RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206
File Name: 05a0435p.06
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
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Plaintiff-Appellee, -
OFFICEMAX, INC.,
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No. 04-4009
v.
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UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, -
Defendant-Appellant. -
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Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of Ohio at Cleveland.
No. 03-00961—Patricia A. Gaughan, District Judge.
Argued: July 29, 2005
Decided and Filed: November 2, 2005
Before: ROGERS and SUTTON, Circuit Judges; ROSEN, District Judge.*
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COUNSEL
ARGUED: Teresa E. McLaughlin, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington,
D.C., for Appellant. Henry D. Levine, LEVINE, BLASZAK, BLOCK & BOOTHBY, LLP,
Washington, D.C., for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Teresa E. McLaughlin, Robert W. Metzler, UNITED
STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Appellant. Henry D. Levine,
Stephen J. Rosen, LEVINE, BLASZAK, BLOCK & BOOTHBY, LLP, Washington, D.C., Stephan
J. Schlegelmilch, BAKER & HOSTETLER, Cleveland, Ohio, for Appellee. David Isaacson, New
York, New York, for Amicus Curiae.
SUTTON, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ROSEN, D. J., joined. ROGERS,
J. (pp. 16-20), delivered a separate dissenting opinion.
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OPINION
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SUTTON, Circuit Judge. When a party presents the question whether “and” means “or,” it
is tempting to be dismissive of the claim or, worse, to make a crack about the demise of the rule of
law. But in this instance the disputed “and” appears in the context of several uses of the term that
are alternately conjunctive and disjunctive and as much as nine billion dollars in potential tax refund
*
The Honorable Gerald E. Rosen, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Michigan, sitting by
designation.
1
No. 04-4009 OfficeMax, Inc. v. United States Page 2
claims (according to the government) rest on the resolution of the issue in this case and others, both
of which prompt us to be anything but dismissive of the question.
At issue is the meaning of “toll telephone service,” which Congress has subjected to a three-
percent federal excise tax. The relevant legislation defines the phrase as “a telephonic quality
communication for which [ ] there is a toll charge which varies in amount with the distance and
elapsed transmission time of each individual communication.” 26 U.S.C. § 4252(b)(1) (emphasis
added). According to the IRS, the definition means that the tax applies when the telephone company
assesses a toll charge that varies in amount by either the distance or elapsed transmission time of
each individual communication, or both. According to OfficeMax, the definition means that the tax
applies when the telephone company assesses a toll charge that varies in amount by both the distance
and elapsed transmission time of each individual communication. Given the traditional presumption
that Congress uses “and” conjunctively, given other contextual clues supporting a conjunctive
reading, given the awkwardness of construing the provision as the government does and given the
historical fact that the one provider of long-distance telephone service in 1965, when the definition
was adopted, charged for phone calls both by distance and time, we conclude that a toll charge must
vary by both distance and elapsed transmission time in order to be taxed. We thus hold for the
taxpayer and affirm.
I.
A.
In 1898, 22 years after Alexander Graham Bell’s work led to the invention of the telephone,
Congress imposed the first tax on telephone service. Designed to curb the federal deficit caused by
the Spanish-American War, the temporary tax applied to “every person, firm or corporation owning
or operating any telephone line or lines” and charged one cent for “messages or conversations
transmitted over their respective lines . . . for which a charge of fifteen cents or more was imposed.”
30 Stat. at 460, Pub. L. No. 55-133 (1898). Congress repealed the tax as scheduled in 1902. See
Louis Alan Talley, The Federal Excise Tax on Telephone Service: A History 1 (Congressional
Research Service 2001), available at http://www.law.umaryland.edu/marshall/crsreports/
crsdocuments/RL30553_01042001.pdf (hereinafter “Talley”). Beginning in 1914 and continuing
through 1916, in response to falling revenues caused by the start of World War I, Congress
reenacted the tax—this time applying it to owners or operators of “any telegraph or telephone line
or lines” and charging the same one cent for “dispatches, messages, or conversations originated at
each of their respective exchanges, toll stations, or offices, and transmitted thence over their lines
. . . for which a charge of 15 cents or more was imposed.” 30 Stat. at 761, Pub. L. No. 217; see
Talley at 1–2. Between 1917 and 1924, in response to the United States’ entry into the war,
Congress imposed a higher tax—“5 cents upon each telegraph, telephone, or radio, dispatch,
message, or conversation, which originates within the United States, and for the transmission of
which a charge of 15 cents or more is imposed.” 40 Stat. 300, Pub. L. No. 50. Congress increased
the tax to 10 cents for calls costing more than 50 cents in 1919. See Talley at 3.
The Great Depression prompted the next iteration of the tax, and it has existed in one form
or another ever since. Id. In 1932, Congress enacted a tax on “each telegraph, telephone, cable, or
radio dispatch, message, or conversation, which originates . . . within the United States,” applying
different rates to each service. 47 Stat. at 270, Pub. L. No. 154. In 1958, Congress changed the
organization and labeling of the “communication services” tax, 72 Stat. at 1289, Pub. L. No. 85-859,
dividing it into six categories, two of which concern us here: (1) “general telephone service,” i.e.,
local telephone services; and (2) “toll telephone service,” i.e., long-distance service involving a toll
charge. 72 Stat. at 1290, Pub. L. No. 85-859. The local (“general”) and long-distance (“toll”)
telephone service taxes continued at varying rates through 1959, when Congress passed legislation
No. 04-4009 OfficeMax, Inc. v. United States Page 3
repealing the tax on July 1, 1960. But by that date new legislation had enacted a one-year extension,
and subsequent one-year extensions maintained the tax through 1965. Talley at 4–5.
In 1965, Congress enacted the Excise Tax Reduction Act, which called for the repeal of most
excise taxes, including an immediate reduction of the telephone tax from ten percent to three percent
followed by an annual one-percent reduction thereafter until the tax was completely repealed on
January 1, 1969. 79 Stat. at 145, Pub. L. No. 89-44. The 1965 legislation retained three categories
of taxable services: “local telephone service,” “toll telephone service” and “teletypewriter exchange
service.” As to toll telephone service, originally defined in the 1958 legislation as “a telephone or
radio telephone message or conversation for which (1) there is a toll charge, and (2) the charge is
paid within the United States,” Congress enacted the following definition, unchanged to this day:
(1) a telephonic quality communication for which (A) there is a toll charge which
varies in amount with the distance and elapsed transmission time of each individual
communication and (B) the charge is paid within the United States, and
(2) a service which entitles the subscriber, upon payment of a periodic charge
(determined as a flat amount or upon the basis of total elapsed transmission time),
to the privilege of an unlimited number of telephonic communications to or from all
or a substantial portion of the persons having telephone or radio telephone stations
in a specified area which is outside the local telephone system area in which the
station provided with this service is located.
79 Stat. at 146, Pub. L. No. 89-44; 26 U.S.C. § 4252(b). When Congress enacted this legislation
(and for many years before and after its passage), the country had just one provider of long-distance
service—AT&T. See, e.g., Am. Bankers Ins. Group v. United States, 408 F.3d 1328, 1333 (11th Cir.
2005). And when Congress passed this version of the tax, AT&T already imposed a toll charge
based on variations in both the time and distance of each call. Id.
In 1966, in response to spending pressures brought on by the Vietnam War, Congress began
another series of extensions of the tax. The extensions continued through the 1970s and 1980s, with
legislation maintaining the tax at varying rates through 1991. During these years, long-distance
telecommunications transformed from a service offered by only one commercial provider to a
service offered by several companies in a competitive market. The Federal Communications
Commission issued a 1971 Specialized Common Carrier decision opening the long distance market
to competition. See Michael R. Ward, Bureau of Economics Staff Report: Measurements of Market
Power in Long Distance Telecommunications (Federal Trade Commission 1995), available at
http://www.ftc.gov/reports/telecomm.pdf. An antitrust suit filed by the Department of Justice and
the eventual settlement of that litigation in 1982 spurred further competition in the long-distance
market. “While AT&T’s share of the long distance market’s revenues in 1982 was 95%, by 1987
its market share had fallen to 80%, and [in 1993 was] about 60%. By 1991, MCI’s and Sprint’s
revenue market shares had climbed to 17% and 10% respectively.” Id. at 4 (citation omitted).
