CRA Holdings US, Inc. and Subsidiaries v. United States Government
Filing
120
DECISION and ORDER. Defendant's motion (Dkt. 95) is GRANTED. Plaintiffs shall provide satisfactory responses to Defendant's Fourth Set Interrogatories Nos. 10 and 11 within 30 days. Signed by Hon. Leslie G. Foschio on 8/22/2018. (SDW)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
WESTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
________________________________________
CRA HOLDINGS US, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES,
Plaintiffs,
DECISION
and
ORDER
v.
15-CV-239W(F)
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Defendant.
________________________________________
APPEARANCES:
ZERBE FINGERET FRANK & JADAV
Attorneys for Plaintiffs
JOHN H. DIES,
JEFFERSON H. READ,
ROBERT G. WONISH, II, of Counsel
3009 Post Oak Boulevard, Suite 1700
Houston, Texas 77056
RICHARD E. ZUCKERMAN
Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General
Tax Division, U.S. Department of Justice
Attorney for Defendant
JAMES M. STRANDJORD,
Trial Attorney, of Counsel
PO Box 55
Ben Franklin Station
Washington, DC 20044
In this action Plaintiffs, a national environmental remediation consulting firm,
seek to recover tax refunds of $245,077 for Plaintiffs’ 2002 tax year ending
September 30, 2002, and $413,066 for Plaintiff’s 2003 tax year ending September
30, 2003, based on tax credits for qualified research expenses (“QREs”) (“Plaintiffs’
claim”). Plaintiffs initially sought refunds in the amount of $700,463 for Plaintiffs’
2002 tax year and $795,978 for Plaintiffs’ 2003 tax year based on 6,100
environmental remediation projects in which Plaintiffs were engaged; however,
subsequently, in Plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint, filed March 20, 2017, Plaintiffs
reduced to 159 the number of projects upon which Plaintiffs’ claim is based. At
Plaintiffs’ request, opposed by Defendant, in order to streamline litigation of the
matter, the court determined that the case should proceed based on a random
sample of 10% of the 159 projects. See CRA Holdings U.S., Inc. v. United States,
2017 WL 3404758, at *1 (W.D.N.Y. Aug. 8, 2017). Following several rounds of
interrogatory practice Defendant, on January 17, 2018, served Defendant’s Fourth
Set of Interrogatories directed to the 12 projects upon which Plaintiffs rely to support
Plaintiffs’ claim including Interrogatories Nos. 10 and 11 (“Interrogatory No. __”).
Dkt. 95-3 at 2. Interrogatory No. 10 requests “[f]or each claimed project” Plaintiffs
“identify each employee that you [Plaintiffs] contend performed qualified service.”1
Interrogatory No. 11 requests for each employee Plaintiffs identify in answer to
Interrogatory No. 10, Plaintiffs further identify “the specific activitys(ies) [sic] that
each employee performed” during Plaintiffs’ taxable years 2002 and 2003 which
Plaintiffs (1) “contend qualified as services for each project” comprising the 12
projects selected as a representative sample of the 159 projects asserted by
Plaintiffs, (2) the dates when these activities were performed, (3) the amount of time
spent by each identified employee in the performance of such “qualified services,”
and (4) the “amount of qualified research expenses associated with the activity.”
As the term “qualified services” was not defined in Defendant’s Fourth Set of
Interrogatories the following summary of 26 U.S.C. § 41 which creates the R&D tax
1
Unless indicated otherwise, underlining and bracketed material is added.
2
credit upon which Plaintiffs claim is based (“§ 41___”) provides such definition and
is intended to assist in an understanding of the relevance of Interrogatories Nos. 10
and 11 to the merits of Plaintiffs’ claims and the concomitant importance of
Plaintiffs’ responsive answers to Defendant’s ability to defend against Plaintiffs’
claims. The research credit available under § 41 is defined as 10% of the excess of
the taxpayer’s qualified research expenses or QREs for the relevant tax year over
the base amount. § 41(a)(1). The base amount is the product of the fixed base
percentage and the taxpayer’s average annual gross receipts for the four years
preceding the tax year for which the credit is sought. § 41(c). The fixed base
percentage is the percentage which the taxpayer’s aggregate QREs for the
taxpayer’s tax years from January 1, 1984 through December 31, 1988 is of the
taxpayer’s aggregate gross receipts for this period. § 41(c)(3)(A).2 A taxpayer’s
QREs are defined as both in-house and contract research expenses “paid or
incurred by a taxpayer in the taxpayer’s trade or business. § 41(b)(1), (2). In-house
research expenses are defined as “wages paid or incurred to the taxpayer’s
employee for qualified services . . . and related “supplies.” § 41(b)(2)(A)(i), (ii). The
term “qualified services . . . means services [where the taxpayer’s employee is]
engaging in qualified research, or the direct supervision or support” of such
services. § 41(b)(2)(B)(i), (ii). As relevant to Defendant’s motion, qualified research
is defined as “research . . . undertaken for the purpose of discovering information . .
. which is technological in nature the application of which is “intended to be useful in
the development of a [taxpayer’s] new or improved business component . . . where
2
For a representation of the formula created by these provisions see CRA Holdings US, Inc. v.
United States, 2018 WL 3390240, at *7 (W.D.N.Y. July 12, 2018) (Appendix).
3
“substantially all the [taxpayer’s research] activities . . . constitute elements of a
process of experimentation . . . for [the taxpayer’s] (i) new or improved function, (ii)
performance, or (iii) reliability or quality.” § 41(d)(1), (3). A taxpayer’s “business
component” includes “any product, process, computer software, technique, formula,
or invention . . . held for sale or lease or used by the taxpayers in a [taxpayer’s]
trade or business.” § 41(d)(2)(B).
The tests for determining whether a taxpayer’s research expenses are
qualified under § 41(d)(1), see Shami v. Comm’r, 741 F.3d 560, 563 (5th Cir. 2014)
(summarizing the requirements for R&D expenses to qualify for computing an
alleged § 41 tax credit), are required to be applied to each of the taxpayer’s
business components to which such expenses are claimed by the taxpayer to
relate. § 41(d)(2); see also United States v. Quebe, 2017 WL 279539, at **2-3
(S.D. Ohio Jan. 23, 2017) (citing Suder v. Comm’r, 2014 WL 4920724, at *14 (T.C.
2014). To summarize, “qualified services” are services performed by a taxpayer in
qualified research. Expenses related to a taxpayer’s research are qualified services
if four tests are satisfied. Quebe, 2017 WL 279539 at *3 (citing Suder, 2014 WL
4920724, at *14).3 First, the expenses must be eligible for deductibility under 26
U.S.C. § 174 in that they are “incurred in connection with the taxpayer’s trade or
business which represent research and development costs in the experimental or
laboratory sense.” Quebe, 2017 WL 279539, at *3 (quoting 26 C.F.R. § 1.174-2).4
Specifically, such experimental or laboratory expenses must be “intended to
3
Quebe was an action brought against the taxpayers pursuant to 26 U.S.C. § 7405(b) for
repayment of an erroneous refund based on taxpayers’ § 41 tax credits.
