IL Tool Works Inc v. CIR ( 2004 )


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  •                            In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________
    No. 02-1239
    ILLINOIS TOOL WORKS INC. and subsidiaries,
    Petitioner-Appellant,
    v.
    COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE,
    Respondent-Appellee.
    ____________
    Appeal from the United States Tax Court.
    No. 16022-99—Mary Ann Cohen, Judge.
    ____________
    ARGUED SEPTEMBER 12, 2003—DECIDED JANUARY 21, 2004
    ____________
    Before BAUER, KANNE, and EVANS, Circuit Judges.
    KANNE, Circuit Judge. Illinois Tool Works Inc. and
    its subsidiaries (“ITW”) appeal from the tax court’s determi-
    nation that $6,956,590 of a more than $17 million court
    judgment paid by ITW should be capitalized as a cost of
    acquiring certain assets of the DeVilbiss Co. rather than
    deducted as an ordinary business expense. The judgment at
    issue was the result of a jury verdict in a patent infringe-
    ment suit filed against DeVilbiss’s former owner, Champion
    Spark Plug, Inc. ITW assumed the pending lawsuit, and its
    defense, upon its acquisition of DeVilbiss in 1990. ITW
    2                                                 No. 02-1239
    acknowledges that at least a portion of the judgment should
    be capitalized as a cost of acquisition, but disputes the
    amount. We agree with the determination of the tax court
    and affirm.
    I. History
    The facts are not in dispute. DeVilbiss was a division of
    Champion in the 1970s. In 1975, Jerome H. Lemelson, an
    inventor and engineer, wrote DeVilbiss and offered to
    license it certain of his patents, including the “ ‘431 patent.”
    DeVilbiss, fatefully, did not take Lemelson up on the offer.
    Instead, in 1978, DeVilbiss acquired a license from a
    Norwegian company named Trallfa to sell its computer-
    controlled paint-spray robots. Attorneys for Lemelson
    contacted DeVilbiss in 1979, notifying it that certain of
    its products in the robot and manipulator field might be
    infringing on Lemelson’s patents, including the ‘431 patent.
    DeVilbiss’s director of robotic operations replied, summarily
    denying any infringement. Thereafter, in 1980, DeVilbiss
    and Trallfa entered a new license agreement whereby
    DeVilbiss gained the right to manufacture, as well as to
    sell, Trallfa robots.
    The first of two relevant patent infringement suits
    brought by Lemelson followed in 1981. Lemelson launched
    that suit in the U.S. Court of Claims (“Court of Claims
    lawsuit”) against the United States, alleging that its
    purchase and use of certain robots, including the Trallfa
    robot, infringed his patents. Champion, owner of DeVilbiss,
    entered as a third-party defendant. The government
    ultimately settled that suit for $5000 and sought indemnifi-
    cation from Champion. Notably, the presiding judge in that
    action told the parties prior to settlement that based on his
    view of the merits, Lemelson was unlikely to succeed.
    No. 02-1239                                                  3
    Lemelson filed the second patent infringement suit in
    1985 against Champion directly (“Lemelson lawsuit”), al-
    leging as he had before that the Trallfa robot infringed on
    several of his patents, including the ‘431 patent. He sought
    damages relating to the sale of Trallfa robots prior to 1986.
    That case was stayed shortly after filing, pending the res-
    olution of the 1981 Court of Claims lawsuit.
    DeVilbiss retained counsel to represent it in the Lemelson
    lawsuit. That attorney, Mark C. Schaffer, specialized in
    intellectual property law. In his estimation the case was
    meritless, and he communicated the same to DeVilbiss.
    Larry Becker, division counsel and secretary of DeVilbiss at
    the time the Lemelson lawsuit was filed, also evaluated the
    case and came to the same conclusion. But, he set a range
    of exposure between $25,000 and $500,000 for internal
    purposes. In 1989, before ITW purchased DeVilbiss,
    Lemelson offered to settle for $500,000. DeVilbiss rejected
    the offer, countering with $25,000. Although not clear from
    the record, settlement discussions apparently stalled, and,
    in any event, no settlement was reached at that time.
    ITW acquired DeVilbiss in 1990.1 In the purchase agree-
    ment, ITW agreed to assume certain liabilities of the seller,
    which included the pending Lemelson lawsuit. ITW became
    aware of the Lemelson lawsuit prior to closing, during the
    due diligence phase of the sale, which ITW conducted over
    a ten-to-fourteen-day period. As part of the due diligence
    review, DeVilbiss disclosed all of its pending litigation,
    including the Lemelson lawsuit. Although the damages
    claimed by Lemelson were described as “open” on the
    schedule provided to ITW, Becker reiterated his opinion
    1
    Prior to ITW’s purchase of DeVilbiss, Champion had sold it to
    Eagle Industries, who then sold it to ITW. The Lemelson lawsuit
    was pending throughout these transactions.
