United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 07-2631
UNITED STATES,
Petitioner, Appellant,
v.
TEXTRON INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES,
Respondent, Appellee.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND
[Hon. Ernest C. Torres, U.S. District Judge]
Before
Torruella, Boudin, Circuit Judges,
and Schwarzer,* District Judge.
Kevin J. O'Connor, with whom Nathan J. Hochman, Assistant
Attorney General, Richard T. Morrison, Deputy Assistant Attorney
General, Gilbert S. Rothenberg, David I. Pincus, Robert W. Metzler,
Judith A. Hagley, Attorneys, Tax Division, Department of Justice,
and Robert Clark Corrente, United States Attorney, was on brief for
appellant.
John A. Tarantino, with whom Patricia K. Rocha, Adler Pollock
& Sheehan P.C., Arthur L. Bailey, J. Walker Johnson, and Steptoe &
Johnson LLP, was on brief for appellee.
David M. Brodsky, Robert J. Malionek, Adam J. Goldberg, Latham
& Watkins LLP, Robin S. Conrad, Amar D. Sarwal, Susan Hackett,
Senior Vice President and General Counsel, Attorneys for the
Chamber of Commerce of the United States of America and Association
of Corporate Counsel, as amicus curiae in support of Textron Inc.
*
Of the Northern District of California, sitting by designation.
Kevin L. Kenworthy, Alan I. Horowitz, and Miller & Chevalier
Chartered, Attorneys for Financial Executives International, as
amicus curiae in support of Textron Inc.
January 21, 2009
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TORRUELLA, Circuit Judge. The question presented by this
appeal is whether the work-product doctrine protects documents
prepared by Textron Inc. for the purpose of calculating tax reserve
liability from production to the IRS pursuant to an investigative
subpoena. Like other companies, Textron prepares "tax accrual
workpapers" which, generally speaking, list the questionable
positions Textron took on its tax returns, estimate the likelihood
that those positions will not withstand scrutiny, and calculate the
amount of additional tax liability that would result from revision
of those positions. Textron prepares these estimates so that it
can maintain an adequate reserve fund, properly report its assets
and liabilities, and obtain independent certification of its
financial statements. As part of the auditing process, Textron
showed these tax accrual workpapers to Ernst & Young ("E&Y") an
independent auditor.
This case arose when the Internal Revenue Service
("IRS"), after noticing potential tax shelter transactions, issued
an administrative summons to Textron pursuant to I.R.C. § 7602
seeking tax accrual workpapers for Textron's 2001 tax returns.
Textron refused to comply and asserted a number of defenses. The
IRS sued to enforce the subpoena. After an evidentiary hearing,
the district court ruled for Textron on its work-product protection
claim, but rejected its other defenses. The district court also
found that Textron's disclosure to E&Y did not constitute waiver.
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The IRS appeals. After careful review,1 we affirm in part, vacate
in part, and remand.
I. Background
The IRS subpoena sought "Tax Accrual Workpapers," defined
as:
[A]11 accrual and other financial workpapers
or documents created or assembled by the
Taxpayer, an accountant for the Taxpayer, or
the Taxpayer's independent auditor relating to
any tax reserve for current, deferred, and
potential or contingent tax liabilities,
however classified or reported on audited
financial statements, and to any footnotes
disclosing reserves or contingent liabilities
on audited financial statements. They include,
but are not limited to, any and all analyses,
computations, opinions, notes, summaries,
discussions, and other documents relating to
such reserves and any footnotes.
The subpoena sought all documents in the actual or constructive
possession, custody, or control of Textron or its accountants. The
district court held oral arguments where the government reiterated
that it was seeking tax accrual documents prepared by Textron or
E&Y. Textron argued that it had created the documents in
anticipation of a dispute with the IRS regarding its tax returns.
1
Textron was joined by amici curiae Committee on Taxation and
Committee on Corporate Reporting of Financial Executives
International, Chamber of Commerce of the United States of America,
and Association of Corporate Counsel. The IRS has submitted two
scholarly articles which we have considered: Dennis J. Ventry, Jr.,
Protecting Abusive Tax Avoidance, 120 Tax Notes 857 (2008); and
Claudine Pease-Wingenter, The Application of the Attorney-Client
Privilege to Tax Accrual Workpapers: The Real Legacy of United
States v. Textron, 8 Houston Bus. & Tax L.J. 337 (2008).
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The district court then held an evidentiary hearing on
the types of documents included in the definition of "tax accrual
workpapers" and the basis for Textron's work product claim. At the
evidentiary hearing, the IRS's expert witness, Professor Douglas
Carmichael, testified that securities law requires that public
companies obtain a letter from an independent auditor approving the
company's financial statements, and that part of that audit was an
analysis of the company's reserves for covering tax loss.
Textron's former Director of Tax Reporting, Roxanne Cassidy,
countered that the tax accrual workpapers were created "to
determine whether Textron was adequately reserved with respect to
any potential disputes or litigations that would happen in the
future." Cassidy and Norman Richter, Textron tax counsel, explained
that the tax accrual workpapers listed positions Textron was taking
on its tax returns that might require that a reserve be set aside.
These positions were then analyzed by Textron attorneys who
estimated a percentage likelihood that the position would not
prevail if challenged by the IRS. Textron calls this the "hazards
of litigation percentage." The reserve requirement was calculated
by multiplying this percentage times the tax benefit claimed.
In response, Carmichael, the IRS expert witness,
contended that public companies prepare these papers every year to
comply with securities law regardless of whether they expect
litigation. But, Richter testified that the tax accrual workpapers
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were prepared under the assumption that issues identified would be
challenged by the IRS and would need to be defended. He further
testified that if Textron did not anticipate any disputes, the tax
accrual workpapers would be blank. The IRS disagreed, arguing that
some workpapers would nevertheless be necessary to handle deferred
taxes or to justify setting aside no tax reserve.
It was undisputed that the IRS audits every Textron
return in multi-year cycles. Testimony also showed that in each
audit cycle hundreds of IRS adjustments to Textron's returns were
simply accepted by Textron. Where Textron and the IRS do dispute
tax liability, their dispute could be resolved through a conference
with the audit team, by presentation of arguments to the IRS Office
of Appeals, or, ultimately, federal court litigation. In seven of
the last eight audit cycles, Textron and the IRS have brought at
least one issue to the IRS Office of Appeals. Between 1959 and
present, Textron and the IRS have litigated three disputes in
federal court. Textron admitted that it expected to concede
several issues identified in the workpapers, and that the
percentage for those issues was listed as "100%." Textron
explained that those items were due to instances where legal
developments rendered a prior position undefendable.
IRS agents explained that access to the workpapers would
help them navigate Textron's 4000 page tax return which was
accompanied by "9 four-drawer file cabinets" of paper. The IRS
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witnesses explained that the tax accrual workpapers would help the
IRS understand the substance of a transaction and could help the
IRS identify potential issues with Textron's return. An agent
testified that in 2006 the IRS adopted the policy of seeking tax
accrual workpapers when the audit team becomes aware (sometime
through self-reporting) of certain transactions by the taxpayer
which potentially constitute abusive tax shelters.
As to the waiver issue, the IRS's expert, Carmichael,
testified that companies create these tax accrual workpapers,
knowing that they will be shared with an auditor. Evidence also
showed that the auditor's code of ethics requires information be
kept confidential unless required to be produced in response to a
subpoena or other legal obligation. Mark Weston, a partner at E&Y,
submitted an affidavit explaining these confidentiality obligations
and further stating that E&Y had not in fact disclosed any
information regarding Textron's 2001 tax accrual computations. But
the IRS expert opined that auditors ultimately owe an allegiance to
the investing public and have legal obligations of disclosure in
some instances.
Textron countered that it let E&Y look at its tax accrual
workpapers, but did not allow E&Y to retain a copy of them. Debra
Raymond, a Textron tax manager, averred that she had reviewed E&Y's
files and that E&Y did not in fact retain a copy of Textron's
workpapers.