In 1990, Congress made the excise tax permanent at a three-percent rate, and, aside from a
1997 amendment clarifying that calling cards were taxable, it did not revisit the issue again during
that decade. The 1990s, however, did see a change in the way companies billed for long-distance
telephone services, with long-distance companies beginning to offer for the first time nationwide
long-distance plans for flat per-minute rates. AT&T abandoned its distance-and-time formula in
favor of a time-only formula in 1997.
Congress most recently considered the tax in 2000, when it enacted a package of spending
and tax bills that proposed repealing the tax. A presidential veto, however, prevented the bill from
becoming a law.
No. 04-4009 OfficeMax, Inc. v. United States Page 4
B.
From the first quarter of 1999 through the last quarter of 2002, OfficeMax purchased long
distance telephone service from MCI. During this time, MCI charged OfficeMax one flat per-minute
rate for every long distance call it made between States, another flat per-minute rate for long
distance calls within each State (the rate of which varied by State) and another flat per-minute rate
for long distance calls to international destinations (the rate of which varied by the destination
country). At the end of each call, MCI rounded up to the nearest minute, multiplied the number of
minutes by the flat per-minute rate, and assessed a total charge for the call. At the end of the billing
cycle, MCI added up the total charges for all of the calls and billed OfficeMax for the amount. In
addition, MCI collected from OfficeMax, and remitted to the federal government, the three-percent
excise tax ostensibly imposed on these calls. On April 6, 2002, and February 13, 2003, OfficeMax
filed claims with the federal government for a full refund of the $380,296.72 in excise taxes it had
paid through MCI. In seeking a refund, OfficeMax argued that MCI was not providing a taxable
service—neither a “toll telephone service, a “local telephone service” nor a “teletypewriter exchange
service,” as Congress has defined those phrases. Most pertinently, the company argued, it had not
provided a “toll telephone service” because it did not provide “a telephonic quality communication
for which [ ] there is a toll charge which varies in amount with the distance and elapsed transmission
time of each individual communication,” 26 U.S.C. § 4252(b)(1) (emphasis added).
The district court granted OfficeMax’s motion for summary judgment, reasoning that the
statutory language requires a telephone service plan’s charges to vary both with the distance and
elapsed time of each call. It also rejected the IRS’s alternative arguments that OfficeMax’s long-
distance plan met (1) an alternative definition for “toll telephone service” provided in § 4252(b)(2)
or (2) the definition of “local telephone service,” § 4252(a), both of which must pay the same tax.
II.
Section 4251 of Title 26 imposes a tax on “amounts paid for communications services.” It
defines “communications services” as “(A) local telephone service; (B) toll telephone service; and
(C) teletypewriter exchange service.” Id. Section 4252 defines “toll telephone service” as:
(1) a telephonic quality communication for which (A) there is a toll charge which
varies in amount with the distance and elapsed transmission time of each individual
communication and (B) the charge is paid within the United States, and
(2) a service which entitles the subscriber, upon payment of a periodic charge
(determined as a flat amount or upon the basis of total elapsed transmission time),
to the privilege of an unlimited number of telephonic communications to or from all
or a substantial portion of the persons having telephone or radio telephone stations
in a specified area which is outside the local telephone system area in which the
station provided with this service is located.
26 U.S.C. § 4252(b) (emphasis added). The section defines “local telephone service” as:
(1) the access to a local telephone system, and the privilege of telephonic quality
communication with substantially all persons having telephone or radio telephone
stations constituting a part of such local telephone system, and
(2) any facility or service provided in connection with a service described in
paragraph (1).
No. 04-4009 OfficeMax, Inc. v. United States Page 5
26 U.S.C. § 4252(a). The section defines “teletypewriter exchange service” as:
the access from a teletypewriter or other data station to the teletypewriter exchange
system of which such station is a part, and the privilege of intercommunication by
such station with substantially all persons having teletypewriter or other data stations
constituting a part of the same teletypewriter exchange system, to which the
subscriber is entitled upon payment of a charge or charges (whether such charge or
charges are determined as a flat periodic amount, on the basis of distance and elapsed
transmission time, or in some other manner).
26 U.S.C. § 4252(c).
As these sections of the tax code reveal, Congress used “and” in more than one sense when
it enacted these provisions in 1965—giving it a conjunctive meaning (requiring all items) in some
places and giving it a disjunctive or cumulative meaning (allowing any of the items) in other places.
Section 4252(b)(1), for example, requires that the toll charge vary in amount with the distance and
elapsed time of each individual communication “and” that the charge be paid within the United
States. Both sides of this “and,” the parties agree, must be satisfied for the telephone service to be
taxable. The same is true of other uses of the term in these provisions. See 26 U.S.C. § 4252(a)(1)
(defining one alternative meaning of “local telephone service” as “access to a local telephone
system, and the privilege of telephonic quality communication with . . . such local telephone
system”) (emphasis added); § 4252(c) (defining “teletypewriter exchange service” as “access . . .
to the teletypewriter exchange system . . . and the privilege of intercommunication . . . with
substantially all persons . . . [in] the same teletypewriter exchange system”) (emphasis added).
At times, however, Congress used the term differently. Take § 4251: it defines
“communications services” as “local telephone service, toll telephone service, and teletypewriter
exchange service.” 26 U.S.C. §4251 (emphasis added). No one doubts the disjunctive (or
cumulative) nature of this usage because the definitions of the services in § 4252 are generally
mutually exclusive and because no service exists that can satisfy all three definitions at once.
Section 4252 likewise uses “and” to connect a list of alternative definitions of toll telephone service
found in §§ 4252(b)(1) and (b)(2). Here, too, no one contests that a “toll charge which varies in
amount with the distance and elapsed transmission time of each individual communication,”
§ 4252(b)(1), cannot simultaneously be a “periodic charge (determined as a flat amount or upon the
basis of total elapsed transmission time) [for] the privilege of an unlimited number of telephonic
communications,” § 4252(b)(2).
As these different usages reveal, there is more to “and” than meets the eye. The case, then,
does not simply turn on the intuition that “and” means “and,” “or” means “or,” and never the twain
shall meet. For several reasons, however, the “and” at issue in this dispute requires a telephone
company’s toll charge to vary both by distance and time to be taxable.
First, dictionary definitions, legal usage guides and case law compel us to start from the
premise that “and” usually does not mean “or.” Dictionaries consistently feature a conjunctive
definition of “and” as the primary meaning of the word, see, e.g., Webster’s Third New
International Dictionary 80 (2002) (“along with or together with . . . added to or linked to . . . as well
as”), or the first usage of the word historically, see Oxford English Dictionary (2d ed, 1989)
(“[i]ntroducing a word, clause, or sentence, which is to be taken side by side with, along with, or in
addition to, that which precedes it”); Caleb Nelson, Originalism and Interpretive Conventions, 70
U. Chi. L. Rev. 519, 519 (2003) (“In all living languages, the conventional usages of individual
words change over time. For illustrations, one need only consult the Oxford English Dictionary,
which arranges its definitions of each word so that they proceed from the earliest usages to those that
were introduced more recently.”). Cf. Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 80 (2002)
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(alternative six of the second definition of “and”: “reference to either or both of two alternatives . . .
esp[ecially] in legal language when also plainly intended to mean or”).
Legal usage guides are to the same effect. See 1A Norman J. Singer, Statutes and Statutory
Construction § 21.14 at 179–80 (6th ed. 2002) (“Statutory phrases separated by the word ‘and’ are
usually to be interpreted in the conjunctive.” ); id. at 183–84 (“While there may be circumstances
which call for an interpretation of the words ‘and’ and ‘or,’ ordinarily these words are not
interchangeable. The terms ‘and’ and ‘or’ are often misused in drafting statutes. . . . The literal
meaning of these terms should be followed unless it renders the statute inoperable or the meaning
becomes questionable.”); 1 Bouvier’s Law Dictionary and Concise Encyclopedia 194–95 (3d
Revision 1914) (“A conjunction connecting words or phrases expressing the idea that the latter is
to be added to or taken along with the first. It is said to be equivalent to ‘as well as.’”); id. at 195
(“It is sometimes construed as meaning ‘or.’”); Bryan A. Garner, A Dictionary of Modern Legal
Usage 55 (2d ed. 1995) (“Oddly, and is frequently misused for or where a single noun, or one of
two nouns, is called for. . . . Sloppy drafting sometimes leads courts to recognize that and in a given
context means or, much to the chagrin of some judges.” (quoting MacDonald v. Pan Am. World
Airways, Inc., 859 F.2d 742, 746 (9th Cir. 1988) (Kozinski, J., dissenting) (“We give our language,
and our language-dependent legal system, a body blow when we hold that it is reasonable to read
‘or’ for ‘and.’”))).