4
Unless indicated otherwise all underlining is added.
4
discover information that would eliminate uncertainty concerning the development
or improvement of a [taxpayer’s] product. Uncertainty exists if the information
available to the taxpayer does not establish the capability or method for developing
or improving the product or the appropriate design of the product.” Id. Second,
under the “technological information test” the research at issue will qualify if it seeks
to discover information that is technological in nature, i.e., that involves a “process
of experimentation” which “fundamentally relies on principles of the physical or
biological sciences, engineering or computer science,” 26 C.F.R. § 41-4(a)(4),
(a)(3)(i), and “‘if it is intended to eliminate uncertainty concerning the development
or improvement of a business component.’” Id. (quoting 26 C.F.R. § 1.41-4(a)(3)(i)).
Third, the asserted expenses will qualify under the business component test if the
taxpayer intends information to be discovered will “‘be useful in the development of
a new or improved business component of the taxpayer.’” Quebe, 2017 WL
279539, at *3 (quoting Suder, 2014 WL 4920724, at *17 (citing 26 U.S.C. §
41(d)(1)(B)(ii))). Finally, “the process of experimentation test” requires that
“substantially all of the research activities” claimed by the taxpayer “must constitute
elements of a process of experimentation for the purpose of relating to a new or
improved function, performance, or reliability or quality.” Quebe, 2017 WL 279539,
at *3 (citing 26 U.S.C. § 41(d)(1)(C), (3)(A)). As relevant to the instant case, “[a]
process of experimentation is a process designed to evaluate one or more
alternatives to achieve a result where the capability or the method of achieving that
result or the appropriate design of that result is uncertain as of the beginning of the
taxpayer’s research activities,” and which relies on “principles of the physical or
5
biological sciences, engineering, or computer science” involving “identification of
uncertainty concerning the development or improvement of a business component,”
the identification and evaluation of alternatives to eliminate that uncertainty,” and a
“process of evaluating the alternatives (through, for example, modeling, simulation,
or a systematic trial and error methodology).” 26 C.F.R. § 1.41-4(a)(5)(i).5
Interrogatory No. 10 thus requests Plaintiffs identify each of Plaintiffs’
employees whom Plaintiffs allege have performed research activities that are
research or experimental in nature and which are aimed discoveries of a
technological nature, intended to develop a taxpayer’s new or improved business
component thus constituting a QRE for purposes of computing the existence of a
claimed research credit under § 41(a). Interrogatory No. 11 requests Plaintiffs to
“identify the specific [research] activity(ies) [sic] that each employee performed that
you [Plaintiffs] contend constituted qualified services for each project, including the
date(s) the activity(ies) [sic] was performed, the amount of time the employee spent
performing the qualified services, and the amount of qualified research expenses
associated with the activity.” Dkt. 95-3 at 2 (“Interrogatory No. 10,” Interrogatory
No. 11,” collectively “the Interrogatories” or “Defendant’s Interrogatories”). As the
preceding overview of the requirement for a tax credit based on Plaintiffs’ alleged
QREs incurred in connection with each of the 12 sample projects indicates, whether
Plaintiffs’ expenses associated with these projects constitute “qualified services”
under § 41 and related I.R.S. regulations is essential to Plaintiffs’ claim. Thus,
Plaintiffs do not dispute that Defendant’s Interrogatories Nos. 10 and 11 seek
5
Unless indicated otherwise all bracketed material added.
6
relevant information. Nor do Plaintiffs contend Defendant’s Interrogatories request
information that is disproportional to “the needs of the case” in violation of
Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(b)(1). Further, as also relevant to Defendant’s motion, because
“‘[t]ax credits are a matter of legislative grace . . . taxpayers bear the burden of
proving they are entitled to claim tax credits.” Quebe, 2017 WL 279539, at *2
(quoting Suder, 2014 WL 4920724, at *12 (citations omitted)); see also 26 C.F.R. §
1.41-4(d) (“A taxpayer claiming a credit under section 41 must maintain records in
sufficiently useable form and detail to substantiate that the expenditures claimed are
eligible for the credit.”)
Plaintiffs’ response to Interrogatory No. 10, served February 19, 2018,
consisted of Plaintiffs’ statement that Plaintiffs’ qualified research expenses were
not recorded by project and that Plaintiffs provided to Defendant a list of employees
who recorded time on each project, but that the time recorded did not allocate such
time between qualified and non-qualified research services for each project. Dkt.
95-4 at 18 (referencing Bates No. CRA 459109-CRA 459156 (Dkt. 95-4 at 23-70).
In lieu of actual specific time data for each employee, as Interrogatory No. 10
requests, Plaintiffs stated that an “estimated percentage of time spent on qualified
research activities per year per employee has been produced [to Defendant]” in a
document provided by Plaintiffs, as Bates Nos. CRA 2692-CRA 2711. Dkt. 95-4 at
18. This document was not included in Defendant’s motion; however, it is attached
as Exhibit 4 to Plaintiffs’ Supplemental Response to Defendant’s Motion, filed July
13, 2018, see Dkt. 115-4 at 1-20. Plaintiffs also stated as a “further answer” to
Interrogatory No. 10 that project documents, provided to Defendant as CRA 4164-
7
CRA 459104 “reflect[ ] the work done on the project and dates . . . which support
the estimations of the percentage of time [Plaintiffs’] employees spent performing
activities.” Dkt. 95-7 at 21 (Plaintiffs’ Amended answers served March 1, 2018).
These voluminous documents are not included in the record. Plaintiffs further
asserted in Plaintiffs’ response that Plaintiffs’ use of estimates regarding the time
spent per employee performing qualified services was permitted under the so-called
“Cohan6 line of cases, as applied in the R&D tax credit context.” Dkt. 95-4 at 19.
For Plaintiffs’ response to Defendant’s Interrogatory No. 11, also served
February 19, 2018, Plaintiffs stated, like Plaintiffs’ response to Interrogatory No. 10,
that Plaintiffs could not provide specific information because Plaintiffs did not
maintain contemporaneous records for the actual time spent by Plaintiffs’
employees on qualified research activity or related expenses in connection with the
projects, and that such time and expenses were therefore estimated on an annual
basis. Dkt. 95-4 at 19. Plaintiffs further stated that Plaintiffs’ estimates of qualified
research time by Plaintiffs’ employees on the projects on an annual basis had been
provided in Plaintiffs’ documents provided in Bates Nos. CRA 2692-CRA 2711.7
Dkt. 95-4 at 19. As with Interrogatory No. 10, Plaintiffs also relied on the projects’
documents produced to Defendant as CRA 4164-CRA 459104. See Dkt. 95-8 at
21.
