Valero Energy Corporation v. United States

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 17, 2009
Docket08-3473
StatusPublished

This text of Valero Energy Corporation v. United States (Valero Energy Corporation v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Valero Energy Corporation v. United States, (7th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit

No. 08-3473

V ALERO E NERGY C ORPORATION, in its own right and as successor to Ultramar Diamond Shamrock Corporation,

Petitioner-Appellant, v.

U NITED S TATES OF A MERICA, Respondent-Appellee.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 06 C 6730—Matthew F. Kennelly, Judge.

A RGUED F EBRUARY 18, 2009—D ECIDED JUNE 17, 2009

Before R OVNER, E VANS, and T INDER, Circuit Judges. E VANS, Circuit Judge. In this appeal, Valero Energy Corporation asks us to take a close look at the tax practitioner-client privilege. Valero sought to protect several documents under this privilege, and the result was a mixed bag—some documents were shielded from the Internal Revenue Service, while others were not. 2 No. 08-3473

Valero now contends that by reaching this decision, the district court misconstrued not only the privilege, but also an exception to the privilege, which grants the gov- ernment access to certain documents when tax shelters are promoted. Valero is a large company involved in crude oil refining (it’s the largest refiner in the United States ac- cording to its Web site) and oil-product marketing. The Texas-based giant got even bigger in December 2001, when it acquired Ultramar Diamond Shamrock Corpora- tion (UDS), an oil company with Canadian subsidiaries. This acquisition not only expanded Valero’s reach north- ward, it also resulted in some pretty hefty tax savings. Before the deal took place, UDS consulted with Ernst & Young about restructuring and refinancing its Canadian operations. Valero, in turn, called on its long-time advisors at Arthur Anderson to review Ernst & Young’s plan and provide further tax advice. At this time, the Canadian currency was in a slump vis-à-vis the United States dollar, and Valero took advantage. In 2002, shortly after the acquisition was completed, Valero realized $105 million in tax-deductible foreign currency losses (under 26 U.S.C. §§ 987, 988) through a complicated series of transactions implemented with Arthur Anderson’s help. The transactions included the creation of spin-off entities, several same-day wire transfers of cash, a large distribution from one of the Canadian subsidiaries to a United-States-based parent, re-classification of a separate foreign subsidiary as a branch of Valero for tax purposes, and the extinguishment of debt. No. 08-3473 3

This loss was big enough to catch the government’s eye, and the IRS began investigating. The IRS eventually issued a summons to Arthur Andersen, seeking all docu- ments related to tax planning, tax research, or tax analysis, by or for, Ultramar Diamond Shamrock (including any of its subsidiaries or partnerships, both domestic and for- eign) and Valero Energy Corporation (including any of its subsidiaries or partnerships, both domestic and foreign) in connection with their 2001, 2002 and 2003 Canadian and U.S. income taxes . . . . Valero, as a third party, asked the district court to quash the summons. See 26 U.S.C. § 7609(b). It argued that the summons was overbroad and that many documents were protected by either the work-product doctrine or the tax practitioner-client privilege. The privilege shields communications between a federally authorized tax practitioner and her client “to the extent the com- munication would be considered a privileged communica- tion if it were between a taxpayer and an attorney.” 26 U.S.C. § 7525(a)(1). The government countered by arguing that the scope of the summons was appropriate and that even if the tax practitioner-client privilege ap- plied, the documents were discoverable since they were made in connection with the promotion of a tax shelter, a statutory exception to the privilege. Id. at § 7525(b). The government presented little evidence to back up this claim and rested, instead, on Valero’s failure to deny that saving on taxes was one of its motivations for the 2002 transactions. 4 No. 08-3473

There was no clear victor in this first dispute. The district court concluded that the IRS issued the sum- mons in good faith and that it was not overly broad. The court rejected Valero’s claim of privilege under the work- product doctrine but, after an in camera, document-by- document review, sustained its claim of privilege under the tax practitioner-client privilege. In doing so, the court rejected the government’s argument regarding the tax shelter promotion exception, noting that it failed to meet its burden to prove the exception’s applicability by simply relying on Valero’s silence. The court then directed Valero to produce any documents withheld based only on the overbreadth and work-product objec- tions. This order resulted in a second round of document production. Valero found new documents responsive to the summons and sought to keep some of them out of the grasp of the government by again asserting the tax practitioner-client privilege. The government then filed a motion to enforce the summons before the district court, arguing, as it did before, that the privilege did not apply, and if it did, the tax-shelter exception required Valero to produce the documents. This time, though, the gov- ernment acted with more gusto. It supported its argu- ment with a detailed declaration from the IRS agent conducting the investigation into Valero’s tax liabilities. Attached to this declaration were several exhibits— including e-mails, billing records, and minutes from Valero’s board meetings—to bolster the contention that one of the driving purposes behind the multitude of transactions in 2002 was to avoid paying taxes. Valero No. 08-3473 5

responded by asserting that Arthur Anderson was not trying to sell or peddle a corporate tax shelter, and there- fore the exception was inapplicable. It contended that the rigamarole was necessary for paying off public debt, saving some Canadian taxes, and restructuring the busi- ness operations. The foreign currency losses, Valero maintained, were a natural result of fulfilling these goals. The government, however, poked holes in these purported motivations, arguing that the savings in United States taxes were much more substantial than any savings in Canadian taxes and that Valero could have achieved these purposed aims in a more direct manner without triggering the foreign currency losses. The added support won over the district court. After another round of in camera, document-by-document review, the court rejected some of Valero’s claims of privilege outright. The court did sustain the privilege for other documents but held that some of these docu- ments were discoverable since they fell within the excep- tion for documents promoting tax shelters. This time, the court reasoned, the government had met its burden. The court found that it had laid a foundation in fact that Arthur Andersen promoted (by providing input and helping to organize) a multi-step plan, a significant pur- pose of which was to avoid federal income taxes. Valero appeals this second ruling. It has combed through the documents that the district court found unprotected and has identified a subset that, it argues, should have been privileged. We granted a stay, allowing the contested documents to remain under seal, and Valero 6 No. 08-3473

has provided a sealed appendix containing these docu- ments for our review.

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