Reflecting these traditional assumptions about the meaning of the term, the Supreme Court
has said that “and” presumptively should be read in its “ordinary” conjunctive sense unless the
“context” in which the term is used or “other provisions of the statute” dictate a contrary
interpretation. See Crooks v. Harrelson, 282 U.S. 55, 58 (1930) (“We find nothing in the context
or in other provisions of the statute which warrants the conclusion that the word ‘and’ was used
otherwise than in its ordinary sense.”); United States v. Field, 255 U.S. 257, 262 (1921) (“These
conditions are expressed conjunctively; and it would be inadmissible, in construing a taxing act, to
read them as if prescribed disjunctively.”); City of Rome v. United States, 446 U.S. 156, 172 (1980)
(“By describing the elements of discriminatory purpose and effect in the conjunctive, Congress
plainly intended that a voting practice not be precleared unless both discriminatory purpose and
effect are absent.”). The federal courts of appeals have done likewise. See, e.g., Bruce v. First Fed.
Sav. & Loan Ass’n of Conroe Inc., 837 F.2d 712, 715 (5th Cir. 1988) (“The word ‘and’ is therefore
to be accepted for its conjunctive connotation rather than as a word interchangeable with ‘or’ except
where strict grammatical construction will frustrate clear legislative intent.”).
When courts have interpreted “and” disjunctively, they have done so only to avoid an
incoherent reading of a statute. See Slodov v. United States, 436 U.S. 238, 246–47 (1978)
(interpreting a statute disjunctively that limited personal liability to “any person required to collect,
truthfully account for and pay over any tax imposed by this title” because a conjunctive reading
would lead to an absurd result: “Because the duty to pay over the tax arises only at the quarter’s end,
a ‘responsible person’ who willfully failed to collect taxes would escape personal liability for that
failure simply by resigning his position.”) (quotations and brackets omitted); Sosa v. Chase
Manhattan Mortgage Corp., 348 F.3d 979, 981, 983 (11th Cir. 2003) (interpreting as disjunctive the
phrase “[n]o person shall give and no person shall accept any portion” because “[e]xtending liability
only if there were both a culpable giver and acceptor of an unearned fee would lead to irrational
results”); United States v. Bonilla-Montenegro, 331 F.3d 1047, 1050–51 (9th Cir. 2003) (interpreting
as disjunctive a definition of “crime of violence”—“an offense . . . that has as an element the use . . .
of physical force . . . and [ ] includes murder, manslaughter, kidnapping, [etc.]”—because it would
“def[y] common sense” to require an enumerated crime of violence also to have a use-of-force
element) (quotation omitted); Peacock v. Lubbock Compress Co., 252 F.2d 892, 893 (5th Cir. 1958)
(interpreting as disjunctive “an employer engaged in . . . the ginning and compressing of cotton”
because “compressing is an operation entirely removed from ginning and [ ] the two are never
carried on together”).
No. 04-4009 OfficeMax, Inc. v. United States Page 7
Second, consistent with the inquiry proposed by these definitions and cases, there is nothing
unusual (or for that matter absurd) about requiring a telephone toll charge to vary both with distance
and time before subjecting it to tax. That is exactly the way long-distance calls were charged for
a considerable period of time. In 1965, when Congress enacted this definition, the country had just
one long-distance telephone provider, and AT&T billed for long-distance calls based both on the
distance and time of the call or on a WATS-line basis (i.e., a flat rate for unlimited calling). Not
surprisingly, when the drafters of § 4252 defined taxable long-distance service, they adopted a
definition that turns on the distance-and-time measure of charging for the call, see § 4252(1), and
a definition that turns on the WATS-line method of billing, see § 4252(2).
There is something odd, by contrast, about giving the distance-and-time requirement a
disjunctive interpretation. Why would Congress write a statute that says toll charges may vary by
time or distance? In the last decade, it is true, time-varied toll charges have proved to be a viable
stand-alone option. How strange, however, to impose a toll charge that varies solely by distance,
with all calls from, say, Columbus, Ohio to Bozeman, Montana costing the same amount regardless
of whether they last 60 seconds, 60 minutes or 60 days. At no point in this litigation has the
government given us any indication that there is now, or ever has been, such a curious billing
practice.
The government, we suppose, might respond that the drafters had a different disjunctive
interpretation of “and” in mind. Instead of taxing calls charged on one basis (distance) or the other
(time), what Congress really meant to do was to tax calls charged on the basis of time and distance
together or on the basis of time alone. Given the presumption that “and” has a conjunctive meaning
and given the understandable reason why Congress would have embraced that meaning here, it is
hard to see why we should adopt not just a disjunctive reading of the term but such a nuanced and
changeable one.
Third, context bolsters this conclusion. In writing the 1965 legislation, Congress defined
three types of taxable communication services: “toll telephone service,” “local telephone service”
and “teletypewriter exchange service.” It chose to define local telephone service simply by
reference to “access” to “a” local telephone system; it chose to define the other two services by
reference to the method of charging for those services. As to toll telephone service, we have seen,
Congress taxed long-distance phone calls charged on the basis of time and distance. In defining
teletypewriter exchange, it chose not to use a time-and-distance methodology alone and chose not
to deploy the all-purpose, protean “and” that the government claims was used in defining toll
telephone service. Rather than limit the taxable communication services to one billing method, it
imposed the tax on charged teletypewriter services “whether such charge or charges are determined
as a flat periodic amount, on the basis of distance and elapsed transmission time, or in some other
manner.” 26 U.S.C. § 4252(c).
This phrase, enacted at the same time as § 4252(1)(A), shows that Congress used a distance-
and-time formulation elsewhere in the same bill and plainly meant it to have a traditionally
conjunctive connotation there. See Gustafson v. Alloyd Co., Inc., 513 U.S. 561, 570 (1995)
(recognizing “that identical words used in different parts of the same act are intended to have the
same meaning”) (quotation omitted). And it shows the ease with which Congress could have
demonstrated the taxability of different methods of toll charges or all charges (“or in some other
manner”) had it wished to do so when defining toll telephone service.
Fourth, in reaching this conclusion, we are not alone. Every court to reach this issue—save
one district court subsequently reversed—has concluded that the statute unambiguously requires
variance by both distance and elapsed transmission time. See Am. Bankers Ins. Group v. United
States, 408 F.3d 1328 (11th Cir. 2005) (reversing Am. Bankers Ins. Group, Inc. v. United States, 308
F. Supp. 2d 1360 (S.D. Fla. 2004)); Am. Online, Inc. v. United States, 64 Fed. Cl. 571 (Ct. Cl. 2005);
No. 04-4009 OfficeMax, Inc. v. United States Page 8
Honeywell Int’l, Inc. v. United States, 64 Fed. Cl. 188 (Ct. Cl. 2005); AMTRAK v. United States, 338
F. Supp. 2d 22 (D.D.C. 2004); Hewlett-Packard Co. v. United States, No. 04-03832, 2005 U.S. Dist.
LEXIS 199972 (N.D. Cal. Aug. 5, 2005); Reese Bros. v. United States, No. 03-745, 2004 U.S. Dist.
LEXIS 27507 (W.D. Pa. Oct. 20, 2004); Fortis, Inc. v. United States, No. 03 Civ. 5137, 2004 U.S.
Dist. LEXIS 18686 (S.D.N.Y. Sept. 16, 2004). We are comfortable in charting a similar course here.