As to the interrogatory’s request for a description of the specific research
activity each employee performed on each project, Plaintiffs’ answer referred
Defendant to Plaintiffs’ responses to Defendant’s Interrogatory No. 8. Dkt. 95-4 at
19. Defendant’s Interrogatory No. 8 requested Plaintiffs describe what Plaintiffs’
6
7
Referring to Cohan v. Comm’r, 39 F.2d 540 (2d Cir. 1930) discussed, infra, at 26-27.
Copies of these documents are included in the record at Dkt. 115-4.
8
experiments8 for each project consisted of, and Plaintiffs’ identification of each of
Plaintiffs’ employees who worked on such experiments, the time spent by the
employee on each experiment together with a description of the “uncertainty the
experiment was intended to eliminate.” Dkt. 95-4 at 3. In Plaintiffs’ response to
Interrogatory No. 8, Plaintiffs described in general form the activity in which Plaintiffs
engaged for each project making reference to Bates numbered documents Plaintiffs
asserted had been provided to Defendant. Dkt. 95-4 at 3-18. Plaintiffs also
responded (Dkt. 95-8 at 9) that the identification of Plaintiffs’ alleged uncertainties
were previously provided in Plaintiffs’ responses to Defendant’s Third Set of
Interrogatories. Dkt. 99-5 at 3. For example, for the Project 003698 – Cambrex –
RI/FS Maybrook Superfund – Cambrex Corporation, Plaintiffs describe an
investigation “of the release of hazardous substances, pollutants or contaminant
from the site” requiring Plaintiffs to undertake “a detailed site investigation” to
determine the site’s geologic hydrology, and chemical characteristics, including
treatability and natural attenuation studies in order to recommend appropriate
remedial actions for the site to address the pyridine9-based compounds located at
the site. Dkt. 95-4 at 4. Plaintiffs stated such work was performed during the period
1991, 1995, 1996, and 2001-2003 which resulted in a final approved report in 2006.
Dkt. 95-4 at 5. In none of Plaintiffs’ descriptions responsive to Interrogatory No. 8,
however, do Plaintiffs identify any of Plaintiffs’ employees who engaged in the
8
As the term “experiment” is not defined in Defendant’s Fourth Set of Interrogatories, the court
assumes it is intended to be defined by 26 C.F.R. § 1.41-4(a)(5)(i).
9
Pyridine, a carbon-nitrogen liquid compound made from coal-tar and other chemicals, is used in
various pharmacologic and industrial products, and is considered carcinogenic. See National Center
for Biotechnology Information. PubChem Compound Database; CID=1049,
https://pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/compound/1049 (last accessed Aug. 14, 2018).
9
projects nor the time spent by employees engaged in qualified research for each
project described by Plaintiffs.
By letter dated February 22, 2018, Defendant advised Plaintiffs that Plaintiffs’
responses to Interrogatory Nos. 8, 10 and 11 were deficient in that none provided
the requested information, that Plaintiffs failed to particularize the actual activities
Plaintiffs claim to constitute qualified research for each project, the names of
employees Plaintiffs claim were engaged in such activities, nor did Plaintiffs provide
the amount of time associated with employees so engaged for each project within
the sample. Dkt. 95-5 at 1. In Plaintiffs’ response, dated February 28, 2018,
Plaintiffs also stated that Defendant had been provided all available records and
reiterated Plaintiffs had no records which “tracked [research] activity by project.”
Dkt. 95-6 at 1. On March 1, 2018, Plaintiffs served Plaintiffs’ Amended and, on
March 5, 2018, Second Amended responses to Defendants’ Interrogatories. Dkt.
95-7 at 1-15; Dkt. 95-8 at 1-24. Defendant filed its motion to compel on March 13,
2018 (Dkt. 95) (“Defendant’s motion”). In neither Plaintiffs’ Amended nor Second
amended responses did Plaintiffs provide any material modifications to Plaintiffs’
original responses to Interrogatories 8, 10, and 11. However, in Plaintiffs’ Third
Amended responses, served on March 27, 2018, in opposition to Defendant’s
motion, Dkt. 99-5 at 3-22, Plaintiffs amended Plaintiffs’ response to Interrogatory
No. 8 in which Plaintiffs asserted that further descriptions of Plaintiffs’ qualified
research activities were available in previously provided documents specifically
Bates Nos. CRA 2556-2577; 2595-2597; 2598-2615, 2616-2629, and 2529-2655.
Dkt. 99-5 at 3. These documents are not, however, included in the record by
10
Plaintiffs nor do Plaintiffs rely on them in Plaintiffs’ opposition. See Dkt. 99 at 5.
The court therefore does not consider them in its determination of Defendant’s
motion. Oral argument on Defendant’s motion was deemed unnecessary.
Defendant contends that Plaintiffs’ responses to Defendant’s Interrogatories
are deficient for several reasons. First, while Interrogatory No. 10 requests Plaintiffs
identify by name those of their employees Plaintiffs assert performed qualified
services on each project, Plaintiffs provided a list of all employees who worked on
each project without indicating which employees performed qualified services on
specific projects and, instead, asserted Plaintiffs could respond by estimating the
amount of time each employee actually engage in qualified services for each
project. Dkt. 95-2 at 6. Similarly, in answer to Defendant’s Interrogatory No. 11
requesting Plaintiffs identify specifically the activities in which Plaintiffs’ employees
engaged on each project that constituted qualified services including the date
performed, amount of time spent in performing the services and the related
amounts of expenses, in response, Plaintiffs again asserted Plaintiffs lacked
contemporaneous records which would enable Plaintiffs to provide complete
answers to Defendant’s questions and that Plaintiffs had provided estimates of the
percentage of all qualified services time for Plaintiffs’ employees who performed
services on the projects on an annual basis, not by project. Dkt. 115 at 3. Plaintiffs
also directed Defendant to Plaintiffs’ response to Interrogatory No. 8. Dkt. 99 at 5 n.
1. Plaintiffs further contend that Defendant overlooked Plaintiffs’ reference to Bates
numbered documents which Plaintiffs state provided “the list of [Plaintiffs]
employees who were claimed to performed [sic] qualified research activities.” Dkt.