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The IRS subpoena also requested any tax-accrual documents
prepared by E&Y regarding Textron. After the evidentiary hearing,
the district court found that the "tax accrual workpapers" at issue
did not include facts about the issues they identified, and could
be described as follows:
1. A spreadsheet that contains:
(a) lists of items on Textron's tax returns,
which, in the opinion of Textron's counsel,
involve issues on which the tax laws are
unclear, and, therefore, may be challenged by
the IRS;
(b) estimates by Textron's counsel expressing,
in percentage terms, their judgments regarding
Textron's chances of prevailing in any
litigation over those issues (the "hazards of
litigation percentages"); and
(c) the dollar amounts reserved to reflect the
possibility that Textron might not prevail in
such litigation (the "tax reserve amounts").
2. Backup workpapers consisting of the
previous year's spreadsheet and earlier drafts
of the spreadsheet together with notes and
memoranda written by Textron's in-house tax
attorneys reflecting their opinions as to
which items should be included on the
spreadsheet and the hazard of litigation
percentage that should apply to each item.
United States v. Textron Inc., 507 F. Supp. 2d 138, 142-143 (D.R.I.
2007). The government objects on appeal that the district court
did not include in this definition any tax accrual workpaper that
E&Y prepared in its audit of Textron.
The district court then found that the subpoenaed
documents were relevant, requested for a proper purpose, and were
privileged attorney-client communications. Id. at 143-48. But,
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the district court found that the attorney-client privilege was
waived by disclosure to E&Y. Id. at 151-52.
As to the work-product protection claim, the district
court credited Textron's testimony that its ultimate purpose in
preparing the tax accrual workpapers was to ensure that it was
"'adequately reserved with respect to any potential disputes or
litigation that would happen in the future.'" Id. at 143 (quoting
the testimony of Norman Richter). The court found that this desire
to ensure adequate reserves was also prompted, in part, by its wish
to satisfy independent auditors that Textron had properly reported
its financial information. Id. at 150. The court acknowledged the
First Circuit's "because of" test for determining whether documents
were prepared in anticipation of litigation and recognized that
under that test there is no protection for "'documents that are
prepared in the ordinary course of business or that would have been
created in essentially similar form irrespective of the
litigation.'" Id. (quoting Maine v. United States Dep't of the
Interior, 298 F.3d 60, 70 (1st Cir. 2002)). The district court
then held that the tax accrual workpapers "would not have been
prepared at all 'but for' the fact that Textron anticipated the
possibility of litigation with the IRS." Id. The district court
reasoned that while the papers were used to obtain a favorable
opinion letter from E&Y regarding Textron's reserves, there would
have been no need for such reserves "if Textron had not anticipated
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a dispute with the IRS that was likely to result in litigation or
some other adversarial proceeding." Id. The IRS appeals the
conclusion that the work-product doctrine protects the tax accrual
workpapers.
The district court then noted that the standard for
waiver of the work-product protection was different than for
attorney-client privilege. Id. at 152. The district court
concluded that disclosure of Textron's tax accrual workpapers to
E&Y did not effect a waiver since disclosure "did not substantially
increase the IRS's opportunity to obtain the information contained
in them." Id. at 153. The district court based its decision on
E&Y's professional confidentiality obligations and the fact that
E&Y averred that it had not actually disclosed the information.
Id.2 The IRS also appeals this conclusion.
The district court then ruled that the government could
not make the showing needed to overcome work-product protection
since the government sought Textron's "mental impressions,
conclusions, opinions or legal theories." Id. at 154 (internal
quotations omitted). The IRS does not appeal this conclusion.
2
The district court also found that E&Y had promised to keep the
documents confidential. The IRS contends that this fact is not
supported in the record. As explained infra n.9, we need not
decide this dispute.
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II. Discussion
Three issues are thus presented for appeal: (1) whether
the work-product doctrine protects Textron's workpapers; (2)
whether any such work-product protection was waived through
disclosure to E&Y; and (3) whether the district court erred in not
considering the IRS's request for E&Y's workpapers.
On these evidentiary issues, we "review district court
rulings on questions of law de novo; we review district court fact
findings for clear error; and we review 'discretionary judgments
such as evidentiary rulings' for abuse of discretion." Cavallaro
v. United States, 284 F.3d 236, 245 (1st Cir. 2002) (quoting United
States v. Mass. Inst. of Tech. ("MIT"), 129 F.3d 681, 683 (1st Cir.
1997)).
"[T]he party who invokes the privilege bears the burden
of establishing that it applies to the communications at issue and
that it has not been waived." XYZ Corp. v. United States, 348 F.3d
16, 22 (1st Cir. 2003).
A. Work-Product Protection
1. Applicable law
"[T]he work-product doctrine does apply in tax summons
enforcement proceedings." Upjohn Co. v. United States, 449 U.S.
383, 386 (1981). The work-product doctrine protects "documents and
tangible things that are prepared in anticipation of litigation or
for trial by or for another party or its representative." Fed. R.
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Civ. P. 26(b)(3)(A). In assessing whether a document was prepared
in anticipation of litigation, this circuit uses the "because of"
test. Maine, 298 F.3d at 68. Under this test, a document is
protected "if, 'in light of the nature of the document and the
factual situation in the particular case, the document can be
fairly said to have been prepared or obtained because of the
prospect of litigation.'" Id. at 70 (quoting United States v.
Adlman, 134 F.3d 1194, 1202 (2d Cir. 1998)) (emphasis in original).
It is also our law that, "the 'because of' standard does not
protect from disclosure 'documents that are prepared in the
ordinary course of business or that would have been created in
essentially similar form irrespective of the litigation.'" Id.
(quoting Adlman, 134 F.3d at 1202). As discussed below, we hold in
this case that the presence of a business purpose does not defeat
work-product protection.
The work-product doctrine originates in Hickman v.
Taylor, where the Supreme Court laid out the problems with allowing
the discovery of work product:
Were such materials open to opposing counsel
on mere demand, much of what is now put down
in writing would remain unwritten. An
attorney's thoughts, heretofore inviolate,
would not be his own. Inefficiency, unfairness
and sharp practices would inevitably develop
in the giving of legal advice and in the
preparation of cases for trial. The effect on
the legal profession would be demoralizing.
And the interests of the clients and the cause
of justice would be poorly served.
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Hickman v. Taylor, 329 U.S. 495, 511 (1947). The doctrine is
rightly seen as a protection for the adversary system, not simply
the attorney. Coastal States Gas Corp. v. Department of Energy,
617 F.2d 854, 864 (D.C. Cir. 1980) (noting the doctrine does not
protect all documents prepared by a lawyer and instead "focuses on
the integrity of the adversary trial process itself" (quotation
omitted)).
The Restatement has offered a definition of litigation in
the work product context:
"Litigation" includes civil and criminal trial
proceedings, as well as adversarial
proceedings before an administrative agency,
an arbitration panel or a claims commission,
and alternative-dispute-resolution
proceedings such as mediation or mini-trial.
It also includes a proceeding such as a grand
jury or a coroner's inquiry or an
investigative legislative hearing. In general,
a proceeding is adversarial when evidence or
legal argument is presented by parties
contending against each other with respect to
legally significant factual issues.
Restatement (Third) of the Law Governing Lawyers § 87 cmt. h
(2000). "'Adversarialness' is the touchstone of this approach to
the 'litigation' question . . . ." In re Grand Jury Subpoena, 220
F.R.D. 130, 147 (D. Mass. 2004).
2. Are tax disputes "litigation?"
The IRS argues that preparation of tax returns is not
meant to be an adversary process, but rather is a self-reporting
regime that relies on the good faith of taxpayers. The IRS reasons
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that it is not seeking to gain unfair litigation advantage but
rather to verify self-assessment in an environment where the
taxpayer holds all the relevant information. Textron responds that
it routinely engages in administrative disputes and even federal
court litigation with the IRS.