Attempting to counter this conclusion, the government first argues that we must account for
the other uses of “and” in this legislation that have a disjunctive or cumulative meaning. But the
case law referenced above adequately accounts for this argument. As those cases provide, “and”
presumptively has a conjunctive meaning save when that interpretation makes little or no sense in
context. Sections 4251 and 4252, it is true, contain three instances where “and” is not used in its
customary conjunctive sense. But in each case, context requires the term to be construed
disjunctively because it conjoins a list of mutually exclusive alternatives. See § 4251(b)(1) (taxing
“(A) local telephone service; (B) toll telephone service; and (C) teletypewriter exchange service”)
(emphasis added); § 4252(b) (defining “toll telephone service” as the definition at issue in this case
“and” an alternative definition that could not be satisfied simultaneously) (emphasis added);
§ 4252(a) (defining “local telephone service” as “(1) [a substantive definition] and (2) any facility
or service provided in connection with a service described in paragraph (1)”) (emphasis added). In
marked contrast, a toll charge simultaneously may be based on variations in distance and time.
The government next argues that these other uses of “and” at a minimum establish
ambiguity about the meaning of the term in § 4252(b)(1)(A). “[A]mbiguity,” however, “is a creature
not of definitional possibilities but of statutory context.” Brown v. Gardner, 513 U.S. 115, 118
(1994). And the question whether a statute is ambiguous arises after, not before, a court applies
traditional canons of interpretation—the most important here being the context in which the word
appears and the presumption that “and” carries a conjunctive connotation. See Chevron, U.S.A., Inc.
v. Natural Res. Def. Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 843 n.9 (1984) (“If a court, employing traditional
tools of statutory construction, ascertains that Congress had an intention on the precise question at
issue, that intention is the law and must be given effect.”); Robinson v. Shell Oil Co., 519 U.S. 337,
341 (1997) (“The plainness or ambiguity of statutory language is determined by reference to the
language itself, the specific context in which that language is used, and the broader context of the
statute as a whole.”).
Nor does the government’s invocation of legislative history advance its cause. For one, the
government has not presented the necessary warrant—a case of statutory ambiguity—for
commencing a search of the statute’s legislative history. See Ex parte Collett, 337 U.S. 55, 61
(1949); Chapman v. The Higbee Co., 319 F.3d 825, 829 (6th Cir. 2003); see also United States v.
R.L.C., 503 U.S. 291, 307–11 (1992) (Scalia, J., concurring).
For another, even the most far-reaching search of the legislative history behind the 1965 Act
uncovers little. The committee report describing this provision elucidates nothing; it merely parrots
the language that Congress ultimately enacted into law. Cf. Pub. L. No. 89-44, 79 Stat. 136, 146,
with H.R. Rep. No. 433 (1965), reprinted in 1965 U.S.C.C.A.N. 1645, 1677 (“Toll telephone service
is defined as being a telephonic quality communication for which a toll charge is made which varies
in amount with the distance and the lapsed transmission time of individual communications, but only
if the charge is paid within the United States.”).
And the explanations for passing the 1965 Act do as much to undermine the government’s
position as to support it. When Congress enacted the present definition of toll telephone service in
1965—changing it from a broad definition of a service for which a toll was charged and paid within
the United States, Pub. L. No. 85-859, 72 Stat. 1275, 1290 (1958)—it defined the phrase in a way
that accounted for two distinct billing methods employed in 1965 by AT&T, the sole long-distance
provider at that time. As we have noted, the first method calculated a charge for each call based on
No. 04-4009 OfficeMax, Inc. v. United States Page 9
elapsed time and distance. The distance between the originator and receiver of the call would fall
within one of several concentric mileage bands measured from the call’s origin. The per-minute rate
of the call varied depending on which mileage band applied. This system was codified in
§ 4252(b)(1). The second method, known as “Wide Area Telephone Service” or “WATS,”
calculated one charge per billing period, based on either a flat rate or the total elapsed time of all
calls made during the period. This charge entitled the customer to an unlimited number of calls
regardless of distance, and it was codified in § 4252(b)(2). See 1965 USCCAN 1676–77.
All of this supports our interpretation. It shows why Congress would define toll telephone
service as requiring a charge that varied both by time and distance. And it shows why Congress
would define taxable telephone calls based on how a private company billed the calls: There was
just one company; AT&T’s job was to collect the tax, not to pay it; and its monopoly status
eliminated any commercial pressure to accommodate tax-sensitive clients.
Persisting, the government points out that (1) Congress crafted the new definitions “to make
it clear that it is the service as such which is being taxed and not merely the equipment being
supplied,” 1965 USCCAN 1676, not to exempt certain long-distance phone calls from taxation, and
(2) Congress added an important exemption for “private communication services” (e.g., intercoms)
but again did not aim to eliminate from taxation certain long-distance calls because of the way they
were billed. Even if we were to infer from these shards of legislative evidence that Congress meant
to tax all long-distance service as it existed in 1965—through the creation of a definition based on
extant billing methods—that does not mean we should interpret the same language to include all
long distance service as it exists today. A statute enacted in 1890 that imposed an excise tax on
sales, say, of “any vehicle of transportation” would cover airplanes, even though they were not
invented until several years after 1890. Yet a statute enacted in 1890 that taxed sales of “any vehicle
of transportation designed to convey passengers by land or sea” would not cover sales of traditional
airplanes, even though the legislator’s purpose in 1890 could fairly be characterized as taxing all
modes of transportation. Why should it be any different for this tax when time brings to an end an
uncompetitive communications market and leads to wireless telephone communication (for which
distance-based billing may make less sense)? As these examples suggest and as the terms of the
1965 legislation require, “[i]t is ultimately the provisions of our laws rather than the principal
concerns of our legislators by which we are governed.” Oncale v. Sundowner Offshore Serv., Inc.,
523 U.S. 75, 79–80 (1998).
A legislature that chooses to define eligibility for taxation based on how a private entity
chooses to charge for the service, moreover, can hardly be treated as a body that means to impose
a tax for all time. Just the opposite seems true, as the approach ultimately cedes the taxing authority
to private entities, which is presumably why this method of taxation infrequently appears in Title
26.
A party willing to invoke broad generalizations of legislative purpose, at any rate, must
account for equally plausible—yet vastly different—characterizations of that intent. When Congress
wrote the present definition of toll telephone service in 1965, it planned to eliminate the tax in its
entirety over the following three years. Entitled the “Excise Tax Reduction Act,” the 1965
legislation imposed an immediate reduction of the telephone tax (from 10 percent to 3 percent),
established an annual one-percent reduction of the tax, then called for the elimination of the tax on
January 1, 1969. See 1965 USCCAN 1676; id. at 1645, 1649 (noting that the legislation “either in
the current fiscal year, or over the next 3 subsequent years, removes entirely [the] miscellany of
selective excise taxes [including the communications services excise tax] except those designed to
serve certain specific purposes”); id. at 1655 (House committee report noted that “[i]n large part,
these taxes were imposed as emergency wartime measures (either in World War II or the Korean
War) or as an emergency method of raising revenues at the time of the depression of the 1930’s”).
The Congress that enacted this legislation thus did not contemplate the continued application of the
No. 04-4009 OfficeMax, Inc. v. United States Page 10
language past January 1, 1969, let alone to 1999. No matter how clear its design to include the
lion’s share of long-distance service in existence between 1965 and 1969, that does not lead to the
inference that the 1965 Congress meant to tax the lion’s share of long distance service in existence
between 1999 and 2002. In the end, “application of ‘broad purposes’ of legislation at the expense
of specific provisions ignores the complexity of the problems Congress is called upon to address and
the dynamics of legislative action.” Board of Governors of Federal Reserve System v. Dimension
Financial Corp., 474 U.S. 361, 373–74 (1986); Rodriguez v. United States, 480 U.S. 522, 526
(1987) (per curiam) (“[I]t frustrates rather than effectuates legislative intent simplistically to assume
that whatever furthers the statute’s primary objective must be the law.”).
The government also fails to gain ground by emphasizing that “the statute does not state that
the charge must vary with ‘both distance and elapsed time.’” U.S. Br. at 27. The presumption that
“and” has a conjunctive meaning, however, spares legislative drafters from having to use a belt-and-
suspenders approach (or, shall we say, both belt-and-suspenders approach) every time they deploy
the term. The argument also comes perilously close to suggesting an interpretive presumption in
favor of the government and against the taxpayer. Regardless of the current status of the “traditional
canon that construes revenue-raising laws against their drafter,” United Dominion Indus. v. United
States, 532 U.S. 822, 839 (2001) (Thomas, J., concurring), the government has not identified any
case establishing an opposite presumption. See Bowers v. New York & Albany Literage Co., 273
U.S. 346, 350 (1927) (“The provision is part of a taxing statute; and such laws are to be interpreted
liberally in favor of the taxpayers.”); United States v. Merriam, 263 U.S. 179, 188 (1923) (“If the
words are doubtful, the doubt must be resolved against the government and in favor of the
taxpayer.”); Benziger v. United States, 192 U.S. 38, 55 (1904); American Net & Twine Co. v.