11
99 at 4 (referencing Dkt. 115-4 at 1-20). However, as Defendant points out,
Plaintiffs’ answers to Interrogatory No. 8 does not provide any reasonably detailed
description of Plaintiffs’ qualified services, rather it articulates only generalized
statements of the types of evaluation and determination of remedial alternatives that
were undertaken by Plaintiffs in work on the project. Dkt. 95-2 at 8. Significantly,
however, Plaintiffs’ answer to Interrogatory No. 10 does not point to a document
which lists “employees who were claimed to performed [sic] qualified research
activities”. Rather, Plaintiffs’ answer states that “[t]he lists of employees who
recorded time spent on each of the 12 projects may be found on the attached
Exhibit I – CRA 459109-CRA 459156.” (referencing Dkt. 95-4 at 18). Importantly,
as Plaintiffs’ response does not state that any of this time involved “qualified
research activities;” it is therefore unresponsive to Interrogatory No. 10. Plaintiffs do
not dispute that the amount of time Plaintiffs’ employees applied to qualified
services for each project is relevant to Plaintiffs’ claim, nor could they. See Quebe,
2017 WL 279539, at *20 (plaintiff’s interrogatory requesting defendants provide
defendants’ employees “hours . . . worked” on projects defendants based
defendants’ § 41 tax credits upon required defendants’ response and “a detailed
description of the specific work” the employees performed on the projects).
Moreover, an examination of this document demonstrates it provides no indication
that any of the numerous employees listed performed qualified research on any of
the projects. See Dkt. 115-3 at 1-48 (passim). Plaintiffs also asserted that the
estimated time Plaintiffs were engaged in qualified research was produced as CRA
2692-CRA 2711 (Dkt. 11-4 at 1-20). Dkt. 99-3 at 18. That in lieu of
12
contemporaneous records which specifically record the amount of qualified service
time by each of Plaintiffs’ employees per project Plaintiffs have sought to estimate
the amount of time so spent, does not however, reasonably answer Defendant’s
interrogatory, which is obviously intended to enable Defendant to challenge whether
any qualified services were actually performed by Plaintiffs’ employees involved in
any of the 12 projects. For example, if Defendant was able to ascertain which
employees Plaintiffs assert, based on Plaintiffs’ review of Plaintiffs’ available
records, actually engaged in qualified services for each project, Defendant can
determine whether it should depose such employees, or some subset of the group,
to determine whether Plaintiff’s representations are accurate and are based in fact.
See United States v. Quebe, 321 F.R.D. 303, 311 (S.D.Ohio 2017) (sanctioning
taxpayer defendants for failure to adequately answer plaintiff’s interrogatories
requesting description of defendant’s asserted R&D work to support defendant’s tax
refund based on sample of 12 projects where such failure “prejudices plaintiff by
forcing [plaintiff] to prepare for . . . depositions without essential information”).
Simply estimating the amount of employee time a taxpayer believes was spent on
qualified services substantially begs the question of whether such qualified services
were in fact provided by any of Plaintiffs’ employees on the project.
Plaintiffs’ reliance on Fed.R.Civ.P. 33(d) (“Rule 33(d)”), Dkt. 99 at 3, is
misplaced. Rule 33(d), which permits in lieu of a direct answer to an interrogatory a
responding party to specify its business records from which the requesting party
may derive an answer, is inapplicable to the present facts because it is not possible
for Defendant to obtain a reasonably accurate answer to Interrogatory No. 10 from
13
the documents relied by on Plaintiffs. In particular, although Plaintiffs provided
documents purporting to list all employees who worked on the 12 projects between
June 2001 and December 2003, given that Plaintiffs’ tax years at issue are October
2001 to September 2002, and October 2002 to September 2003, a listed employee
as provided by Plaintiffs may have worked on a project before or after Plaintiffs’ tax
years at issue commenced or ended. Additionally, because Plaintiffs concede that
most of Plaintiffs’ listed employees did not perform qualified service on all of the
projects 100% of the time, see Dkt. 115-4 at 3-20 (indicating Plaintiffs’ estimated a
portion of employee research time associated with the projects did not exceed
80%), Plaintiffs’ records do not allow Defendant to readily determine the portion of
an employees’ claimed research activity was spent on any project. Nor could
Plaintiffs, as Plaintiffs also claim that Plaintiffs lack any records which associate
Plaintiffs’ employees’ alleged qualified research time by project, Dkt. 99-2 at 1.
Even if Plaintiffs rely on 26 C.F.R. 1.41-2(d)(2) (permitting a taxpayer to claim all of
an employee’s research time if “substantially all” of such time, meaning at least 80%
is devoted to qualified research activity) (§ 1.41-2(d)(2)”), Plaintiffs do not deny that,
as Defendant contends, Dkt. 100 at 2, this list (Dkt. 115-4 at 1-20), including Bates
Nos. CRA 2692-CRA 2711, was created when Plaintiffs originally asserted 6,100
projects supported Plaintiffs’ original claim and has not been parsed by Plaintiffs to
relate only to the 12 sample projects now at issue. Moreover, as noted, Plaintiffs
stated such portion did “not exceed 80%” negating the applicability of § 1.41-2(d)(2).
Thus, Plaintiffs, whether purposefully or not, would impose on Defendant the task of
culling out from among 913 employees who are listed on this document (Dkt. 115-4)
14
and are among Plaintiffs’ employees who Plaintiffs assert performed qualified
research services in connection with the 6,100 projects, including the 12 sample
projects, in varying percentages of their respective total time, in order to attempt to
determine which of Plaintiffs’ listed employees actually performed any such services
on any of the 12 projects. Plaintiffs’ failure to identify which of its employees
actually performed any qualified services on each sample project is particularly
remarkable in view of Plaintiffs’ prior representations in this case that if sampling
were approved by the court, Plaintiffs would “provide information [requested by
Defendant] on a project by project basis” (Dkt. 31 at 23); see also Dkt. 36 at 1
(“CRA has repeatedly indicated willingness to provide most of the information
requested once the project list to be tried has been limited to a sample.”).
Plaintiffs’ reliance on Rule 33(d) which requires that the “burden of deriving
or ascertaining the answer will be substantially the same for either party,” is further
undermined by the fact that § 41 requires a taxpayer to “retain records in sufficiently
usable form and detail to substantiate that the expenditures [i.e., qualified research
activities] claimed are eligible for the credit.” 26 C.F.R. § 1.41-4(a), (d). Plaintiffs’
reliance on these lists, Dkts. 94-5, 115-4, and other documents referenced by
Plaintiffs in responding to Defendant’s Interrogatories therefore amounts to a
“document dump” (defined as “the projection of voluminous and mostly
unresponsive documents without identification of specific pages or portions of
documents which are responsive to discovery requests”), which courts have found,
in a R&D tax credit context, to be unresponsive to the plaintiff’s interrogatory
seeking information (to “identify which [of 12 sample projects] project each
15
employee worked on and what their job entailed”). See Quebe, 321 F.R.D. at 30607 (quoting Scott Hutchinson Enter., Inc. v. Cranberry Pipeline Corp., 318 F.R.D.