Citing Roxworthy, Textron argues that anticipation of
audit disputes can constitute anticipation of litigation. United
States v. Roxworthy, 457 F.3d 590, 600-01 (6th Cir. 2006) (finding
memos prepared analyzing legal arguments supporting and opposing
specific tax positions to be protected work product). But,
Roxworthy cites another case, Hodges, for the proposition that "a
document prepared 'in anticipation of dealing with the IRS . . .
may well have been prepared in anticipation of an administrative
dispute and this may constitute litigation within the meaning of
Rule 26.'" Id. at 600 (quoting Hodges, Grant & Kaufmann v. IRS,
768 F.2d 719, 719-22 (5th Cir. 1985)) (emphasis added). Hodges,
however, was not expressing a holding, but simply remanding to the
district court to consider a work-product claim. Considering that
Roxworthy dealt with anticipation of litigation with respect to
specific transactions, Roxworthy does not establish that all
documents prepared analyzing tax returns are protected. Instead,
Roxworthy holds that documents created to analyze specific areas of
likely dispute may be protected.
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Nonetheless, after considering the applicable test, we
conclude that, while not all "dealing with the IRS" during an audit
is "litigation," the resolution of disputes through adversary
administrative processes, including proceedings before the IRS
Appeals Board, meets the definition of litigation. The IRS is
correct that preparation and filing of returns relies on good faith
self-reporting. But, good-faith disputes regarding the proper
application of tax law also arise during the audit process. Thus,
though the initial processing of these disputes in the audit
process may not be adversarial, the disputes themselves are
essentially adversarial; the subject of these disputes will become
the subject of litigation unless the dispute is resolved.3
3. Were the tax accrual workpapers prepared in
anticipation of litigation?
In addition to the question of whether audit disputes
with the IRS are litigation, we must confront the question of
whether Textron's tax accrual workpapers are prepared in
anticipation of such disputes. The district court reasoned that
the business need to cover potential liabilities arose out of the
anticipation of potential disputes, and thus would not occur "but
3
Thus, we do not hold that filing tax returns or participating in
audits is itself adversarial. Our holding does not and should not
change the essentiality of good faith self-assessment. The IRS
retains many enforcement tools to ensure compliance with that
system. Thus, we do not share in the IRS's negative conclusions
about the policy effects of our judgment, which concerns tax
accrual workpapers, documents which the IRS admits it seeks only in
limited circumstances.
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for" those disputes. Textron, 507 F. Supp. 2d at 150. The IRS
argues that the district court's conclusion is factually and
legally wrong.
a. Analysis
The IRS argues that, as a legal matter, the documents
were not prepared in anticipation of litigation and that the
district court misapplied the "because of" test when it reasoned
that the documents would not have been created "but for" the
prospect of litigation.
We agree with the district court's finding that one of
the purposes behind the creation of the documents was anticipation
of litigation. As the district court explained, the need to
estimate the likelihood of success in litigation was a result of
the need to set up a reserve fund to cover tax positions for which
Textron could foresee disputes with the IRS.
Of course, simple relation to litigation is insufficient
to trigger work-product protection. Maine, 298 F.3d at 69.
Further, work-product protection must be assessed in reference to
a "the function that the document serves," not its content.
Roxworthy, 457 F.3d at 595. And it is not enough that the preparer
"had the prospect of litigation in mind when it" created the
documents. Adlman, 134 F.3d at 1204. Rather, the "because of"
test "really turns on whether it would have been prepared
irrespective of the expected litigation with the IRS." Id.
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But, here, the function of the documents was to analyze
litigation for the purpose of creating and auditing a reserve fund.
It can be fairly said that "'the driving force behind the
preparation'" of the documents, Roxworthy, 457 F.3d at 595 (quoting
Nat'l Union Fire Ins. Co. v. Murray Sheet Metal Co., 967 F.2d 980,
984 (4th Cir. 1992)), was the need to reserve money in anticipation
of disputes with the IRS. The district court so found, and we find
no clear error. See Cavallaro, 284 F.3d at 245 (clear error
standard applied to findings of fact of district court in privilege
case).4 In this way, we read the district court's "but for"
4
The dissent challenges this factual conclusion of the district
court, but utterly fails to explain why the district court's
acceptance of the testimony of Textron's witnesses was clear error.
Specifically, the district court found that Textron would have no
need to compute reserves if it had not anticipated litigation.
Textron, 507 F. Supp. 2d at 150 (recognizing that though "it may be
accurate to say that the workpapers helped Textron determine what
amount should be reserved to cover any potential tax liabilities,"
anticipation of disputes drove that very need). Contrary to the
dissent's intimations, the district court did find that Textron's
tax accrual workpapers were prepared with dual purposes in mind.
Id. at 143 (finding Textron's "ultimate purpose" in preparing the
workpapers was to ensure Textron was adequately reserved with
respect to disputes or potential litigation, but acknowledging that
the desire to establish adequate reserves "also was prompted, in
part, by its wish to satisfy an independent auditor" and obtain a
clean opinion). These findings were based on testimony from
Textron's witnesses. The testimony of the government's expert,
cited by the dissent, does not contradict the conclusion that
Textron was motivated by dual purposes, especially considering that
it is not clear that the expert is using the same definition of
"anticipation of litigation" that we adopt. See infra. Thus, the
district court's fact finding was not clearly erroneous. Rather,
it is accurate to say that Textron's tax accrual workpapers would
not have been prepared in a similar form irrespective of the
potential for litigation.
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reasoning as a way of expressing its conclusion that the documents
would not have been prepared irrespective of the prospect of
litigation, but rather were prepared "because of" the risk of
disputes and litigation which gave rise to a need to compute and
report tax reserves.5
The IRS next argues that the district court found that
the "workpapers helped Textron determine what amount should be
reserved to cover any potential tax liabilities and that the
workpapers were useful in obtaining a 'clean' opinion from E&Y
regarding the adequacy of the reserve amount." Textron, 507 F.
Supp. 2d at 150. The IRS argues that this finding legally compels
a ruling that the tax accrual workpapers are not protected, since
documents prepared in the ordinary course of business receive no
protection. Maine, 298 F.3d at 70. The IRS further reasons that
since the documents were required to comply with reporting and
securities obligations, the tax accrual workpapers were prepared
pursuant to "regulatory requirements" and are therefore not
protected. See Nat'l Union, 967 F.2d at 984. The IRS reasons
that, as a simple matter of law, Rule 26 does not apply to
5
The IRS also argues that some form of workpaper would have been
prepared even if no disputes were anticipated in order to justify
setting aside no reserve. But that is not the context in which the
workpapers at issue in this case were created. Rather, the
evidence shows that these workpapers project the risks of
litigation over specific tax positions and were created in the
context of anticipating disputes (and therefore possible
litigation) over those positions.
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"[m]aterials assembled in the ordinary course of business, or
pursuant to public requirements unrelated to litigation, or for
other nonlitigation purposes." Fed. R. Civ. P. 26 Notes of
Advisory Committee on 1970 amendments.
We reject the IRS's contention that the mere presence of
a business or regulatory purpose defeats work-product protection.
To be sure, "there is no work-product immunity for documents
prepared in the regular course of business rather than for purposes
of the litigation," even though "litigation is already in
prospect." 8 Charles Alan Wright, Arthur R. Miller & Richard L.
Marcus, Federal Practice and Procedure, § 2024 (2008) (emphasis
added). But, it is also true that "'[d]ual purpose' documents
created because of the prospect of litigation are protected even
though they were also prepared for a business purpose." Id.; see
also In re Grand Jury Subpoena, 357 F.3d 900, 907 (9th Cir. 2004)
(adopting Wright and Miller's "because of" test in order to handle
"dual purpose" documents).
