Rodriguez v. Fed. Deposit Ins. Corp.

589 U.S. 132, 140 S. Ct. 713, 206 L. Ed. 2d 62
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 25, 2020
Docket18-1269
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 589 U.S. 132 (Rodriguez v. Fed. Deposit Ins. Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rodriguez v. Fed. Deposit Ins. Corp., 589 U.S. 132, 140 S. Ct. 713, 206 L. Ed. 2d 62 (2020).

Opinion

Justice GORSUCH delivered the opinion of the Court.

*716 This case grows from a fight over a tax refund. But the question we face isn't who gets the money, only how to decide the dispute. Should federal courts rely on state law, together with any applicable federal rules, or should they devise their own federal common law test? To ask the question is nearly to answer it. The cases in which federal courts may engage in common lawmaking are few and far between. This is one of the cases that lie between.

The trouble here started when the United Western Bank hit hard times, entered receivership, and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation took the reins. Not long after that, the bank's parent, United Western Bancorp, Inc., faced its own problems and was forced into bankruptcy, led now by a trustee, Simon Rodriguez. When the Internal Revenue Service issued a $4 million tax refund, each of these newly assigned caretakers understandably sought to claim the money. Unable to resolve their differences, they took the matter to court. The case wound its way through a bankruptcy court and a federal district court before eventually landing in the Tenth Circuit. At the end of it all, the court of appeals ruled for the FDIC, as receiver for the subsidiary bank, rather than for Mr. Rodriguez, as trustee for the corporate parent.

How could two separate corporate entities both claim entitlement to a single tax refund? For many years, the IRS has allowed an affiliated group of corporations to file a consolidated federal return. See 26 U.S.C. § 1501 . This serves as a convenience for the government and taxpayers alike. Unsurprisingly, though, a corporate group seeking to file a single return must comply with a host of regulations. See 26 U.S.C. § 1502 ; 26 CFR § 1.1502-0 et seq. (2019). These regulations are pretty punctilious about ensuring the government gets all the taxes due from corporate group members. See, e.g., § 1.1502-6. But when it comes to the distribution of refunds, the regulations say considerably less. They describe how the IRS will pay the group's designated agent a single refund. See § 1.1502-77(d)(5). And they warn that the IRS's payment discharges the government's refund liability to all group members. Ibid. But how should the members distribute the money among themselves once the government sends it to their designated agent? On that, federal law says little.

To fill the gap, many corporate groups have developed "tax allocation agreements." These agreements usually specify what share of a group's tax liability each member will pay, along with the share of any tax refund each member will receive. But what if there is no tax allocation agreement? Or what if the group members dispute the meaning of the terms found in their agreement? Normally, courts would turn to state law to resolve questions like these. State law is replete with rules readymade for such tasks-rules for interpreting contracts, creating equitable trusts, avoiding unjust enrichment, and much more.

Some federal courts, however, have charted a different course. They have crafted their own federal common law rule-one known to those who practice in the area as the Bob Richards rule, so named for the Ninth Circuit case from which it grew: In re Bob Richards Chrysler-Plymouth Corp. , 473 F.2d 262 (1973). As initially conceived, the Bob Richards rule provided that, in the absence of a tax allocation agreement, a refund belongs to the group member responsible for the losses that led to it. See id., at 265 . With the *717 passage of time, though, Bob Richards evolved. Now, in some jurisdictions, Bob Richards doesn't just supply a stopgap rule for situations when group members lack an allocation agreement. It represents a general rule always to be followed unless the parties' tax allocation agreement unambiguously specifies a different result.

At the urging of the FDIC and consistent with circuit precedent, the Tenth Circuit employed this more expansive version of Bob Richards in the case now before us. Because the parties did have a tax allocation agreement, the court of appeals explained, the question it faced was whether the agreement unambiguously deviated from Bob Richards 's default rule. In re United Western Bancorp, Inc. , 914 F.3d 1262 , 1269-1270 (2019). After laying out this "analytical framework" for decision, id., at 1269 (emphasis deleted), the court proceeded to hold that the FDIC, as receiver for the bank, owned the tax refund.

Not all circuits, however, follow Bob Richards . The Sixth Circuit, for example, has observed that "federal common law constitutes an unusual exercise of lawmaking which should be indulged ... only when there is a significant conflict between some federal policy or interest and the use of state law." FDIC v. AmFin Financial Corp. , 757 F.3d 530 , 535 (2014) (internal quotation marks omitted). In the Sixth Circuit's view, courts employing Bob Richards have simply "bypassed th[is] threshold question." 757 F.3d at 536 .

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Bluebook (online)
589 U.S. 132, 140 S. Ct. 713, 206 L. Ed. 2d 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rodriguez-v-fed-deposit-ins-corp-scotus-2020.