Worthington, 141 U.S. 468, 474 (1891); Leavell v. Blades, 141 S.W. 893, 894 (Mo. 1911) (“When
the tax gatherer puts his finger on the citizen, he must also put his finger on the law permitting it.”).
The government next urges us to defer to a 1979 IRS revenue ruling holding that a ship-to-
shore satellite service that charged users without reference to distance satisfied the definition of
“toll telephone service.” Rev. Rule 79-404, 1979-2 C.B. 382. But the one-page analysis in this
revenue ruling does not contain the traditional hallmarks for receiving deference, whether under
Chevron, or under Skidmore v. Swift & Co., 323 U.S. 134 (1944). The revenue ruling acknowledges
that “[l]iterally, the service provided in this case does not come within the definition of . . . ‘toll
telephone service’ . . . because the charge for such service does not vary with distance and therefore
does not meet the requirement of section 4252(b)(1).” Rev. Rule 79-404, 1979-2 C.B. 382, *3. It
then echoes the point, explaining that “[t]he toll charges described in section 4252(b)(1) . . . vary
in amount with both distance and elapsed transmission time of the individual communication.” Id.
at *6 (emphasis added). Despite this “literal[]” meaning of the statute, the IRS determined that the
communications service was “essentially” a toll telephone service “in order to comport with the
legislative intent” of the statute, which it discerned as seeking to encompass all long-distance service
in existence in 1965 and therefore all long-distance service in the future (including what was being
provided in 1979). In the IRS’s words:
The service in this case is essentially “toll telephone service” as described in section
4252(b)(1) of the Code, even though the charge for calls between remote maritime
stations and stations in the United States vary with elapsed transmission time only.
The toll charges described in section 4252(b)(1), that vary in amount with both
distance and elapsed transmission time of the individual communication, reflect
Congress’ understanding of how the charges for long distance calls were computed
at the time the section was enacted. The intent of the statute would be frustrated if
a new type of service otherwise within such intent were held to be nontaxable merely
because charges for it are determined in a manner which is not within the literal
language of the statute.
No. 04-4009 OfficeMax, Inc. v. United States Page 11
Id. at *6–7.
When the Court decided Chevron, five years after this revenue ruling, we do not think it had
in mind deferring to tax administrators who wished to impose taxes on services that were
“essentially,” but not “literally,” within the contours of a taxing statute. Even if this circuit gave
Chevron deference to revenue rulings, which it does not, see Aeroquip-Vickers, Inc. v. Comm’r, 347
F.3d 173, 181 (6th Cir. 2003) (declining to give Chevron deference to revenue rulings because they
lack the “force of law”); Ammex, Inc. v. United States, 367 F.3d 530, 535 n.2 (6th Cir. 2004) (same),
this revenue ruling would not clear step one of the Chevron test.
Likewise, even assuming revenue rulings were entitled to Skidmore respect, cf. United States
v. Cleveland Indians Baseball Co., 532 U.S. 200, 220 (2001) (declining to decide whether revenue
rulings are entitled to deference at all), that deference would apply to a revenue ruling “only to the
extent that [it has] the ‘power to persuade.’” Christensen v. Harris County, 529 U.S. 576, 587
(2000) (quoting Skidmore, 323 U.S. at 140). Under Skidmore, courts should consider “‘the
thoroughness evident in [the ruling’s] consideration, the validity of its reasoning, its consistency
with earlier and later pronouncements, and all those factors which give it power to persuade, if
lacking power to control.’” United States v. Mead Corp., 533 U.S. 218, 228 (2001) (quoting
Skidmore, 323 U.S. at 140). Generated by an agency that frequently insists that its citizens “turn
square corners,” Rock Island, Ark. & La. R.R. Co. v. United States, 254 U.S. 141, 143 (1920), this
revenue ruling no more supports an “essential” method of tax imposition than it does an “essential”
method of tax payment. As other parts of our opinion explain, neither the legislative history nor
one-sided generalizations about the purpose of the law make the case for straying from the ordinary
meaning of the language in the statute. Agencies in the end receive Skidmore respect because of the
persuasiveness of their reasoning, not in spite of it.
No more availing is the government’s argument that, no matter how unpersuasive the
revenue ruling is, we must defer to it because Congress repeatedly has reenacted the excise tax since
1979. The Supreme Court has not spoken with one mind on this issue. On the one hand, the Court
has said that “[w]here an agency’s statutory construction has been fully brought to the attention of
the public and the Congress, and the latter has not sought to alter that interpretation although it has
amended the statute in other respects, then presumably the legislative intent has been correctly
discerned.” North Haven Bd. of Educ. v. Bell, 456 U.S. 512, 535 (1982). On the other hand, the
Court has said: “We walk on quicksand when we try to find in the absence of corrective legislation
a controlling legal principle.” Helvering v. Hallock, 309 U.S. 106, 121 (1940); see also Central
Bank, N.A. v. First Interstate Bank, N.A., 511 U.S. 164, 186 (1994). Never mind: even the cases
applying the reenactment doctrine impose limitations on it that are applicable here—“where the law
is plain, subsequent reenactment does not constitute an adoption of a previous administrative
construction.” Brown, 513 U.S. at 121. And the doctrine does not apply when “the record of
congressional discussion preceding reenactment makes no reference to the [interpretation], and there
is no other evidence to suggest that Congress was even aware of the [agency’s] interpretive
position.” Id. Here, the government fails to identify any evidence in the telephone-excise-tax
legislation from 1979 to the present that discusses or acknowledges the existence of the 1979
revenue ruling.
The government alternatively urges us to accept another interpretation of the provision, one
not yet embraced by any administrative ruling. It claims that “‘distance’ clearly is shorthand for toll
rate,” so that even if the statute requires that the toll charge vary by both distance and elapsed time,
a service would qualify if the toll charge varied by both toll rate (even a constant toll rate) and
elapsed time. U.S. Br. at 35. Under AT&T’s billing method in 1965, the government explains, all
calls within a certain mileage band were charged at the same per-minute rate regardless of any
difference in actual distance spanned by a given call. Because this system could produce equal
billing for calls of modestly different distances (but the same time), all that the statute must require
No. 04-4009 OfficeMax, Inc. v. United States Page 12
is some per-minute rate, however constant, by which to multiply the elapsed time. But, in making
this argument, the government cannot escape the reality that the distance of each individual call
under the AT&T system, measured by miles spanned and nothing more, did play a crucial role in
the calculation of that call’s charge. Without knowing the call’s distance in miles—hence the reason
they were called “mileage bands”—no one could ascertain the appropriate charge for the call. That
AT&T bundled concentric mileage ranges into a series of rate quanta does not change this fact. In
juxtaposition to the 1965 billing method used by AT&T, MCI’s model for billing OfficeMax during
the tax years at issue does not take into account the distance of the call.
Nor may the government prevail by comparing AT&T’s mileage bands with certain political
zones—namely different States for intrastate calling and different countries for international
calling—that yield different per-minute rates under the MCI plan for OfficeMax. The crucial
variable under OfficeMax’s plan is the location of the call’s destination (for international calls) or
the location of the call’s origin and destination (for intrastate calls) within the legal/political
boundaries that serve as the dividing line between federal and state regulation of telephone service.
That is, the differences in rates do not serve as a proxy for call distance, but instead accommodate
the FCC’s regulatory jurisdiction over interstate and international calls and the states’ regulatory
jurisdiction over intrastate calls. See La. Pub. Serv. Comm’n v. FCC, 476 U.S. 355, 360 (1986);
AT&T Corp. v. Iowa Utils. Bd., 525 U.S. 366, 381 n.8 (1999). Moreover, any possible correlation
between political boundaries and a call’s total distance is imperfect at best and does not convert any
of the political zones into a measure of call distance. In many instances, for example, intrastate calls
(which on average would seem to span a shorter distance than the longest of interstate calls)
command higher per-minute rates than interstate calls.