Thus, the best reading of the advisory committee's note
is simply that preparation for business or for public requirements
is preparation for a nonlitigation purpose insufficient in itself
to warrant protection. The note states that there is no protection
for documents created for business, regulatory, or "other
nonlitigation purposes." This language suggests the note is
considering business and regulatory purposes as nonlitigation
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purposes, but does not suggest that the presence of such a purpose
should somehow override a litigation purpose, should one exist. To
the contrary, the language of the note does not suggest that the
advisory committee was considering the problem of dual purpose
documents. Thus, we do not read the note as stating that there
should be no protection where a document is prepared because of the
possibility of litigation but also for a business or regulatory
purpose.6
Like in the case where a company analyzes pending
litigation for the purpose of setting aside a reserve, cf. Adlman,
6
One district court in this circuit has reached an opposite
conclusion. In re Raytheon Sec. Litig., 218 F.R.D. 354, 359 (D.
Mass. 2003) ("However, even when documents were created 'because
of' litigation, documents that are required to be prepared to
comply with the law may not be protected."). This approach refuses
to protect documents prepared because of the possibility of
litigation simply because another possible purpose is present. As
explained infra, such an approach ignores the primary distinction
between the "because of" and the "primary purpose" test.
The IRS also points to another decision in this circuit where
the district court analyzed opinion letters regarding investment
vehicles alleged to be tax shelters. Fidelity Intern. Currency
Advisor A Fund, L.L.C., ex rel. Tax Matters Partner v. United
States, No. 05-40151, 2008 WL 4809032, at *13 (D. Mass. April 18,
2008). The court found those letters' "purpose was not to analyze
pending or imminent claims; instead, it was to induce the taxpayers
to invest in the strategy (or, put differently, to provide comfort
to those investors, particularly with respect to the possible
imposition of future tax penalties)." Id. But that court did not
hold "dual purpose" documents unprotected. Rather, it essentially
made a factual call, which we do not now judge, that the
possibility of litigation was too remote. Id. As explained, infra
Section II.A.4, in the present case the context surrounding the
creation of the documents, namely the need to estimate reserve
funds, made it reasonable for Textron to foresee and analyze
litigation.
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134 F.3d at 1200 (describing hypothetical examples where work-
product protection applies), here the business purpose derives from
and is inextricably related to anticipating litigation. That the
anticipation of such disputes (and corresponding potential
litigation) also triggered certain business and accounting
obligations does not bar the protection of the work-product
doctrine. See id. at 1202 ("Where a document is created because of
the prospect of litigation, analyzing the likely outcome of that
litigation, it does not lose protection under this formulation
merely because it is created in order to assist with a business
decision."); In re Special September 1978 Grand Jury (II), 640 F.2d
49, 61 (7th Cir. 1980) ("We conclude that the materials . . . were
indeed prepared in anticipation of litigation, even though they
were prepared as well for the filing of the Board of Elections
reports."). In arguing against this conclusion, the IRS points to
a Third Circuit case where that court instructed the district court
on remand to assess whether a tax reserve file was prepared to
assist in litigation or to comply with securities requirements.
United States v. Rockwell Int'l, 897 F.2d 1255, 1266 (3d Cir.
1990). In the present case, however, the district court has
already conducted such analysis and has concluded that the
workpapers were created because of both purposes.
The dissent disagrees with this legal conclusion and
relies primarily on the language in Maine that "the 'because of'
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standard does not protect from disclosure 'documents that are
prepared in the ordinary course of business or that would have been
created in essentially similar form irrespective of the
litigation.'" Maine, 298 F.3d at 70 (quoting Adlman, 134 F.3d at
1202). Based on this language, the dissent charges we are going
against established circuit precedent. But, for the reasons
described above, it is error to read this "ordinary course of
business" language as implying that all documents prepared with
some business purpose in mind are necessarily unprotected. The
court in Maine was not confronted with dual purpose documents like
those at issue here. Rather, that court recited the above quoted
language in the course of holding that there was insufficient
information to see if the documents at issue were prepared for
litigation or rather in the ordinary course of business. Id.
Thus, Maine's "ordinary course of business" language should not be
read as barring protection for dual purpose documents where one
business purpose is present. This conclusion is all the more clear
when one consider's Adlman's reason for adopting the "because of"
test:
The issue is less clear, however, as to
documents which, although prepared because of
expected litigation, are intended to inform a
business decision influenced by the prospects
of the litigation. The formulation applied by
some courts in determining whether documents
are protected by work-product privilege is
whether they are prepared "primarily or
exclusively to assist in litigation" -- a
formulation that would potentially exclude
-22-
documents containing analysis of expected
litigation, if their primary, ultimate, or
exclusive purpose is to assist in making the
business decision. Others ask whether the
documents were prepared "because of" existing
or expected litigation -- a formulation that
would include such documents, despite the fact
that their purpose is not to "assist in"
litigation. Because we believe that protection
of documents of this type is more consistent
with both the literal terms and the purposes
of the Rule, we adopt the latter formulation.
Adlman, 134 F.3d at 1197-98, quoted in part in Maine, 298 F.3d at
68.
Further, a contrary holding would lead to undesirable
results in other cases. Consider a document prepared to analyze a
specific litigation in order to compute for an auditor how much
must be retained in a litigation reserve fund. Were we to adopt
the IRS position that documents created to satisfy audit reporting
responsibilities were not protected, opposing counsel in the
litigation might be able to discover such a memo, effectively
disclosing counsel's ultimate mental impression of the case. In
fact, in similar circumstances, the Sixth and Second circuits have
suggested that memoranda analyzing a transaction or position to be
protected by the work-product doctrine. Roxworthy, 457 F.3d at
600; Adlman, 134 F.3d at 1200-04 (remanding for the district court
to apply the correct standard).
-23-
b. Countervailing concerns
Having explained why application of the work-product
doctrine leads us to the conclusion that Textron's tax accrual
workpapers are protected, we pause to address the IRS's arguments
against such a conclusion.
i. Arthur Young
The IRS asserts our decision will run afoul of Supreme
Court precedent. In Arthur Young, the Court declined to recognize
an accountant's work-product doctrine, thus holding that tax
accrual workpapers created by an independent auditor were not
protected. United States v. Arthur Young & Co., 465 U.S. 805, 815-
21 (1984). The Court recognized that the auditor's papers
necessarily included the taxpayer's own thinking about tax "soft
spots." Id. at 813. The Court also rejected some of the fairness
concerns implicated in that case. Id. at 820 (rejecting argument
that "enforcement of an IRS summons for accountants' tax accrual
workpapers permits the Government to probe the thought processes of
its taxpayer citizens, thereby giving the IRS an unfair advantage
in negotiating and litigating tax controversies"). Further, the
Court rejected policy concerns that, without a new privilege,
companies would be tempted to withhold information from auditors.
Id. at 818-19 (finding that "[r]esponsible corporate management
would not risk a qualified evaluation of a corporate taxpayer's
financial posture to afford cover for questionable positions
-24-
reflected in a prior tax return" and concluding that "the
independent auditor's obligation to serve the public interest
assures that the integrity of the securities markets will be
preserved, without the need for a work-product immunity for
accountants' tax accrual workpapers").