44, 54 (S.D.W.Va. 2016)); see also Novak v. Yale University, 2015 WL 731385 at *3
(D.Conn. Nov. 20, 2015) (“Plaintiff’s production was a classic example of a
‘document dump,’ which largely left Defendant with a mass of unmanageable and
unusable documents.”). As such, the burden on Defendant to glean from the
records provided by Plaintiffs the information requested by Interrogatory No. 10 is
not “substantially” equivalent and Plaintiffs may not avoid fully answering
Defendant’s Interrogatory No. 10 by reliance on Rule 33(d).
The purpose of interrogatories pursuant to Rule 33 is to sharpen the issues
and facilitate a party’s preparation to more effectively prosecute or defend a claim.
See Black v. Buffalo Meat Services, Inc., 2016 WL 4363506, at *7 (W.D.N.Y. Aug.
16, 2016) (“‘The point of interrogatories is to obtain a party’s admissions and
contentions under oath and to narrow the issues in the case.’” (quoting Life Music v.
Broadcast Music, Inc., 41 F.R.D. 16, 26 (S.D.N.Y. 1966))). In answering an
interrogatory, a party is required to review all sources of information reasonably
available and provide responsive information. See Upstate Shredding, LLC v.
Northeastern Ferrous, Inc., 2016 WL 865299, at *8 (N.D.N.Y. Mar. 2, 2016) (party
responding to Rule 33 interrogatories is required “to make an inquiry and obtain
information to answer the interrogatories which would include obtaining the
information to fully and completely answer the interrogatories . . .” (internal citations
and quotation marks omitted)). Here, it is self-evident that as Plaintiffs possess
vastly superior knowledge of what Plaintiffs did for each project that Plaintiffs
16
believe constitute qualified services, it is reasonable to place the burden on
Plaintiffs to provide more detailed information responsive to Defendant’s
Interrogatories. See Quebe, 2017 WL 279539, at *19 (because of defendants’
“inherent understanding of their own projects and [p]laintiff’s reasonable lack
thereof,” placing burden on Plaintiffs as the responding party of identification of
“specific aspects of the [claimed R&D] projects does not outweigh the benefits of
the requested information”). Thus, if as Plaintiffs assert, Dkt. 115 at 2, “Plaintiff[ ]
provided by bates number documents which support the response to Interrogatory
No. 10,” it is not unreasonable to place the burden on Plaintiffs, not Defendant, to
cull out the precise information from Plaintiffs’ records responsive to Interrogatory
No. 10. Significantly, Plaintiffs make no representation that all of the employees
Plaintiffs listed as having been employed in qualified R&D work during the taxable
years at issue, see Dkt. 119-4, include all of Plaintiffs’ employees Plaintiffs listed,
Dkt. 115-3, as having performed such work on each of the projects.
Interrogatory No. 11 requested Plaintiffs to identify for each employee
described in response to Interrogatory No. 10 the specific activities each employee
performed for each project which Plaintiffs contend constitute qualified services, the
date performed, and the amount of employee time incurred together with related
expenses. In response, Plaintiffs stated no records were maintained from which
Plaintiffs could respond as to the dates and time such services were performed, see
Dkt. 95-4 at 19, and, with regard to the requested description of qualified services,
Plaintiffs referred Defendant to Plaintiffs’ responses to Interrogatory No. 8
(“Plaintiffs’ Interrogatory No. 8 responses”). Id. In Interrogatory No. 8, Defendant
17
requested Plaintiffs describe the experiment Plaintiffs claim to have conducted with
respect to the projects, identification of Plaintiffs’ employees who worked on the
alleged experiment, the work such employees performed in connection with the
experiment, the time each employee spent on the experiment and the uncertainty
which the experiment was intended to eliminate. As discussed, a “process of
experimentation” is a prerequisite to a taxpayer’s assertion of qualified services
which support a research tax credit. See, supra, at 5 (quoting § 41(d)(1)(3)); 5
(quoting 26 C.F.R. § 1.41-4(a)(5)(i)). However, as an inspection of Plaintiffs’
responses to Interrogatory No. 8 demonstrates, Plaintiffs’ Interrogatory No. 8
responses do not fairly provide a description of qualified services with specific
reference to the required “process of experimentation” element Plaintiffs assert
were performed for each of the 12 projects. For example, as to Project 003698 –
Cambrex – RI/FS Maybrook Superfund – Cambrex Corporation, Plaintiffs explain
Plaintiffs were tasked with determining the nature and extent of the release or
threatened release of hazardous substances, pollutants or contaminants for the
client’s site, particularly “pyridine-based compounds” and with “identifying and
evaluating alternatives” for appropriate remediation. Dkt. 95-8 at 4. While Plaintiffs’
description includes references to the use of “geology, hydrogeology, and
chemistry,” id., absent is any explanatory material relating to technological
uncertainties, as defined by 26 C.F.R. § 1.174-2(a)(1), which confronted Plaintiffs at
the outset, see 26 C.F.R. § 1.41-4(a)(5)(i), the nature of any technological
experimentation in which Plaintiffs’ employees engaged while performing work on
this project, or how such experimentation could be used to create or improve one of
18
Plaintiffs’ business components, that is a “product, process, computer software,
technique, formula or invention for sale, license or lease” as required by §
41(d)(2)(B). In short, Plaintiffs’ description is devoid of information indicative of
activity directed to developing a new or improved business component through
scientific research or technologic discovery using a process of experimentation. As
such, Plaintiffs fail to provide reasonably detailed information concerning the nature
and scope of this project responsive to Defendant’s Interrogatory No. 11.
Another example of Plaintiffs’ deficient responses is found in Plaintiffs’
description of Plaintiffs’ work in regard to project 12902—MSI Ashtabula—Miller
Springs Remediation. Dkt. 95-8 at 5-6. Here, Plaintiffs explain Plaintiffs were
contracted to address the client’s problem of migrating contaminated ground water
from the client’s facility. Id. Plaintiffs also referenced the requirement of
determining the “effectiveness of the barrier wall for ground water control and . . . an
investigation of the potential for off-site migration.” Id. How any of these
responsibilities constituted technological experimentation directed to developing
new or improved products or processes, or addressed real technical uncertainty for
Plaintiffs, is not explained. For example, Plaintiffs do not assert the use of a “barrier
wall” to control ground water migration was a previously unknown remedy or that its
effectiveness at the client’s site required experimentation. A fair reading of the
balance of Plaintiffs’ responses indicates similar deficiencies and given Plaintiffs’
presumably superior understanding of Plaintiffs’ projects it is not unreasonable to
require Plaintiffs to respond with greater particularization. See Quebe, 2017 WL
279539, at *19 (granting plaintiff’s motion to compel more specific responses to
19
plaintiff’s interrogatory requesting defendants to identify with specificity defendants’
asserted business component and uncertainties confronting defendants concerning
development or improvement to defendants’ business component which support
defendants’ claim for § 41 research tax credit). In short, nothing in Plaintiffs’
responses to Interrogatory No. 11 bespeaks the development by Plaintiffs through
scientific research and experimentation anything technologically new or innovative
in connection with either of the two projects, at least as presently described by
Plaintiffs in response to this interrogatory. Accordingly, Plaintiffs’ responses to
Defendant’s Interrogatory No. 11 are insufficient and required Defendant’s motion
with respect to this Interrogatory should be granted. The remainder of Plaintiffs’
initial responses to Interrogatory No. 11 are also deficient for similar reasons.