Judge Rogers’ dissent prompts a few responses. We agree with him that “and” may have a
cumulative meaning or what comes to the same thing—a non-exclusive disjunctive meaning. And
we agree that his examples—“I like bourbon and water” and “I like beer and wine”—begin to
illustrate the difference. While context and common sense suggest that the former means both
together, they suggest that the latter means either or both independently. But from the vantage point
of the regulator or the regulated in 1965, the better analogy for “time and distance” was “bourbon
and water,” not “beer and wine.” In 1965, “time and distance” were used in combination to measure
telephone fees by the only telephone company on the market. Just as “bourbon and water” in
context unambiguously requires both items, so does “time and distance.”
But whether one prefers “bourbon and water” or “beer and wine,” each analogy is missing
an ingredient featured here. Bourbon, water, beer and wine are all stand-alone items. Not so of
“time and distance.” Distance, as we have shown, was not then, is not now and never has been used
as a stand-alone measure for billing a phone call. Because one half of the pair in this case cannot
operate independently, the better analogy is to “bread and butter,” “pancakes and syrup,” “chips and
dip,” or less abstemiously, to “Corona and lime,” or least appetizingly, to “tequila and worm.” As
in these examples, context and common sense indicate that the inability of one item in a conjoined
pair to function independently means that they must be combined, that they must come two by two,
not one by one. The same is true of “time and distance”: While time can function alone, distance
cannot. The same problem undermines the dissent’s Venn-diagram argument, which mistakenly
suggests that distance can exist as a stand-alone item.
Lastly, for the dissent, it suffices to say three things in resolving this case: (1) “and” may
have an in-combination meaning or a cumulative meaning; (2) the statute thus is ambiguous; and
(3) the government thus should prevail under Skidmore deference. Leaving to the side the question
of how many statutory “ands” in the United States Code would be eligible for ambiguity status under
this interpretation, let us start by reiterating that context, common sense, history and the conjunctive
time-and-distance formulation deployed in the tax for teletypewriter service in 1965 (“whether such
charge or charges are determined as a flat periodic amount, on the basis of distance and elapsed
No. 04-4009 OfficeMax, Inc. v. United States Page 13
transmission time, or in some other manner,” 26 U.S.C. § 4252(c)) all show that this “and”
unambiguously has a conjunctive, in-combination meaning.
But even were that not the case, it would not alter our conclusion. Skidmore breathes
deference into an agency’s interpretation based “upon the thoroughness evident in its consideration,
the validity of its reasoning, its consistency with earlier and later pronouncements”—based upon,
in short, its “power to persuade.” 323 U.S. at 140. But the revenue ruling at issue here takes an
approach that the dissent castigates. The ruling acknowledges that “and” “literally” requires both
time and distance: “The toll charges described in section 4252(b)(1), that vary in amount with both
distance and elapsed transmission time of the individual communication, reflect Congress’
understanding of how the charges for long distance calls were computed at the time the section was
enacted.” Rev. Rule 79-404, 1979-2 C.B. 382. In abandoning this natural interpretation, the
revenue ruling says that “a new type of service” cannot avoid taxation “merely because charges for
it are determined in a manner which is not within the literal language of the statute.” Id. The dissent
does not defend that reasoning, and it does not defend the government’s litigating position in this
case. Cf. Bowen v. Georgetown Univ. Hosp., 488 U.S. 204 , 213 (1988) (“Deference to what appears
to be nothing more than an agency’s convenient litigating position would be entirely
inappropriate.”). Skidmore deference does not apply to a line of reasoning that an agency could
have, but has not yet, adopted.
That leaves only the possibility of deferring to the agency’s interpretation, not because it
makes sense on its own terms, but because of its longevity. While the 1979 revenue ruling
concerned the same definition of “toll telephone service” at issue in this case, it arose long before
accessible cellular service (and other developments) led telephone companies to begin charging on
the basis of time alone and it arose in the context of ship-to-shore satellites, a service that (contrary
to the dissent’s suggestion) would not necessarily grab the attention of members of Congress and
their staff. The real test for the agency came in the last decade when taxpayers began filing refund
claims based on the decisions of long-distance carriers to begin charging on the basis of time alone.
What the agency did at that point remains unclear. The taxpayer in this case argues that the IRS has
settled many of these claims for well less than 100 cents on the dollar but claims it has been stymied
in its attempts to obtain access to IRS records to establish whether that is true. At oral argument,
we did not receive a clear answer one way or another. Under these circumstances and with respect
to this anomalously reasoned revenue ruling, we are not prepared to defer to a ruling that only
became relevant to today’s debate in the last decade and that may or may not have been followed
consistently by the agency. Accordingly, whether the “and” in § 4252(b)(1) is ambiguous or not,
the government has not identified any tenable bases for deferring to its position—save for the facts
that it is the government and we depend on its fiscal health, which are not enough.
III.
The government argues that if it may not tax OfficeMax’s service under § 4252(b)(1), it may
tax the company under the so-called WATS-line definition of “toll telephone service,” § 4252(b)(2),
or under the definition of “local telephone service,” § 4252(a). We disagree.
The alternative definition of “toll telephone service,” recall, covers:
a service which entitles the subscriber, upon payment of a periodic charge
(determined as a flat amount or upon the basis of total elapsed transmission time),
to the privilege of an unlimited number of telephonic communications to or from all
or a substantial portion of the persons having telephone or radio telephone stations
in a specified area which is outside the local telephone system area in which the
station provided with this service is located.
No. 04-4009 OfficeMax, Inc. v. United States Page 14
26 U.S.C. § 4252(b)(2) (emphasis added). The government does not contend that OfficeMax paid
a flat amount for unlimited service. It instead contends that because the toll charge for each
individual communication varied by elapsed transmission time alone, the service amounted to a
periodic-charge service determined on the basis of total elapsed transmission time. Not so.
OfficeMax’s monthly bill was a total of toll charges calculated for each individual call. And for
each of these calls, MCI rounded up to the next billing increment and multiplied by a variable rate
to determine the individual call’s charge. The rate was subject to variation depending on other
individual characteristics of the call as well, including “the time of day in which the call was made,”
OfficeMax, Inc. v. United States, 309 F. Supp. 2d 984, 987 (N.D. Ohio 2004). The end result is not
a “periodic charge” based on total elapsed time (or even total elapsed time itself rounded up to the
next billing increment) but rather a monthly bill based on a summation of toll charges for individual
communications. Due to the rounding, the total actual elapsed time of a bill could vary significantly
without a change in the total amount due. The government’s argument also eschews the dichotomy
that the legislation sets in place between services billed by call and services billed by period
regardless of the number of calls. OfficeMax’s phone services fall on the by-call side of this line.
Finally, the government’s argument departs from the requirements that the service must be both
“unlimited” and to “a specified area.” See 26 U.S.C. § 4252(b)(2). The statutory language mirrors
the concept of AT&T’s traditional WATS service, which for a flat rate allowed customers to make
as many calls as they wanted to one of AT&T’s six U.S. service areas. OfficeMax’s phone service,
as noted, levels charges for each call made, eschewing any reasonable definition of “unlimited” and
allows calls to any non-local portion of the country, stretching the limits of “specified area.” All
other courts reaching this issue have concluded similarly. Am. Bankers Ins. Group v. United States,
408 F.3d 1328 (11th Cir. 2005) (reversing Am. Bankers Ins. Group, Inc. v. United States, 308 F.
Supp. 2d 1360 (S.D. Fla. 2004)); Am. Online, Inc. v. United States, 64 Fed. Cl. 571 (Ct. Cl. 2005);
Honeywell Int’l, Inc. v. United States, 64 Fed. Cl. 188 (Ct. Cl. 2005); Hewlett-Packard Co. v. United
States, No. 04-03832, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19972 (N.D. Cal. Aug. 5, 2005); Reese Bros. v. United
States, No. 03–745, 2004 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 27507 (W.D. Pa. Oct. 20, 2004); Fortis, Inc. v. United
States, No. 03 Civ. 5137, 2004 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18686 (S.D.N.Y. Sept. 16, 2004). Indeed, even
the government has elsewhere argued that § 4252(b)(2) applies exclusively to the traditional AT&T
WATS service. See AMTRAK v. United States, 338 F. Supp. 2d 22, 28 (D.D.C. 2004) (“The IRS
argues that ‘Congress drafted §4252(b)(2) purely to cover WATS service.’”(emphasis added)).