Following this precedent, we have recognized that "the
doctrine of construing the [attorney-client] privilege narrowly
. . . has particular force in the context of IRS investigations
given the 'congressional policy choice in favor of disclosure of
all information relevant to a legitimate IRS inquiry.'" Cavallaro,
284 F.3d at 245-46 (quoting Arthur Young, 465 U.S. at 816). But
unlike the Court in Arthur Young, we are not now confronted with
the question of whether to recognize a new privilege. Here, the
doctrinal decision we face is whether to afford protection to
documents created because of both business and litigation -- a
question not presented in Arthur Young.7 Since this question has
7
The IRS also suggests that the Supreme Court was comfortable
with discovery of taxpayer tax accrual workpapers because it
"affirmatively encouraged the IRS's seeking tax-accrual workpapers
from the company prior to pursuing such workpapers from the
auditor." IRS Reply Brief at 22-23 (citing Arthur Young, 465 U.S.
at 820-21 & n.17). But the cited provisions of Arthur Young do not
consider the question of work-product protection, and do not
endorse any particular method, but rather simply take note that the
IRS "has demonstrated administrative sensitivity" by adopting a
policy to "take all reasonable means to secure the information from
the corporation itself before issuing a summons to the independent
auditor." Arthur Young, 465 U.S. at 21 n.17. Whether such
"reasonable means" can include summons of a taxpayer's own tax
accrual workpapers was not considered by the Supreme Court.
-25-
broader implications, the Supreme Court's policy judgment that a
new privilege is not necessary for the accurate preparation of
accountants' tax accrual workpapers is not controlling. Further,
our prior analysis of this issue does not rely on the policy
considerations rejected in Arthur Young. That case is not an
obstacle to our conclusion that protection of dual-purpose
documents is consistent with the purpose and doctrine of the work-
product doctrine.
ii. El Paso
Because of a contrary outcome in a Fifth Circuit case,
the IRS argues that our decision will create a circuit split. See
United States v. El Paso Co., 682 F.2d 530, 542 (5th Cir. 1982),
cert. denied, 466 U.S. 94 (1984). In El Paso, the Fifth Circuit
found that a company's own tax accrual workpapers were not
protected as they were created for purposes of complying with
securities law:
In sum, we believe that the tax pool analysis
does not contemplate litigation in the sense
required to bring it within the work product
doctrine. The tax pool analysis concocts
theories about the results of possible
litigation; such analyses are not designed to
prepare a specific case for trial or
negotiation. Their sole function, from all
that appears in the record, is to back up a
figure on a financial balance sheet. Written
ultimately to comply with SEC regulations, the
tax pool analysis carries much more the aura
of daily business than it does of courtroom
combat. We hold, therefore, that the tax pool
analysis and backup memoranda are not
protected work product materials.
-26-
Id. at 543-44. However, in El Paso the Fifth Circuit applied a
different definition of the work-product doctrine, asking whether
the "primary motivating purpose behind the creation of the document
was to aid in possible future litigation." Id. at 542 (internal
quotation marks omitted). Thus, the result here does not create a
circuit split with El Paso, but is merely the application of an
existing split in the definition of the "anticipation of
litigation." It is precisely in these "dual purpose" situations
that the "because of" test used in this circuit distinguishes
itself from the "primary purpose" test used in the Fifth Circuit.
Maine, 298 F.3d at 68 (citing Adlman for the proposition that the
primary purpose test "is at odds with the text and the policies of
Rule 26 because nothing in it suggests that documents prepared for
dual purposes of litigation and business or agency decisions do not
fall within its scope"). Thus, unlike the Fifth Circuit, we need
not assess whether the tax accrual workpapers carry more of one
aura than another. We need only conclude that since the analysis
was undertaken "because of" the anticipation of litigation, work-
product protection applies.
iii. Factual argument
Since some tax positions in the accrual papers carry a
100 percent chance of failing, the IRS argues, as a factual matter,
that Textron could not have been anticipating litigation. But,
Textron explained that those entries were the result of identifying
-27-
positions that were incorrect as a result of subsequent legal
developments. The IRS also argues that most disputes are resolved
informally. But the fact that most disputes are resolved before
litigation commences does not mean that analysis of those disputes
could not have been in anticipation of "the prospect of litigation"
over those disputes. To the contrary, assessing the likelihood
that a tax position will not withstand scrutiny necessarily entails
analysis which anticipates how litigation of that position would be
resolved.
4. Has Textron adequately identified the
specific litigation for which the workpapers
were prepared?
Adlman and Roxworthy, cases we relied on above, are also
not directly on point as they involved documents analyzing the
consequences of a specific litigation or specific transaction. The
IRS argues that this distinction is controlling, that to protect
Textron's tax accrual workpapers is in effect to afford a "blanket"
protection -- a work-product doctrine that is so broad it will
"swallow" the attorney-client privilege. It is true that we have
required proponents of a work-product protection claim to
"'identify the litigation for which the document was created . . .
and explain why the work-product privilege applies to all portions
of the document.'" Maine, 298 F.3d at 69 (quoting Church of
Scientology Int'l v. United States Dep't of Justice, 30 F.3d 224,
237 (1st Cir. 1994)). These "identification and explanation
-28-
requirements are not to be given a hypertechnical construction,"
but "they can neither be brushed aside nor satisfied by vague
generalities." Id.
Here, Textron has met its burden. The tax accrual
workpapers identify and numerically evaluate a number of tax
positions Textron took on its 2001 returns. As described above,
Textron has shown that its analysis of each position was prepared
by anticipating the possibility of litigation with the IRS arising
over a dispute regarding that position. Thus, the tax accrual
workpapers identify specific positions, and the litigation
projections were created in anticipation of disputes and possible
litigation over those positions.8
The IRS again argues that Textron could not have
consistently had specific litigation in mind since most tax
disputes were resolved before litigation and since Textron could
not reasonably intend to litigate every challenged position. But
these facts do not change our analysis. As the district court
found, the spreadsheet at issue assessed the likelihood of
succeeding in litigation over each specific position. Thus, the
8
The IRS posits that some entries in the tax accrual workpapers
may refer to reserves held for deferred taxes over which no
litigation is to be expected. That some reserves may not be based
on disputes does not change our conclusion regarding computation of
reserves that are based on potential disputes. Further, the IRS
has not requested that we order the production of only the papers
regarding deferred tax reserves, which in any event, would not
appear to be relevant to assisting the IRS.
-29-
function served by creating this analysis is to assess what funds
must be set aside in anticipation of litigation over each of the
positions identified. That Textron might ultimately decide not to
dispute a specific position does not contradict the conclusion that
when it estimated its litigation success, it was anticipating
specific litigation.
Again, we note that a contrary result would lead to an
undesirable result. If we were only to afford work product
protection over documents of this sort by requiring a showing, as
the IRS suggests, that there was some specific quantum of
expectation that the position at issue would mature into full-
fledged litigation, we would essentially be offering protection
only to the cantankerous and combative taxpayer who intends to
thoroughly litigate every position.
Precedent does suggest that a party claiming work-product
protection must "'have had a subjective belief that litigation was
a real possibility, and that belief must have been objectively
reasonable.'" Roxworthy, 457 F.3d at 594 (quoting In re Sealed
Case, 146 F.3d 881, 888 (D.C. Cir. 1998)). The district court
found that, considering its history, it was reasonable for Textron
to conclude that litigation with the IRS was likely. We see the
matter differently but reach the same result.
In the context of these facts, we do not think that a
history of litigation with the IRS should be the deciding factor.
-30-
A company with a history of challenging the IRS creates these
documents "because of" the same reason as another company without
such a history: the possibility of a dispute compels them to
anticipate litigation so as to prepare and assess their tax reserve
funds. In this case, the anticipation of litigation coupled with
securities and reporting requirements forced Textron to analyze and
project its likelihood of success in litigation. Thus, Textron was
effectively forced to operate under the hypothetical belief that
litigation would occur. For this reason, regardless of its
specific history with the IRS, it was objectively reasonable for
Textron to forecast litigation.
The IRS argues that this holding will "immunize nearly
every document generated by lawyers because clients can always be
said to be aware of possible litigation." The IRS worries that
work-product protection would "encompass essentially all legal
advice," since any lawyer analyzing the risks inherent in a legal
transaction or position will be able to gain work-product
protection by saying that the analysis was prepared in anticipation
of litigation regarding that transaction or position. We disagree.