Although in Plaintiffs’ Third Amended Objections and Responses to
Defendant’s Interrogatory No. 8, served March 27, 2018, see Dkt. 115-1 at 2, after
Defendant’s motion, Plaintiffs stated that Plaintiffs had provided to Defendant a
“further answer for each of the claimed projects,” Dkt. 115-1 at 4, a comparison of
such “further information” with Plaintiffs’ original responses fail to indicate any new
information is provided. As with Plaintiffs’ initial responses to Interrogatory No. 11
which referred Defendant to Plaintiffs’ responses to Interrogatory No. 8 requesting
Plaintiffs identify specifically the experiment Plaintiffs performed for each project
and the uncertainty Plaintiffs work encountered, a fair reading of Plaintiffs’ Third
Amended responses fails to indicate any activity by Plaintiffs aimed at the discovery
of a new or improved product, process or technique through a process of
experimentation that could be reasonably responsive to Interrogatory No. 11. In
20
Plaintiffs’ Third Amended response, “in further answer” to Interrogatory No. 8, Dkt.
99-5 at 21, Plaintiffs also rely on documents produced for the projects at CRA 4164CRA 459104, comprising (based on Plaintiffs’ Bates numbering) a total of 454,940
pages of documents stating that these documents “reflect[ ] the work done on each
project, employees who did the work, technical challenges and issues which
created uncertainties, and the process used to resolve technical issues and
challenges . . ..” As discussed, supra, at 14-15, Defendant should not be burdened
with a review of such an enormous number of documents in order to understand the
basis of Plaintiffs’ claim; rather, it was Plaintiffs’ obligation to do so.
Plaintiffs’ answers to Defendant’s Interrogatory No. 11 also relied on
Plaintiffs’ answers to Defendant’s Interrogatory No. 8 of Defendant’s Third Set of
Interrogatories served November 17, 2017. See Dkt. 95-4 at 3 (referencing Dkt. 996 (1-19)). However, based on the court’s review, these answers also fail to specify
the nature of Plaintiffs’ alleged qualified services for each project that could
conceivably respond to Interrogatory No. 11. For example, Plaintiffs’ description of
its activities regarding Project No. 17177—REALM—Tonowanda [sic], Plaintiffs’
amended response, Dkt. 99-6 at 18, described Plaintiffs’ development of “a new
process of remediation” for one of the client’s old structures at the site including
removal of underground petroleum storage tanks, taking of post-removal soil
samples which employed the use of a “PCB Immunoassay Kit” that was, according
to Plaintiffs, “new to the industry at the time.” Plaintiffs also state Plaintiffs’ work
“involved the innovative use of a statistical method for sampling and determination
of hotspots.” However, no explanation of why or how the technological or scientific
21
nature of Plaintiffs’ “new process of remediation” is in fact “new” is provided nor do
Plaintiffs explain that, assuming its newness, the PCB Immunoassay Kit was even
developed by Plaintiffs, or that the alleged innovative use of a statistical sampling
method represents a new technique discovered through experimentation by
Plaintiffs in working on this project. Plaintiffs’ amended response based on this
project for Interrogatory No. 11 is therefore also insufficient.
With respect to Project 003698—Cambrex—RI/FS Maybrook Superfund—
Cambrex Corporation, Plaintiffs’ amended response, Dkt. 99-6 at 15, see
Discussion, supra, at 8, 17, Plaintiffs assert that Plaintiffs “[e]valuated and
recommended a newly developed process of remediation” of the “pyridine-based”
chemicals located at the client’s site. Dkt. 99-6 at 15. Plaintiffs also stated that
Plaintiffs encountered uncertainty as to “the performance of the Monitored Natural
Attenuation (MNA) process for groundwater” contamination; as such, the MNA
process “was a relatively new approach and the pyridine-based compounds were
unique to the site.” Id. Plaintiffs’ amended response is, however, inadequate on its
face as regardless of the asserted uniqueness for remediation purposes of the
presence of the pyridine compounds located at the site, and the uncertainty of how
the MNA would perform, there is no way to determine, based on Plaintiffs’ amended
response, whether the “newly developed [MNA] process” was one created by
Plaintiffs or another entity based on Plaintiffs’ work on this project, from technologic
or scientific knowledge, or that an experiment involving research was performed by
Plaintiffs in its development. As such, Plaintiffs’ reliance on this amended response
to Interrogatory No. 11 is insufficient.
22
Project 12902—MSI Ashtabula—Miller Springs Remediation, indicates
Plaintiffs’ encountered the need to address the particular vapor exposure
assessment problem based on the client’s manufacture of “specialty chemicals” at
the site, Dkt. 99-6 at 10, which, according to Plaintiffs, required Plaintiffs “utilize a
novel approach” which [Plaintiffs] had not previously used. However, Plaintiffs’
amended response to Interrogatory No. 8 with respect to this project fails to state
why, from a technical or scientific perspective, such approach was “novel” and
whether such alleged novelty had in fact been developed by Plaintiffs through a
process of experimentation in connection with this project. Nothing describing or
even implying a process of experimentation directed to an analysis of any
uncertainty or alternatives with respect to Plaintiffs’ resolution of the vapor
assessment phase of Plaintiffs’ work on this project is provided in Plaintiffs’
amended response. Thus, Plaintiffs’ amended response regarding this project is
non-responsive to Interrogatory No. 11 seeking reasonable particularization of
Plaintiffs’ alleged qualified services for this project.
Plaintiffs’ amended response for Project 17358-ENCORE-GMPT Willow Run,
Dkt. 99-6 at 14, is also deficient in this regard. While it describes the difficulties
Plaintiffs encountered in recommending a remediation plan for the oil laden ground
at the site, including the potential use of “multiphase vacuum extraction technology”
or a “permeable reactive barrier technology,” there is no indication that Plaintiffs
were engaged in the development or evaluation of either of these remediation
technologies as potential remedies or even that they were in fact new or improved
processes of a technologic or scientific nature available to Plaintiffs’ industry. For
23
all that Plaintiffs’ description reveals, Plaintiffs utilized existing processes to perform
Plaintiffs’ work on this project. Plaintiffs’ amended disclosure therefore is an
insufficient response to Interrogatory No. 11.
