancillary Agreement or any Prior Transfer Agreement....

The TSA’s arbitration provision, found in Section 8.11, requires that “[a]ny disagreement between [KBR and Halliburton] with respect to any matter that is the subject of this Agreement, including, without limitation, any disagreement with respect to any calculation or other determinations by Halliburton hereunder ... shall be resolved by a nationally recognized independent accounting firm chosen by and mutually acceptable to the Parties.” Under this provision, arbitration would be conducted by a single person from an accounting firm, known as an Accounting Referee. In contrast to the MSA, the TSA contains no provision addressing determinations of arbitrability.

After the corporate separation, a dispute arose between the two companies regarding whether Halliburton had paid more than its required share of tax liabilities for certain years preceding the corporate spinoff. During each pre-spinoff year, Halliburton had filed a single, consolidated tax return for itself and its subsidiaries, including KBR. Even though a consolidated return was filed, the tax liabilities were allocated between the two companies.

In 2011, Halliburton notified KBR that it had determined, pursuant to the TSA, that it had paid more than its share of tax liabilities for a number of pre-separation years. Halliburton claimed that the amount of the overpayment was approximately $256 million. It sought reimbursement from KBR for that amount.

KBR pointed out that Halliburton had paid the funds for its share of the tax liabilities into the intercompany account. It asserted that the account had been settled in anticipation of the corporate spinoff. KBR claimed that, contrary to Halliburton’s position, under the circumstances, there was no basis in the TSA for Halliburton to reopen the settled account or to reallocate and recalculate tax liabilities that were paid based on filed tax returns.

Ultimately, the companies could not agree on a resolution of Halliburton’s overpayment claim. In January 2012, Halliburton sent a notice to KBR, requesting the appointment of an Accounting Referee, as provided in the TSA, “to resolve the disputes between the parties concerning the amounts owed by KBR to Halliburton under the TSA.”

KBR responded that Halliburton’s request for an Accounting Referee to calculate — under the methods prescribed in the TSA — the amount of tax obligations owed by Halliburton for the pre-spinoff tax years was premature. KBR averred that first a determination had to be made whether Halliburton was entitled to pursue *556 a claim to recover funds that it had paid into the intercompany account. KBR asserted that this preliminary determination was governed by provisions in the MSA. 1

To support its position, KBR pointed to a release provision in the MSA. The provision states that KBR is released from liability for claims arising from acts or events that occurred prior t'o, or in association with, the corporate spinoff, unless such claims were specifically preserved in another agreement.

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446 S.W.3d 551, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 10181, 2014 WL 4493471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/halliburton-company-v-kbr-inc-texapp-2014.