As we have just explained, in the case of tax accrual workpapers,
the dual purposes -- financial reporting and anticipating
litigation -- are necessarily intertwined; the function of
preparing adequate financial reports inherently requires Textron to
anticipate and analyze litigation. The anticipation of litigation
-31-
may be similarly intertwined in other cases. See, e.g., Delaney,
Migdail & Young, Chartered v. IRS, 826 F.2d 124, 127 (D.C. Cir.
1987) (distinguishing case law requiring a "specific claim" to
uphold a claim of work-product protection to certain IRS memoranda
analyzing potential legal vulnerabilities). But in many cases,
there will not be an obvious objectively reasonable need to foresee
litigation.9 Of course, each case will depend on its facts. See,
e.g., Adlman, 134 F.3d at 1204 (remanding for further fact finding
applying the correct standard). But, in the present case, we
conclude that Textron's need to consider the possibility of
litigation with respect to each disputed position adequately
satisfies this requirement.
9
For example, the IRS argues that protecting Textron's tax
accrual papers would lead to protection of documents prepared by a
bank to estimate loan failure rates. We disagree. A loan may fail
for all sorts of reasons. Tax positions would ultimately succeed
or fall based on their legal merit, assessed through litigation.
In this case, the combination of the possibility of litigation and
reporting requirements required Textron to anticipate litigation.
Legal analysis of other transactions and positions may not entail
such specific consideration of litigation.
The IRS also fears our holding will somehow lead companies to
use lawyers to conduct performance reviews, then seek work-product
protection for such documents. We think such a hypothetical is
distinguishable. In such a case, the employer may be evaluating
the employee's performance for business purposes, regardless of the
possibility of litigation. Here, Textron evaluates its tax
positions for business purposes precisely because of the
possibility those positions will be challenged in litigation.
Thus, the business context makes it reasonable for Textron to
anticipate and foresee litigation. While such a question is a
factual matter for another case, it seems less likely that the
function of employee evaluations would similarly make it reasonable
for an employer to anticipate litigation.
-32-
B. Waiver of Work-Product Protection
Unlike attorney-client privilege, "work product
protection is provided against 'adversaries,' so only disclosing
material in a way inconsistent with keeping it from an adversary
waives work product protection." MIT, 129 F.3d at 687.
Specifically, "disclosure to an adversary, real or potential,
forfeits work product protection." Id.
We must decide whether Textron waived work-product
protection by showing its tax accrual workpapers to E&Y, its
independent auditor. A number of district court cases have
concluded that disclosure to independent auditors does not waive
work-product protection. See, e.g., Regions Fin. Corp. &
Subsidiaries v. United States, No. 06-00895, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS
41940, at *27-28 (N.D. Ala. May 8, 2008); Lawrence E. Jaffe Pension
Plan v. Household Int'l, Inc., 237 F.R.D. 176, 183 (N.D. Ill. 2006)
("Disclosing documents to an auditor does not substantially
increase the opportunity for potential adversaries to obtain the
information."); Merrill Lynch & Co. v. Allegheny Energy, Inc., 229
F.R.D. 441, 448 (S.D.N.Y. 2004) ("A business and its auditor can
and should be aligned insofar as they both seek to prevent, detect,
and root out corporate fraud."). But see Medinol v. Boston Sci.
Corp., 214 F.R.D. 113, 116-17 (S.D.N.Y. 2002) ("Boston Scientific
and its outside auditor Ernst & Young did not share 'common
interests' in litigation, and disclosures to Ernst & Young as
-33-
independent auditors did not therefore serve the privacy interests
that the work product doctrine was intended to protect."). It is
undisputed that Textron and E&Y were not actual adversaries. The
IRS argues by analogy to MIT that they were potential adversaries.
In MIT, we found work-product privilege waived when MIT disclosed
documents to a Defense Department auditing agency. 128 F.3d at
687. The audit agency was reviewing MIT's expense submissions. Id.
We found MIT and the agency to be potential adversaries as, "MIT
doubtless hoped that there would be no actual controversy between
it and the Department of Defense, but the potential for dispute and
even litigation was certainly there." Id.
The facts here are different. While the Defense
Department auditing agency was reviewing expenses to determine if
it would challenge those expenses, E&Y was not auditing Textron in
order to identify disputes it would have with Textron, but rather,
to decide if it could issue a letter certifying Textron's financial
statements. This is a cooperative not adversarial relationship.
See Jaffe Pension Plan, 237 F.R.D. at 183 ("[T]he fact that an
independent auditor must remain independent from the company it
audits does not establish that the auditor also has an adversarial
relationship with the client as contemplated by the work product
doctrine."). While it is possible to imagine circumstances where
E&Y's professional obligations could cause E&Y and Textron to come
into conflict on some legal question, the IRS can point to no
-34-
"conceivable scenario in which E & Y would file a lawsuit against
[Textron] because of something E & Y learned from [Textron's]
disclosures." Regions, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 41940, at * 27-28
(citing MIT and the district court's opinion in this case to
conclude that there was no waiver in similar circumstances).
Whereas MIT's disclosure to the Defense Department auditing agency
had the potential to directly trigger a dispute with that agency,
no such potential adversity existed here.
Disclosure to a conduit to a potential adversary can also
waive work-product protection. Raytheon, 218 F.R.D. at 360
(collecting cases). In other words, waiver occurs upon disclosure
to a third party that "substantially increased the opportunities
for potential adversaries to obtain the information." 8 Wright,
Miller, & Marcus, supra, § 2024 (2008). Though E&Y has
professional confidentiality obligations limiting disclosure, the
IRS argues that it may be required to turn documents over to the
SEC and may, in some circumstances, have a duty to disclose
information to protect stockholders. See Arthur Young, 465 U.S. at
817-18 ("The independent public accountant performing this special
function owes ultimate allegiance to the corporation's creditors
and stockholders, as well as to the investing public.").
The IRS also argues that E&Y may be required to disclose
this information in response to a valid subpoena. At first glance,
this argument seems circular: a subpoena would only be valid if the
-35-
protection did not survive. But, on further examination, the
question is more complicated. The record establishes that E&Y did
not retain a copy of Textron's tax accrual workpapers. Thus, at
first we would see little likelihood that E&Y would have to
disclose those papers. But, E&Y used those papers, together with
its own expertise, in preparing its own assessment of Textron's
reserve tax liability. Therefore, the only remaining documents
which could be subjected to a risk of discovery are E&Y's own
assessments, which incorporate Textron's analysis.
Though we hold Textron's tax accrual workpapers are
protected, Arthur Young suggests that E&Y's workpapers may be
discoverable. 465 U.S. at 815-821.10 In fact, as we find infra,
Textron itself may be required to produce E&Y's workpapers on
remand.
Since E&Y's workpapers may be discoverable, the question
we must ask is whether disclosure of those workpapers substantially
increased the risk that the contents of Textron's workpapers would
be disclosed to an adversary. As the Supreme Court has recognized,
independent auditors "obtain and assess the opinions, speculations,
and projections of management with regard to unclear, aggressive,
or questionable tax positions that may have been taken on prior tax
10
Though the parties debate the extent of confidentiality
agreements and expectations of privacy between Textron and E&Y, we
find such expectations irrelevant here, since a bilateral
confidentiality agreement regarding Textron's workpapers would not
defeat a valid IRS subpoena for E&Y's workpapers.
-36-
returns." Arthur Young, 465 U.S. at 812. Further the auditor's
workpapers "may document the auditor's interviews with corporate
personnel." Id. (emphasis added). Thus, disclosure of E&Y's
workpapers might reveal Textron's own analysis. On the other hand,
E&Y's affiant, Weston, suggested that E&Y "did not rely solely upon
the conclusions of [Textron's] tax counsel" but instead "applied
its own professional knowledge and judgment." Because the district
court did not address the question of whether the IRS can gain
discovery of E&Y's tax workpapers through a subpoena to Textron, it
made no factual findings regarding the actual contents of E&Y's
workpapers or the extent to which disclosure of such workpapers
would effectively constitute disclosure of Textron's own
assessment. Rather than rely on vague language suggesting what
might be in E&Y's workpapers, we think that this is a question the
district court must develop on remand through in camera inspection,
if feasible, or through testimony.