In Plaintiffs’ description of Project 31756—General Dynamics—Crab
Orchard, Dkt. 99-6 at 13, Plaintiffs assert that Plaintiffs developed a “new process of
remediation of soil and groundwater” at an ammunition storage facility. Dkt. 99-6 at
13. While Plaintiffs also asserted that in connection with this new remediation
process Plaintiffs’ developed “a new process of electronically recorded sample
collection data in the field during [Plaintiffs’] investigations” of the site, Plaintiffs
provided no explanation of why or how such alleged developments represent new
technology or a scientific discovery based on any form of experimentation.
Accordingly, as stated, this amended response is also an inadequate response to
Interrogatory No. 11.
Plaintiffs’ amended response regarding Project 31217—Crompton—Powder
Tech Lab Closures—Texas is similarly deficient for the simple reason that although
Plaintiffs assert that in this project Plaintiffs engaged in developing “relatively new
methodologies for remediation of soil and groundwater” at the site, Plaintiffs’
interesting descriptions of the actions taken by Plaintiffs fail to describe how or why
from a technological or scientific point of view any of the activities in which Plaintiffs
engaged on this project represent a new or improved process or methodology. For
example, although Plaintiffs assert Plaintiffs’ chemists “worked with an outside lab
to develop analytical methods that were acceptable to the [relevant] regulatory
agency,” Plaintiffs fail to indicate what, if any, of this activity involved new results of
24
a technologic or scientific nature, nor the nature of any experiment conducted by
Plaintiffs in developing the new methodology. Moreover, Plaintiffs fail to explain,
even assuming a “new analytical method[ ]” resulted, that such method was
Plaintiffs’ work product and not that of the stated “outside lab.” Plaintiffs’ amended
response as a response to Interrogatory No. 11 is thus deficient on its face.
Another example of Plaintiffs’ deficient responses to Interrogatory No. 11 is
Plaintiffs’ amended response based on its work on Project 19128—KS Bearings—
Masco Corporation. See Dkt. 99-6 at 9. Here, Plaintiffs assert their work included
“[d]evelopment of new process of source and migration pathway determinations . . .
to determine the source and contaminant migration in groundwater,” id., in order to
refute assertions of the source of such contamination. Id. Although Plaintiffs claim
there was “uncertainty” as to the “best method of source determination,” id., and
that Plaintiffs provided a report “convincingly refuting the alleged source of
contamination,” id., nowhere in Plaintiffs’ amended response is there any attempt by
Plaintiffs to explain why, from a technological or scientific view, the “process”
allegedly used by Plaintiffs on the project was “new,” or that its development
resulted from experimentation or research of a scientific or technical nature actually
conducted by Plaintiffs. Nor, relevantly, does the amended response include the
identity of Plaintiff’s employees who performed the services described. For this
reason, Plaintiffs’ response, based on this project, to Interrogatory No. 11 is
deficient.
Similarly, as to Project 52778—NASA—Kennedy Space Center, Dkt. 99-6 at
12, Plaintiffs’ amended response indicates Plaintiffs experienced uncertainties
25
whether to use a natural attenuation remedy and “conducted a three-dimensional
numerical groundwater flow and contaminant fate/transport modeling” to evaluate
the alternative remedies. However, as with Plaintiffs’ other amended responses,
these descriptions do not include any indicators that Plaintiffs engaged in any
scientific or technologic based research to develop or discover such remedies or
modeling10 as new or improved products, processes or techniques for use in
Plaintiffs’ remediation consulting business. Rather, Plaintiffs’ description of
Plaintiffs’ site investigation, taking of samples, three-dimensional numerical
modeling, and systematic testing of alternative remedy designs denotes the use of
standard remediation consulting procedures not involving any experimental activity
of a research nature by Plaintiffs or even Plaintiffs’ development of new technology
for evaluating potential remediation schemes. As such, it is deficient.
Plaintiffs’ Project 19069—G&H Landfill Year 2 O&M—G&H Landfill Site PRP
Group, Dkt. 99-6 at 17, involved Plaintiffs in remediation of contaminants in the
client’s landfill and especially the cleanup of affected groundwater. According to
Plaintiffs’ amended response, Plaintiffs considered various optional remediation
systems to address the issue including the use of a “geosynthetic clay lines . . . for
the landfill cap,” but nothing in Plaintiffs’ description of its activities on the project
indicates Plaintiffs actually developed any new process or products through
experimentation involving research based on technology or science including
10
Although the use of “modeling” may constitute a form of experimentation required for determining
that qualified services were performed, see, supra, at 5 (referencing 26 C.F.R. § 1.41-4(a)(5)(i)),
whether the particular form of modeling utilized by Plaintiffs in this project establishes that all of
Plaintiffs’ services on this project constituted qualified services is not definitively shown based on the
information provided.
26
“geosynthetic clay lines” and the use thereof for the site. As such, Plaintiffs’
amended response fails to provide Defendant any information regarding Plaintiffs’
performance of any qualified services particularly involving a process of
experimentation as to this project, and, therefore Plaintiffs’ amended response is
inadequate as an answer to Interrogatory No. 11.
As to Project 17365—Encore—GM Commercial Program, Dkt. 99-6 at 16,
Plaintiffs’ amended response explains this project was “highly challenging” to
Plaintiffs involving “innovative approaches to reduce costs and remediation time.”
Plaintiffs also engaged in the “investigation and a systematic process of evaluating
different approaches.” As is obvious from a full reading of Plaintiffs’ amended
response, however, concerning this project, nothing in Plaintiffs’ description of
Plaintiffs’ work on this project explains the reasons why such “approaches” were
“innovative” or whether such “approaches” involved some form of technology or
science that Plaintiffs had newly developed or discovered through some form of
experimentation in the course of Plaintiffs’ work on the project. Accordingly, this
amended response also fails to fairly respond to Interrogatory No. 11.
Plaintiffs’ amended response to Project 30257—GM Tonowanda [sic]
Loading Eval., Dkt. 99-6 at 18, describes Plaintiffs’ work at another GM facility to
remediate sanitary and storm sewers that contain PCB. In Plaintiffs’ amended
response, Plaintiffs claim Plaintiffs developed “a new process of remediation” of the
sewer systems but provide no explanation of why such processes should be
considered as technologically new. Although Plaintiffs advert to a “PCB
encapsulation method,” Dkt. 99-6 at 19, Plaintiffs do not state Plaintiffs’
27
development of this method was the result of scientific research involving a process
of experimentation performed by Plaintiffs on this project. Plaintiffs reference to
“storm water modeling at the site” and that Plaintiffs employed a “mass loading
calculation” does not assert these techniques were new in a technological sense,
involve an experimental evaluation of alternative remedies, nor that they were even
developed by Plaintiffs in connection with Plaintiffs’ work on the project. As such,
the amended response fails to reasonably respond to Defendant’s Interrogatory No.