    4                                                No. 02-1239
    that the lawsuit was meritless. ITW representatives,
    including its director of audits, vice president of patents and
    technology, and group technology counsel (the latter two
    patent attorneys), reviewed the Lemelson case and agreed
    with Becker. They ascribed a 98-to-99 percent chance of
    prevailing at trial, with a worst case scenario exposure of $1
    million to $3 million. They also negotiated a $350,000 cash
    reserve to cover the attorneys’ fees expected to be incurred
    in defending the suit. Except for the accountants, Arthur
    Andersen, and Schaffer, the outside counsel retained by
    DeVilbiss, the record reveals no other outside analysts
    brought in to examine the risk represented by the Lemelson
    lawsuit.
    As a result of ITW’s due diligence findings, the agreed
    purchase price for DeVilbiss was lowered from $126.5
    million to $125.5 million. The Lemelson lawsuit was not a
    factor in this decision.
    After the deal closed, the Lemelson lawsuit was reopened,
    and ITW assumed the defense as the real party in interest,
    although Champion remained named in the caption. ITW
    continued to employ Schaffer, the outside counsel initially
    hired by DeVilbiss, to represent it. At various points prior
    to and during trial, Lemelson offered to settle the case. The
    last offer, for more than $1 million, came after most of the
    evidence had been heard and at the urging of the trial
    court. ITW rejected the settlement offer and did not coun-
    ter.
    In January 1991, a jury returned a verdict in favor of
    Lemelson. It awarded $4,647,905 for patent infringement
    and $6,295,167 in prejudgment interest. The district court
    doubled the patent infringement award because the jury
    found that not only had the ‘431 patent been infringed, it
    had been willfully infringed. The willfulness finding was
    based in part on Champion’s failure to secure an authorita-
    tive opinion on whether the Trallfa robot infringed the ‘431
    No. 02-1239                                                       5
    patent until two months before trial. ITW was, to say the
    least, stunned by the $15,590,977 verdict.
    ITW appealed and lost. It finally paid the judgment in
    1992, which, with accumulated interest, totaled
    $17,067,339. On its 1992 tax return, it capitalized
    $1 million of the judgment as a cost of acquiring DeVilbiss
    and deducted the remaining $16 million as an ordinary
    business expense. The reason for the bifurcation, as ex-
    plained in ITW’s Form 8275-R Disclosure Statement that
    accompanied its 1992 return, was that since it could have
    settled the Lemelson lawsuit for $1 million, the remaining
    $16 million liability resulted from the post-acquisition
    business decision to reject the settlement offer and chance
    it in court. In essence, ITW contended that its gamble on a
    jury trial caused it to incur significant additional expendi-
    tures over $1 million (the perceived worth of the lawsuit
    based on the last settlement offer)—not the acquisition of
    DeVilbiss and its contingent liability in the form of the
    Lemelson suit. As such, ITW reasoned that the amount of
    the judgment attributable to its bad decisions should be
    deducted as an ordinary business expense rather than
    capitalized as a cost of acquisition. The Commissioner of
    Internal Revenue and the tax court rejected this novel mea
    culpa argument and so do we.2
    II. Analysis
    This case revolves around the difference between cap-
    ital and ordinary business expenses as expressed in the
    2
    Only $6,956,590 of the $17 million judgment is at issue on
    appeal because (a) ITW capitalized $1 million in its tax return; (b)
    the Commissioner conceded an allowance of $2,154,160 for post-
    acquisition interest and expenses; and (c) the Commissioner
    conceded a reduction of $6,956,589 due to the sale of certain
    DeVilbiss assets acquired in the 1990 purchase.
    6                                                No. 02-1239
    Internal Revenue Code. The Code allows the immediate
    deduction of “all ordinary and necessary expenses paid or
    incurred during the taxable year in carrying on any trade
    or business.” 16 U.S.C. § 162(a); INDOPCO v. Commis-
    sioner, 
    503 U.S. 79
    , 83 (1992). The opposite is true of capital
    expenses, which the Code defines as “an amount paid out
    for new buildings or for permanent improvements or
    betterments made to increase the value of any property or
    estate.” 26 U.S.C. § 263(a)(1); 
    INDOPCO, 503 U.S. at 83
    .
    Ordinary business expenses, then, are generally incurred to
    meet a taxpayer’s immediate or current business needs
    within the present taxable year. See 
    id. at 85.
    Capital
    expenses are generally incurred for the taxpayer’s future
    benefit. 