C. E&Y's Workpapers
The IRS's subpoena also sought tax accrual workpapers
prepared by E&Y that were within the possession, custody, or
control of Textron or its accountants. The district court did not
include such workpapers in its definition of the documents sought
and so did not rule on their discoverability. The IRS asserts that
such failure to rule is error.
-37-
Textron argues that this omission is the fault of the
IRS. When convening the evidentiary hearing, the district court
called on the parties to present evidence on the question of
"[w]hat specific types of documents are included in the 'Tax
Accrual Workpapers' and 'backup' documentation" sought by the
summons. But the evidence at the evidentiary hearing simply
concerned Textron's workpapers, and the IRS did not bring up E&Y's
workpapers. Textron thus argues that the IRS should not be
permitted to now challenge the scope of the district court's
construction of the summons. We disagree.
The summons explicitly sought these documents and the
record indicates that the government reiterated its request in its
briefing and at the initial oral arguments held before the
evidentiary hearing was scheduled. The district court was fairly
put on notice of this request, and in fact, when discussing the
applicability of I.R.C. § 7525, stated at the oral arguments, "I
think you've made your case as far as the Ernst & Young papers."
That the evidentiary hearing focused on developing evidence
regarding the nature of Textron's tax accrual workpapers does not
show that the IRS had abandoned its clearly made request for E&Y's
workpapers. In other words, since the IRS "squarely and
distinctly" requested E&Y's workpapers, and the district court was
on notice of the issue, the argument is not waived. Cf. B&T
Masonry Constr. Co. v. Pub. Serv. Mut. Ins. Co., 382 F.3d 36, 40
-38-
(1st Cir. 2004) ("To preserve a point for appeal, some developed
argumentation must be put forward in the nisi prius court -- and a
veiled reference to a legal theory is not enough to satisfy this
requirement.").
Turning to the merits, as noted above, Arthur Young
suggests such documents are not protected and Textron has not
argued otherwise. Textron also does not meaningfully dispute the
government's prima facie showing of relevance. Instead, Textron
contends that we may nevertheless affirm the district court because
Textron, the only defendant in this action, does not have
possession, custody, or control of these documents.
In the normal discovery context, "so long as the party
has the legal right or ability to obtain the documents from another
source upon demand, that party is deemed to have control." Mercy
Catholic Med. Ctr. v. Thompson, 380 F.3d 142, 160 (3d Cir. 2004);
see also 8A Wright, Miller, & Marcus, supra, § 2210 ("Inspection
can be had if the party to whom the request is made has the legal
right to obtain the document, even though in fact it has no
copy."). Textron has provided us with no argument why that test
should not apply in the IRS subpoena context.
Textron argues that its witness testified that Textron
could not access the documents. But Textron mischaracterizes the
record. Textron's witness simply testified that E&Y did not give
Textron its workpapers, not that Textron could not obtain copies of
-39-
the documents upon request. Thus Textron has no evidence showing
that it did not have the ability to demand the documents. Textron
argues that R.I. Gen. Laws § 5-3.1-22 establishes an independent
auditor owns its own workpapers. But, again, it does not establish
that Textron does not have the ability or contractual right to
request the documents.
The IRS has some evidence to suggest that Textron may
have had the right to demand E&Y's workpapers. Raymond, a Textron
witness, stated that she had reviewed E&Y's files to confirm that
E&Y did not retain Textron's workpapers. The IRS argues that this
shows Textron has the right to obtain the documents. Textron
argues it shows only a right to temporary access. We need not
parse this testimony, since even adopting Textron's interpretation,
we could not affirm on this basis. Textron has the burden of
showing a lack of control and has produced no evidence to meet this
burden. United States v. Lawn Builders of New England, 856 F.2d
388, 392 (1st Cir. 1988) ("'Once the district court has reason to
believe that the requested documents exist, the burden then shifts
to the summonee to show that he is not in possession of them.'"
(quoting United States v. Freedom Church, 613 F.2d 316, 322 (1st
Cir. 1979))). Thus, we remand for the district court to determine
the factual question of whether Textron can obtain E&Y's
workpapers.
-40-
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court's
determination that Textron's tax accrual workpapers are protected,
affirm that Textron and E&Y were not potential adversaries, but
vacate the ultimate determination that work-product protection was
not waived, and remand for the district court to reassess, in a
manner consistent with this opinion, the question of whether
disclosure of E&Y's workpapers would reveal the information
contained in Textron's own workpapers. On remand the district
court should also assess the discoverability of E&Y's workpapers by
determining whether Textron has the legal right or ability to
obtain these documents.
Affirmed in part, Vacated in part, and Remanded.
No Costs are imposed.
-Concurring and Dissenting Opinion Follows-
-41-
BOUDIN, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting
in part. The central issue is whether Textron's tax-accrual work
papers are protected from IRS summons because they are attorney
work product. Any lawyer might be unnerved to find that his
potential adversary could obtain the lawyer's own estimate of his
chances of success. But under our own precedent and consistent
with other circuits, tax-accrual work papers are not protected
because they are prepared for reasons independent of the need to
prepare for or conduct litigation.
Federal securities laws require publicly traded
corporations like Textron to have their financial statements
certified by an independent auditor. See 15 U.S.C. §§ 78l, 78m; 17
C.F.R. § 210 et seq. Key to the audit is evaluating "the adequacy
and reasonableness of the corporation's reserve account for
contingent tax liabilities." United States v. Arthur Young & Co.,
465 U.S. 805, 812 (1983). Tax accrual work papers aid by inter
alia
pinpoint[ing] the 'soft spots' on a
corporation's tax return by highlighting those
areas in which the corporate taxpayer has
taken a position that may, at some later date,
require the payment of additional taxes" [and
also include] "an item-by-item analysis of the
corporation's potential exposure to additional
liability.
Id. at 813.
In the wake of Enron and other corporate scandals, the
IRS began to seek taxpayers' tax-accrual work papers for certain
-42-
transactions "that [are] the same as or substantially similar to
one of the types of transactions that the [IRS] . . . has
determined to be a tax avoidance transaction." Treas. Reg. §
1.6011-4(b)(2) (2002) (codified at 26 C.F.R. § 1.6011-4(b)(2)).
Here, the IRS' request for Textron's tax accrual work papers was
made after an IRS team found that Textron had entered into nine
separate "Sale-In, Lease-Out" ("SILO") transactions.11
A qualified privilege exists for attorney work product,
but the phrase does not mean any and all work by an attorney that
happens to refer to litigation; it means work connected to
preparing for or managing litigation. Hickman v. Taylor, 329 U.S.
495, 510-12 & n.9 (1947). The attorney-client privilege is not in
any way confined to advice given for use in litigation, Mead Data
Central, Inc. v. U.S. Dep't. of the Air Force, 566 F.2d 242, 252-53
(D.C. Cir. 1977), but the latter privilege was held to be waived by
Textron and is not at issue on this appeal.
In our circuit and in others, documents are said to be
created "in anticipation of litigation," and thus eligible for work
product protection if, "in light of the nature of the document and
the factual situation in the particular case, the document can be
11
SILO transactions are "a combination of a sale of an asset by
a tax-exempt entity" followed by a "lease back to the same entity."
Shvedov, Tax Implications of SILOs, QTEs, and Other Leasing
Transactions with Tax-Exempt Entities 1, CRS Report for Congress
(Nov. 30, 2004). These transactions benefit private entities by
allowing them to "deduct depreciation" and "interest." Id. at 10.
-43-
fairly said to have been prepared or obtained because of the
prospect of litigation." Maine v. U.S. Dep't. of the Interior, 298
F.3d 60, 68 (1st Cir. 2002) (quoting United States v. Adlman, 134
F.3d 1194, 1202 (2d Cir. 1998)) (internal quotation marks omitted).