11 which requests Plaintiffs identify any qualified services including experimentation
performed with respect to this and the other projects in the sample.11
Nor can Plaintiffs avoid Plaintiffs’ responsibility to respond more fully to
Defendant’s Interrogatories Nos. 10 and 11 by asserting Plaintiffs may estimate,
under the so-called Cohan line of cases, the amounts of time in which Plaintiffs’
employees were actually engaged in qualified research while working on the 12
projects, as Defendant contends, Dkt. 117 (passim). See Dkt. 115 at 3. Plaintiffs’
reliance on the Cohan rule requests an overly broad application of the rule and, as
such, Plaintiffs’ contention that Plaintiffs may rely on estimates of the time its
employees spent in research activities in responding to Defendant’s interrogatories,
requesting the specifics of the qualified services performed and which of Plaintiffs’
employees performed them, is mistaken. First, the holding in the Cohan case,
Cohan v. Comm’r, 39 F.2d 540 (2d Cir. 1930), involving a dispute regarding the
famous entertainer and impresario George M. Cohan’s business expense
deductions, allowed the taxpayer to estimate the amount of such expenses but
11
Plaintiffs’ additional responsive material related to only 11 of the 12 sample projects.
28
permitted the Tax Court on remand in arriving at an estimate of the expenses to
“‘bear[ ] heavily if it chooses on the taxpayer whose inexactitude is of his own
making.’” Rodman v. Comm’r, 542 F.2d 845, 853 (2d Cir. 1975) (quoting Cohan, 39
F.2d at 544). As relevant, the Second Circuit pointed out that in Cohan there was
no serious question the alleged expenses were incurred and that the dispute was
over the exact amount of these expenses because the taxpayer failed to keep
sufficient records of such expenses. Rodman, 542 F.2d at 853. However, the
Second Circuit in Rodman, in affirming the Tax Court’s denial of the taxpayer’s
asserted claim for a deduction in that case, also stated that under the Cohan rule,
“courts have consistently held that at least the existence of an expense must be
proved before any deduction can be taken.” Id. at 854. See also Shami, 741 F.3d
at 568-69 (refusing to allow plaintiffs’ estimates of time allegedly spent in performing
qualified research services to support tax credits under § 41); Lerch v. Comm’r, 877
F.2d 624, 628-29 (7th Cir. 1989) (refusing to extend Cohan rule where
“unsubstantiated deductions are of a sort for which the taxpayer could have and
should have maintained the necessary records”); Akers v. Comm’r, 326 Fed.Appx.
593, 595-96 (2d Cir. 2009) (citing Rodman, 542 F.2d at, 853). Accordingly, the
Cohan rule does not permit Plaintiffs to estimate the amount of time employees
allegedly devoted to qualified research activity in connection with the projects in the
absence of evidence that such qualified research activities actually occurred; nor
does it permit Plaintiffs to conflate, as does Plaintiffs’ opposition to Defendant’s
motion, any such estimation with Plaintiffs’ burden to demonstrate that qualified
services underlying Plaintiffs’ estimates of related time, were, in fact, performed in
29
connection with each project. Because Plaintiffs failed to provide Defendant with
specific information to document the actual time Plaintiffs spent in performing
qualified services for each project, Plaintiffs’ responses to Defendant’s
Interrogatories Nos. 10 and 11 based on the Cohan rule are therefore deficient.
Finally, Plaintiffs’ references to documents produced to Defendant to satisfy
Interrogatory No. 11 would require Defendant to cull through over 364,000 pages of
documents referenced by Plaintiffs to attempt to glean a satisfactory answer.12 This
also represents an improper document dump and is an additional ground to require
Plaintiffs to provide complete answers in accordance with Plaintiffs’ burden. For
example, although Plaintiffs insist that the identity of Plaintiffs’ employees who
performed qualified services on each of the 12 projects based on a comparison of
Dkt. 115-3 and Dkt. 115-4, according to Defendant such a comparison yields only
five identifiable employees who performed 216 hours of such work on just one such
project, 3698, the Cambrex – RI/FS Maybrook Superfund project, despite Plaintiffs’
assertion that 86 employees performed 3,823.75 hours of work between June 2001
and December 2002 on the project, in contrast to what is represented in Plaintiffs’
Exhibit 4, Dkt. 115-4. See Dkt. 100 at 4-5. Significantly, Plaintiffs do not respond to
Defendant’s contention. See Dkt. 115 (passim). Moreover, Plaintiffs’ putative
inability to identify Plaintiffs’ employees who allegedly worked on the projects may
be subject to doubt in view of Plaintiffs’ familiarity with the project documents, which
according to Plaintiffs, “reflect[s] [the] . . . employees who did the work [on the
projects].” See Dkt. 99-3 at 21 (Plaintiffs’ Third Amended Responses). As noted,
12
This figure excludes 454,940 additional pages if Plaintiffs’ project documents, CRA 4164 – CRA
459104, are considered.
30
supra, at 6, Plaintiffs do not contest Defendant’s Interrogatories Nos. 10 and 11
request relevant information and that without sufficiently specific responses
Defendant will be hampered in Defendant’s ability to conduct fact depositions of
Plaintiffs’ employees or other witnesses to further test whether any of Plaintiffs’ work
on the projects involved qualified services and the related time Plaintiffs’ employees
were actually engaged in such services. Nor do Plaintiffs dispute Plaintiffs bear the
burden of establishing Plaintiffs’ entitlement to § 41 tax credit as the basis for
Plaintiffs’ claim.
In short, Defendant is entitled to factually based straightforward answers to
Defendant’s Interrogatories without being burdened with the need to scrutinize
thousands of pages of Plaintiffs’ documents in a potentially futile effort to obtain
such important information. Unless greater specificity in Plaintiffs’ descriptions of
Plaintiffs’ work and employee qualified research service time on the 12 sample
projects as alleged by Plaintiffs is provided by Plaintiffs, as the court in Quebe
stated, Defendant will be “prejudice[d]” by forcing . . . [Defendant] to prepare for . . .
depositions without essential information . . . [a]nd, if discovery ends without finality
in the specific employees’ work activities, business components, and uncertainties
[Plaintiffs] must identify, summary judgment or trial by ambush could well emerge
further prejudicing . . . [Defendant] and further impeding a just, speedy, and
inexpensive administration of this case.” Quebe, 321 F.R.D. at 311-12.
31
CONCLUSION
Based on the foregoing, Defendant’s motion (Dkt. 95) is GRANTED.
Plaintiffs shall provide satisfactory responses to Defendant’s Fourth Set
Interrogatories Nos. 10 and 11 within 30 days.
SO ORDERED.
/s/ Leslie G. Foschio
________________________________
LESLIE G. FOSCHIO
UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE
Dated: August 22, 2018
Buffalo, New York
32
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