    Id. at 90
    (noting that generally an expense is
    characterized as capital when “the purpose for which the
    expenditure is made has to do with the corporation’s
    operations and betterment . . . for the duration of its
    existence or for the indefinite future or for a time somewhat
    longer than the current taxable year.” (quotations omitted)).
    The practical result of labeling an expense “ordinary” or
    “capital” is that generally a taxpayer can take an imme-
    diate, full deduction for ordinary business expenses and
    realize an immediate corresponding reduction in taxable
    income, while capital expenses generally result in smaller
    yearly deductions over time through amortization and de-
    preciation. As summarized by the Supreme Court:
    The primary effect of characterizing a payment as
    either a business expense or a capital expenditure con-
    cerns the timing of the taxpayer’s cost recovery: While
    business expenses are currently deductible, a capital
    expenditure usually is amortized and depreciated over
    the life of the relevant asset, or, where no specific asset
    or useful life can be ascertained, is deducted upon
    dissolution of the enterprise. See U.S.C. §§ 167(a) and
    336(a); Treas. Reg. § 1.167(a), 26 C.F.R. § 1.167(a).
    Through provisions such as these, the Code endeavors
    No. 02-1239                                                7
    to match expenses with the revenues of the taxable
    period to which they are properly attributable, thereby
    resulting in a more accurate calculation of net income
    for tax purposes.
    
    INDOPCO, 503 U.S. at 83
    -84.
    “Whether a taxpayer is required to capitalize particular
    expenses is a question of law, and our review is therefore de
    novo.” U.S. Freightways Corp. v. Commissioner, 
    270 F.3d 1137
    , 1139 (7th Cir. 2001); see also Wells Fargo & Co. v.
    Commissioner, 
    224 F.3d 874
    , 880 (8th Cir. 2000). We note
    that ITW, who argues that the majority of the Lemelson
    judgment should be labeled ordinary business expenses,
    hence fully and immediately deductible, bears the burden
    of proving entitlement to the claimed deduction. U.S.
    
    Freightways, 270 F.3d at 1145
    . This is because income tax
    deductions are a matter of legislative grace and the excep-
    tion to the norm of capitalization. Id.; 
    INDOPCO, 503 U.S. at 84
    .
    ITW’s burden is particularly heavy because, as recog-
    nized by the tax court, our prior precedent states that there
    is a “well-settled general rule that when an obligation is
    assumed in connection with the purchase of capital assets,
    payments satisfying the obligation are non-deductible
    capital expenditures.” David R. Webb Co., Inc. v. Commis-
    sioner, 
    708 F.2d 1254
    , 1256 (7th Cir. 1983). ITW acknowl-
    edged the force of this rule when it capitalized a portion of
    the Lemelson judgment as attributable to the obligation (in
    the form of the pending lawsuit) assumed upon acquiring
    DeVilbiss.
    Relying on A.E. Staley Mfg. Co. v. Commissioner, 
    119 F.3d 482
    (7th Cir. 1997), though, ITW argues that the tax court
    erred by applying the rule articulated in Webb inflexibly
    and eschewing the pragmatic, “real life” inquiry advanced
    in Staley. Had it approached ITW’s challenge properly, ITW
    8                                                No. 02-1239
    posits, the tax court would have found that except for ITW’s
    mishandling of the lawsuit after acquisition, the value of
    the Lemelson lawsuit would have been “capped” at $1
    million. Thus, anything above $1 million should be attribut-
    able to decisions made in the course of defending the
    litigation and deducted as an ordinary business expense.
    See, e.g., Commissioner v. Tellier, 
    383 U.S. 687
    (1966) (legal
    expenses incurred in defending against securities fraud
    charges deductible under § 162(a)); Commissioner v.
    Heininger, 
    320 U.S. 467
    (1943) (legal expenses incurred in
    disputing adverse postal designation deductible as ordinary
    and necessary business expenses). We find fault with ITW’s
    argument on several levels.
    A. ITW misreads the tax court’s approach to Webb.
    First, the tax court did not apply Webb inflexibly. ITW
    reads the tax court’s opinion to state that “any payment in
    satisfaction of a contingent liability acquired in a capital
    transaction is always a capital expenditure.” (Appellants’
    Opening Br. at 19). We do not read the tax court’s opinion
    so restrictively. Rather, we note the opinion accurately cites
    Webb for the proposition that “[g]enerally, the payment of
    a liability of a preceding owner of property by the person
    acquiring such property, whether or not such liability was
    fixed or contingent at the time such property was acquired,
    is not an ordinary and necessary business expense.” Illinois
    Tool Works, Inc. v. Commissioner, 
    117 T.C. 39
    , 44-45 (2001)
    (emphasis added). The tax court’s language analyzing ITW’s
    case in light of the above general principle does not fore-
    close in every circumstance an outcome different than the
    one reached; rather, it simply notes that ITW’s arguments
    for treating all but $1 million of the judgment as an ordi-
    No. 02-1239                                                      9
    nary business expense are not persuasive in “the present
    case.” 
