Altera Decision Now Ripe for Appeal

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December 2, 2015

We reported earlier on the Tax Court’s important decision in Altera, which invalidated a transfer-pricing regulation for failure to satisfy the “reasoned decisionmaking” standard for rulemaking under the Administrative Procedure Act.  At the time, there were outstanding issues that prevented the Tax Court from entering a final decision.  The parties have now submitted agreed-upon computations, and on December 1 the Tax Court entered a final decision.  The government has 90 days to file a notice of appeal from that decision.

As we noted previously, the government will be motivated to appeal this decision both because of its specific impact on the regulation of cost-sharing agreements and, more broadly, because it could open the door to APA challenges to other regulations, including but not limited to other transfer pricing rules.  On the other hand, the government could make a judgment that this particular case is not an ideal vehicle for litigating the broader APA issue, in part because an appeal would go to the Ninth Circuit where the Xilinx precedent on cost-sharing is on the books (see here for a report on Xilinx).  It might then make the tactical choice to forego appeal in this case and await a stronger setting in which to litigate the APA issue for the first time in an appellate court.  The Department of Justice will be weighing these competing considerations, and its conclusion should be evident when the 90-day period expires next March.