Next, the provision defines “local telephone service” as “(1) the access to a local telephone
system, and the privilege of telephonic quality communication with substantially all persons having
telephone or radio telephone stations constituting a part of such local telephone system, and (2) any
facility or service provided in connection with a service described in paragraph (1).” 26 U.S.C.
§ 4252(a). “The term ‘local telephone service,’” the statute adds, “does not include any service
which is a ‘toll telephone service.’” Id. The government argues that OfficeMax’s plan must be a
service provided in connection with a local telephone service because all long-distance services
eventually require access to local telephone systems. The only obstacle to a long distance service
qualifying as a local telephone service, it adds, is the language excluding toll telephone service from
the definition of local telephone service. Once it is determined that the OfficeMax plan does not
qualify as a toll telephone service, the government concludes, it is eligible to be taxed as a local
telephone service.
Yet the definition of local-telephone service requires “access to a” local telephone system,
not “access to every” local telephone system included within the boundaries of a long-distance plan.
Not surprisingly, given its application to “local” telephone service, the definition contemplates a
service with limited geographic reach, not a plan that makes use of an untold number of local
services. Applying the local-telephone definition to the long-distance telephone definition,
moreover, not only blurs the line between two statutorily defined services but also is puzzling. It
makes one wonder why Congress would not eliminate the definition of toll telephone service
altogether and apply the tax to all telephone services of any kind.
No. 04-4009 OfficeMax, Inc. v. United States Page 15
IV.
For these reasons, we affirm.
No. 04-4009 OfficeMax, Inc. v. United States Page 16
_________________
DISSENT
_________________
ROGERS, Circuit Judge, dissenting. A host separately asked two prospective guests what
they liked to drink. One said, “I like bourbon and water.” The other said, “I like beer and wine.”
When the second guest arrived at the event, the host served the guest a glass of beer mixed with
wine. “What’s that awful drink?” said the guest, to which the host answered, “You said you liked
beer and wine.” Replied the guest: “Pfui! You know what I meant. Quit playing word games and
get me something I can drink.”
Of course the host was “playing word games,” because the meanings of both “I like bourbon
and water” and of “I like beer and wine” are clear. In the first sentence “I like” applies to “bourbon
and water” together, whereas in the second sentence “I like” applies to each of “beer” and “wine”
separately. Stated differently, the preceding words are distributed over the conjoined elements in
the second sentence, so that the meaning is “I like beer and [I like] wine.” But the preceding words
are not distributed over the conjoined elements in the first sentence, so that the meaning is “I like
(bourbon and water).” In each sentence the word “and” has the same conjunctive meaning—the
difference lies in whether the preceding words are distributed over the conjoined elements or not.
Whether to interpret the preceding words as distributed over the conjoined elements or not depends
on the context of the sentence, and what we externally know about the conjoined elements. Given
what we know about the social context, and what we know about bourbon, water, beer and wine, the
meanings of the two sentences are not at all ambiguous.
I respectfully dissent in this case because it is similarly clear—from the regulatory context
and what we know about telephone toll charges—that the words preceding the conjoined elements
of “distance and elapsed transmission time” in the definition of “toll telephone service” are to be
distributed over the two conjoined elements. That is, “a telephonic quality communication for which
there is a toll charge which varies in amount with the distance and elapsed transmission time of each
individual communication” means “a telephonic quality communication for which there is a toll
charge which varies in amount with the distance and (a telephonic quality communication for which
there is a toll charge which varies in amount with the) elapsed transmission time of each individual
communication.” This natural language interpretation of the statutory language entirely disposes
of OfficeMax’s contention that it does not owe a 3% excise tax on telephone toll charges that vary
based on elapsed time, but do not vary based on distance. The tax is obviously owed.
What we know about the context and about the nature of the conjoined elements strongly
supports this interpretation. It is undisputed that, at the time of enactment of the language in
question, the excise tax covered all home and business telephone charges, with the exception of an
itemized list of special categories, such as services to certain news services and to state and local
governments. It strains credulity that Congress intended that the phone company could unilaterally
repeal a substantial tax on its customers by the simple expedient of combining its 6 or 7 long
distance bands into one single band. It also strains credulity that Congress repeatedly refrained from
repealing the excise tax on telephone charges, presumably because it counted on the revenue, while
simultaneously intending to effect a repeal of the tax on the simple condition that phone companies
find it practical to combine their long distance charging bands into one band.
Of course without context or external knowledge, it is just as possible that all taxable toll
charges have to vary both by distance and elapsed time. Maybe the second guest really wanted beer
and wine in the same glass. Such a possibility at most creates an ambiguity. In the presence of an
ambiguity, however, we are instructed by cases such as Skidmore v. Swift & Co. generally to defer
to a long-standing agency interpretation. See Skidmore, 323 U.S. 134, 139-40 (1944). This is not
No. 04-4009 OfficeMax, Inc. v. United States Page 17
Chevron deference, which if applicable would unquestionably require a ruling in the government’s
favor.1 Instead, it is deference based on two powerful underlying considerations: (1) the agency is
better positioned than the court to interpret specialized language, given its greater familiarity with
the context in which the words are to be effectuated, and (2) congressional acquiescence in the
agency interpretation may be inferred from Congress’s inaction in the face of agency application of
the challenged interpretation. These two considerations, to the extent that2 they are warranted,
support the idea that the agency properly interpreted what Congress wanted.
While the first of these considerations is reasonably strong in this case, the second is
exceptionally powerful. Skidmore states that the weight of an agency interpretive opinion depends
in part on “its consistency with earlier and later pronouncements.” 323 U.S. at 140. The logical
basis for taking consistency into account is perforce that Congress must have acquiesced in the
agency’s interpretation where it has been consistently applied. In contrast, where the agency has
gone back and forth on an interpretation, there is much less reason to expect Congress to step in and
fix the interpretation. See Gen. Elec. Co. v. Gilbert, 429 U.S. 125, 142-43 (1976). In the mine run
of administrative interpretations, of course, this analysis has a fictional air to it. It is hard to say with
confidence that members of Congress are really tracking the interpretive determinations of agencies,
even when such determinations are consistent. Instead, the most we can say is that a consistent
interpretation that adversely affects certain interests would be drawn to congressional attention in
a way that might provoke a congressional response. In the absence of such a response, Congress
can be assumed to be satisfied with the consistent interpretation, in the sense that Congress is
politically comfortable with the results of the interpretation.
This case is far from the mine run of administrative cases in this respect, however. This is
not a case where the agency interpretation has been consistently applied to a series of five or ten
administrative litigants around the country. And it is not a case where the politically relevant
repercussions have not been felt. Instead, based squarely on the interpretation at issue in this case,
millions of phone bills have charged the excise tax, and billions of dollars have been paid. Virtually
every congressperson, every congressional staff member, every tax lobbyist, every accountant, and
every person familiar with the terms of the statute received phone bills for years reflecting an excise
tax on phone charges that varied only by elapsed time. Even more compelling is the political reality
that the Government took and spent the money, and Congress, in making revenue determinations,
took into account the money so taken in. When Congress debated whether to repeal the excise tax
on telephone calls in 2000, at least one member of the House expressed concern over the impending
loss of revenue.3 The inference that Congress acquiesced in the agency’s interpretation is thus not
1
Chevron held that agency interpretations of ambiguous statutory terms are analogous to agency exercises of
statutorily-granted legislative rulemaking power. Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Res. Def. Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837,
843-44 (1984). In United States v. Mead Corp., however, Chevron was held not to apply when the agency determination
was sufficiently ad hoc that Congress cannot have considered the determination to be the exercise of delegated power
to make binding interpretations. 533 U.S. 218, 231-32 (2001). While an argument could be made that Chevron
deference applies here, by virtue of the innumerable adjudications in which the agency consistently applied its
interpretation that the excise tax covered toll charges varying only by elapsed time, it is unnecessary to rely on Chevron
deference in this case. The weaker but nonetheless substantial Skidmore form of deference, clearly applicable here, more
than adequately requires that any ambiguity in this case be resolved in favor of the agency.
