In Apache Corp. v. Commissioner, 165 T.C. ___ No. 11 (11/1325), reviewed opinion, the Court addressed the momentous (to some) issue of whether a taxpayer electing not to carryback some categories of net operating losses (NOLs) can reserve in the election to carryback other categories of NOLs. The opinions in Appache may be viewed on the Tax Court Docket Sheet for Case # 25984-22, here, at #56, on my Google Drive here, on GS here, and on TN here. I must say that I have neither worried nor lost sleep over that issue, either before or after this opinion. As respects the issue actually decided in Apache, I am agnostic which may be an admission that I have not really dug deeply into the issue. So, I don’t propose here to deal with the merits of the issue decided.
I want to address the methodology in reaching the majority opinion and Judge Buch’s concurring opinion.
Judge Buch’s concurring opinion (Slip Op. 22-23) is very short. If I may summarize a very short opinion:
(i)
the statutory text is inconclusive on the
competing interpretations which are equally plausible, phenomenon I describe
as statutory ambiguity where a best interpretation cannot be made; and
(ii)
where the statute is ambiguous, courts are “inclined
to rely on the traditional canon that construes revenue-raising laws against
their drafter.”
The majority determines that the statutory text is not
ambiguous but then says (Slip Op. 18-19) that the default rule Judge Buch
relies on should carry the day even if the text were ambiguous (calling it a “tiebreaking
principle"). As stated, this supposed principle, sometimes stated as a canon or maxim of interpretation, operates like
the rule of lenity that construes criminal statutes in favor of a defendant,
which is a default rule in cases of ambiguity. See e.g., Ryan D. Doerfler, The
"Ambiguity" Fallacy, 88 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 1110, 1116 (2020) (referring
to Chevron and lenity as default rules); Intisar A. Rabb, The Appellate
Rule of Lenity: Responding to Abbe R. Gluck & Richard A. Posner, Statutory
Interpretation on the Bench: A Survey of Forty-Two Judges on the Federal Courts
of Appeals, 131 Harv. L. Rev. 179, 194 N. 77 (2018) (Same re lenity).
That interpretive methodology in ambiguity is a default rule similar to the Chevron default rule prior to Chevron’s demise in Loper Bright. As readers of this blog and observers in general know, Loper Bright overruled Chevron and thus the Chevron default rule does not apply in a state of ambiguity as between two or more interpretations, one of which is an agency interpretation qualifying for Chevron deference (generally notice and comment interpretive regulations).