The "because of" phrase, standing alone, does not answer the
question what happens if the document is created to satisfy some
requirement imposed independently of the need to litigate, but our
precedent squarely answers the question.
We have held that work-product protection does not extend
to "documents that are prepared in the ordinary course of business
or that would have been created in essentially similar form
irrespective of the litigation." Maine, 298 F.3d at 70 (quoting
Adlman, 134 F.3d at 1202) (internal quotation marks omitted). This
caveat applies "even though litigation is already in prospect,"
Adlman, 134 F.3d at 1202 (citing 8 Wright, Miller & Cooper, Federal
Practice and Procedure § 2024, at 346 (3d ed. 1998)), and even if
"the documents aid in the preparation of litigation." Maine, 298
F.3d at 70.
The district court held that the work papers "would not
have been prepared 'but for' the fact that Textron anticipated the
possibility of litigation with the IRS" and that if "Textron had
not anticipated a dispute with the IRS, there would have been no
reason for it to establish any reserve or to prepare the work
papers used to calculate the reserve." U.S. v. Textron Inc., 507
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F. Supp. 2d 138, 150 (D.R.I. 2007). But this misreads Maine: Maine
holds that it is not the subject matter discussed in the materials
that controls but whether documents are prepared "in the ordinary
course of business" or were otherwise independently required, which
are both the case with tax accrual work papers mandated by
accounting requirements.
The decisions in other circuits bear out this legal
interpretation. In Adlman itself, the company in question had "the
prospect of litigation [with the IRS] in mind" when it asked for
the preparation of a memorandum studying the tax implications of a
contemplated restructuring; nonetheless, the Second Circuit allowed
that if the memorandum would have been prepared in a similar form
without expected litigation with the IRS, then it was not created
"because of" litigation. Adlman, 134 F.3d at 1203-04; accord
United States v. Roxworthy, 457 F.3d 590, 598-99 (6th Cir. 2006).12
Conversely, in cases finding documents to be protected,
it is because the documents were created in order to be useful in
litigation. See, e.g., Delaney, Migdail & Young, Chartered v. IRS,
826 F.2d 124, 127 (D.C. Cir. 1987) (protection for "attorneys'
12
See also In re Royal Ahold N.V. Sec. & ERISA Litig., 230 F.R.D.
433, 435 (D. Md. 2005) (no protection for notes and memoranda
detailing witness interviews where "principal reason" for documents
was "to satisfy the requirement of . . . outside accountants");
Fidelity Int'l Currency Advisor A Fund, LLC v. United States, No.
05-40151-FDS, 2008 WL 4809032, at *12-14 (D. Mass. Apr. 18, 2008)
(no protection for opinion letters analyzing "likely tax
consequences" of certain transactions where purpose was "to induce
the taxpayers to invest in the strategy").
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assessment of . . . legal vulnerabilities in order to make sure it
does not miss anything in crafting its legal case") (emphasis
added); see also In re Sealed Case, 146 F.3d 881, 885 (D.C. Cir.
1998) (protection for documents to "protect the client from future
litigation about a particular transaction").
To the extent the panel majority rests on the district
court's legal interpretation, that interpretation is simply at odds
with our decision in Maine and with Adlman on which Maine relied.
Nor can the district court's outcome be defended by treating the
district court's decision as a factual finding that in this
instance Textron prepared these documents both to satisfy the
accounting requirements and for possible use in litigation. This
is not what the district court found and, given the legal rule
adopted in Maine and Adlman, it would not matter if it had so
found.
The government offered compelling evidence that the sole
reason for the creation of Textron's estimates of risk with respect
to individual tax positions was to prepare the reserve figures for
the company books and statements and to satisfy the auditors that
the reserves were adequate. No contrary evidence was offered by
Textron. The district court made no contrary finding and any such
finding would have been clearly erroneous. The government's expert
witness--the former chief auditor of the Public Company Accounting
Oversight Board--testified:
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Q: Does a public company prepare tax accrual
work papers only when it anticipates
litigation over the issues identified in the
work papers?
A: No. They have to prepare them to support
the representations in the financial
statements.
Q: So if a public company believes the chances
of litigation over the issues in the work
papers are remote, it would still prepare
those work papers?
A: Yes. because they'd have to be able to
support that judgment [to the independent
auditor].
Q: And would those work papers be prepared in
the same form as work papers involving issues
for which the company actually anticipates
litigation?
A: Certainly, the basics would be the same....
...
Q: Would the tax accrual work papers ever be
blank?
A: I can't think of a circumstance where they
would, no.
Textron's own witness acknowledged that it would "have to
include in its . . . tax accrual work papers any new transactions
that the company entered into that year that there might be some
tax exposure on" regardless of whether it anticipated litigation
with the IRS. Textron offered no testimony purporting to show that
its lawyers had any intention of utilizing its assessment in the
conduct of any litigation that might ensue (although it did offer
speculation as to how such documents might conceivably be helpful),
and such a use is not even arguably the driving purpose behind the
document's creation.
The only circuit precedent that directly involves tax
accrual work papers held that they were not protected attorney work
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product. United States v. El Paso Co., 682 F.2d 530, 543 (5th Cir.
1982) (noting that in tax accrual work papers legal analysis is
only a "means to a business end").13 The Fifth Circuit looked to
the primary purpose of the documents in deciding whether they were
created "in anticipation of litigation"; but the "because of" test,
as construed in Maine, is certainly no more protective here because
it denies protection so long as the papers would have been prepared
regardless of litigation.
The government's position is also supported by two
scholarly articles that analyzed, and roundly condemned, the lower
court's decision. Pease-Wingenter, The Application of the
Attorney-Client Privilege to Tax Accrual Workpapers: The Real
Legacy of United States v. Textron, 8 Hous. Bus. & Tax L.J. 337
(2008); Ventry, Protecting Abusive Tax Avoidance, 120 Tax Notes 857
(2008). Without endorsing everything in the articles, it is fair
to say that they make scholarly mince-meat of Textron's position.
In most matters of privilege, there is a certain
arbitrariness as to where to draw the line or, to put it
differently, even the most sacrosanct of privileges represents a
sacrifice of other interests--usually, as Bentham classically
13
El Paso denied protection for the work papers because the court
recognized that the company in question was conducting the relevant
analysis because of a need to "bring its financial books into
conformity with generally accepted auditing principles." Id. at
543. And, it saw the need to satisfy independent auditors as being
"compelled by the securities laws." Id.
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explained, the interest of truth. 8 Wigmore, Evidence § 2291
(McNaughton Rev. 1961). Here, the matter is not open to a panel
for re-examination on policy grounds, but no one should think that
the policy arguments are all on one side.
Precisely because the work papers in this instance are
required by the financial statement obligations and accounting
rules, there is little risk of the chilling effect so often paraded
in privilege cases. The Supreme Court in rejecting an accountant's
privilege for the preparation of tax accrual work papers pointed
out that large companies effectively have to comply with the
accounting requirements and would do so with or without a privilege
for the accountant. Arthur Young, 465 U.S. at 818-19.
And, while it may seem one-sided to give the government
Textron's blue print to weaknesses in Textron's tax returns, the
return is massive--constituting more than 4000 pages; the
government has an important interest in collecting taxes that are
owed; and its inquiries into work papers were focused on a specific
type of transaction that had been shown to be open to abuse. So
context should be kept in mind before shedding too many tears for
Textron.
In all events, it is important for us to adhere to the
existing rules of the road. Parties can generally adjust their
behavior so long as they know what privilege rules apply. Here,
the governing rubric in Maine (First Circuit) and Adlman (Second
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Circuit) and a precise precedent in El Paso (Fifth Circuit) govern
this case. An en banc court could change the rule; a panel
majority cannot.
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