2
This contrasts with Chevron deference, where the deference is based on the idea that Congress delegated to
the agency the power to make decisions by interpreting ambiguous provisions. See Chevron, 467 U.S. at 843-44.
3
See, e.g., 146 Cong. Rec. E884 (2000) (statement of Rep. Stark) (“This bill recklessly cuts $20 billion in taxes
that could be used for meaningful legislation . . . .”). The House Committee on Ways and Means in 2000 considered,
and reported favorably upon, a bill to eliminate the excise tax on telephone services. H.R. Rep. No. 106-631 (2000).
The bill, H.R. 3916, would have phased out the excise tax. From this bill, another argument can be made that Congress,
as recently as May 2000, understood that the excise tax covered most long distance charges as they existed at the time.
No. 04-4009 OfficeMax, Inc. v. United States Page 18
fictional, but compelling. Congress not only acquiesced in the interpretation, it relied upon it in a
very concrete and substantial way. Skidmore accordingly strongly supports the conclusion that an
ambiguity should be construed in favor of the agency in this case.
The Government’s position in this litigation has doubtless been weakened by the remarkably
counterintuitive nature of some its arguments. The Government argues among other things that
“and” means “or,” that “local” means nationwide, and that “distance” means “toll rate.” None of
these anomalous contentions, however, is necessary to conclude that “toll telephone service”
includes a toll charge varying solely by elapsed time.
In particular, it is absolutely not necessary for the Government to argue that “and” means
“or” in this case, or that “and” has a disjunctive meaning. Two meanings may be possible when
elements are conjoined by “and” because of ambiguity as to whether the surrounding words apply
to the conjoined elements separately or only together. But under both possibilities the elements are
conjoined, added, cumulative. There is nothing disjunctive about it. Thus any discussion of whether
“and” should be interpreted conjunctively or disjunctively is beside the point.
An argument could be made that Congress, if it desired to tax telephone charges based only
on elapsed time, could have used the disjunctive. That is, Congress could have said, “varies in
amount with the distance or elapsed transmission time of each individual communication.” While
Congress could have used such language, that language has the potential for a different set of
possible interpretations. Some would argue that such language excludes charges that vary on both
bases.
The argument, moreover, is the equivalent of the social host giving the following retort to
the second guest: “If you wanted beer or wine, you should have said ‘or.’” In another case involving
a long-standing agency interpretation asserted to be contrary to plain statutory meaning, the Supreme
Court rejected a comparable argument. In Young v. Community Nutrition Institute, the Court was
asked to determine whether, under 21 U.S.C. § 346, the Food and Drug Administration (“FDA”) had
a mandatory or discretionary duty to promulgate regulations determining the tolerance levels for
harmful, but unavoidable, substances in food. 476 U.S. 974, 978 (1986). Section 346 provided that
“the Secretary shall promulgate regulations limiting the quantity therein or thereon to such extent
as he finds necessary for the protection of the public health.” Id. at 977. The FDA had long
interpreted the phrase “to such extent as he finds necessary” as modifying the word “shall.” Id. at
979. A consumer and two public interest groups argued that “to such extent” modifies only “the
quantity therein or thereon,” thereby requiring the FDA to promulgate tolerance levels. Id. at 980.
The Court reasoned as follows:
While we agree with the Court of Appeals that Congress in § 346 was
speaking directly to the precise question at issue in this case, we cannot agree with
the Court of Appeals that Congress unambiguously expressed its intent through its
choice of statutory language. The Court of Appeals’ reading of the statute may seem
to some to be the more natural interpretation, but the phrasing of § 346 admits of
either respondents’ or petitioner's reading of the statute. As enemies of the dangling
participle well know, the English language does not always force a writer to specify
which of two possible objects is the one to which a modifying phrase relates. A
Congress more precise or more prescient than the one that enacted § 346 might, if
it wished petitioner’s position to prevail, have placed “to such extent as he finds
necessary for the protection of public health” as an appositive phrase immediately
If the Committee thought that the excise tax did not cover modern long-distance charges, there would be no need to enact
a phase-out. Accordingly, it can be assumed that the Committee believed that without intervention, the excise tax would
continue to apply to modern long distance service.
No. 04-4009 OfficeMax, Inc. v. United States Page 19
after “shall” rather than as a free-floating phrase after “the quantity therein or
thereon.” A Congress equally fastidious and foresighted, but intending respondents’
position to prevail, might have substituted the phrase “to the quantity” for the phrase
“to such extent as.” But the Congress that actually enacted § 346 took neither tack.
In the absence of such improvements, the wording of § 346 must remain ambiguous.
The FDA has therefore advanced an interpretation of an ambiguous statutory
provision.
“This view of the agency charged with administering the statute is
entitled to considerable deference; and to sustain it, we need not find
that it is the only permissible construction that [the agency] might
have adopted but only that [the agency’s] understanding of this very
‘complex statute’ is a sufficiently rational one to preclude a court
from substituting its judgment for that of [the agency].”
Id. at 980-81 (citing Chem. Mfrs. Assn. v. Natural Res. Def. Council, Inc., 470 U.S. 116, 125
(1985)).
Finally, the fact that most telephone charges in 1965 varied both by distance and elapsed
time does not4say anything about what Congress intended when charges were later based solely on
elapsed time. The majority suggests that if Congress contemplated charges based solely on time
elapsed, Congress must also have had the “strange” intent of imposing a tax on the “curious”
practice of billing solely by distance, regardless of elapsed time. For the following reasons, the
conclusion simply does not follow.
4
The legislative history of § 4251 supports the position that Congress would have intended the 1965 definition
to cover long distance service today and that modern sessions of Congress also thought that current long distance was
subject to the tax.
Contrary to the district court’s characterization, the definition of toll telephone service was not “narrowed” in
1965 in an attempt to reduce the coverage of the excise tax. The 1965 Excise Tax Reduction Act had multiple goals.
The House and Senate Committees did view the excise tax on communication services to be undesirable, because the
tax “fell with greater severity on those with low incomes” and harmed businesses. H.R. Rep. No. 89-433 (1965), as
reprinted in 1965 U.S.C.C.A.N. 1645, 1676. In order to achieve the goal of first reducing the tax, then eliminating the
tax altogether, the Act reduced the rate of the tax from its original 10% to 3% in the first year, 2% in the second year,
1% in the third year, with the tax to be eliminated in 1969. Id.; see also S. Rep. No. 89-324 (1965), as reprinted in 1965
U.S.C.C.A.N. 1690, 1725. (As explained by the majority, the phase-out was later repealed for revenue-related reasons.)
The definition of toll telephone service was not changed to help in the reduction or elimination of the tax. The
definition was “updated and modified to make it clear that it is the service as such which is being taxed and not merely
the equipment being supplied.” 1965 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 1676, 1725. This update was unrelated to the reduction goal,
which was addressed in its entirety by the phase-out provisions described above.
No. 04-4009 OfficeMax, Inc. v. United States Page 20
We can think of charging by elapsed time and charging by distance as overlapping circles,
where area A is charging by elapsed time, area C is charging by distance,
and area B is charging by both distance and elapsed time. The issue in
this case is whether Congress meant to include all charges in areas A, B,
and C, or only charges in area B. The majority’s argument is based on
the idea that, for practical purposes, Congress assumed that areas A and
C did not exist; there was only B at the time of enactment. (i.e., the
circles happened to be congruent and cover identical areas at the time.)
But what do we draw from this? One conclusion is that Congress never
intended to create the possibility of a gap in the form of areas A and C.
This is the more likely answer, for the reasons given above. Another
conclusion is that Congress expressly limited itself to area B, and
inadvertently created the gap of A and C, when those possibilities arose. This is less likely given
Congress’ intention to tax substantially all long distance service. See supra note 4.
The majority’s point—that area C was a null set in 1965 and continues to be a null set
now—really does not affect the analysis one way or another. The issue is whether Congress meant
to draw a line around all of A, B, and C, or whether it meant to draw a line around only B. That
Congress apparently did not anticipate a gap leads to the conclusion that it did not intend to create
one.
In my view, we should not encourage lawyers to play word games at the expense of the
public fisc. I respectfully dissent.