    Id. at 47.3
    B. Webb controls
    Next, we agree with the tax court that the facts of this
    straightforward case do not dictate a departure from Webb.
    In Webb, the taxpayer acquired a wood veneer company
    that many years ago agreed to pay an employee’s widow,
    Mrs. Grunwald, a lifetime pension of $12,700 
    annually. 708 F.2d at 1255
    . The taxpayer knowingly assumed the liability
    to Mrs. Grunwald as part of the purchase agreement. 
    Id. In tax
    years thereafter it attempted to deduct, as an ordinary
    and necessary business expense, the $12,700 paid to Mrs.
    Grunwald. The Commissioner determined that the $12,700
    was not an ordinary business expense, but a capital one,
    which the tax court upheld. 
    Id. at 1255-56.
      We affirmed, observing that because the taxpayer agreed
    to assume the pension payments as part of its purchase
    agreement for the wood veneer business, the payments were
    more properly attributed to that capital investment, not its
    current business operations. 
    Id. at 1256.
    In essence, the
    agreement to pay the debt to the widow served as part of
    the purchase price for the business. 
    Id. (“Assumption of
    the
    obligation to make pension payments to Mrs. Grunwald was
    in theory and in fact, part of the cost of acquiring the assets
    of the wood veneer business from the taxpayer’s predeces-
    sor.”) Because the purchase of the wood veneer business
    was meant to enhance the taxpayer’s operations into the
    future, the expenses to acquire it—which included the
    discharge of the annual debt to Mrs. Grunwald—had to be
    3
    ITW argued for deductibility on several different grounds before
    the tax court, abandoning all but its reliance on Staley on appeal.
    10                                              No. 02-1239
    capitalized. 
    Id. (stating that
    generally “when an obligation
    is assumed in connection with the purchase of capital
    assets, payments satisfying the obligation are non-deduct-
    ible capital expenditures”).
    Similarly, ITW knowingly assumed the Lemelson lawsuit
    as part of the purchase agreement for the DeVilbiss assets.
    Because ITW agreed to pay that contingent liability in
    exchange for DeVilbiss, that contingent liability formed part
    of the purchase price. Because the DeVilbiss acquisition
    was meant to benefit ITW into the future, the expenses to
    acquire it—including the Lemelson lawsuit, once assigned
    a value through the judgment—must be capitalized.
    ITW attempts to distinguish Webb based on the parties’
    expectation of the ultimate value of the Lemelson lawsuit
    and on ITW’s alleged ability, post-acquisition, to negatively
    impact the liability amount. In Webb, the acquiring com-
    pany knew that it owed an annual liability of $12,700 and
    that it would end when Mrs. Grunwald passed. Therefore,
    ITW argues, the parties in Webb had a complete under-
    standing of the scope of the contingent liability at stake in
    the deal, unlike in the case before us where the parties to
    the transaction failed to grasp the risk represented by the
    Lemelson lawsuit. ITW also urges that since the taxpayer
    in Webb could do nothing to affect the amount of the lia-
    bility, unlike here where the failure to accept a settlement
    offer increased the debt exponentially, Webb should be
    ignored.
    ITW’s attempts to distance itself from Webb are unavail-
    ing. ITW agreed to assume the Lemelson defense and pay
    any judgment, whatever it may be. Although we have no
    doubt the parties earnestly believed the case was meritless,
    ITW cannot dispute that it acknowledged some risk, albeit
    minimal, and did not take steps to mitigate that risk. It
    could have lowered the purchase price or inserted an
    No. 02-1239                                                11
    indemnification clause in the purchase agreement to recoup
    any losses not anticipated by the parties. That a contingent
    liability, once fixed, exceeded the parties’ expectations does
    not render it any less a part of the purchase price. See
    Pacific Transport Co. v. Commissioner, 
    483 F.2d 209
    , 213
    (9th Cir. 1973) (noting that a taxpayer’s failure to realize
    the substance or amount of a contingent liability assumed
    when acquiring property does not change its tax treat-
    ment—the payment must be capitalized); but see Nahey v.
    Commissioner, 
    196 F.3d 866
    , 870 (7th Cir. 1999) (criticizing
    Pacific Transport in dicta). In this case, protection from an
    aberrant jury verdict needed to be sought during contract
    formation, not after the fact in the form of an immediate tax
    deduction.
    Moreover, ITW’s entire premise that its actions after
    assuming the liability should be examined for the effect it
    had on increasing the amount of the ultimate indebtedness
    strays from the inescapable fact that, like the taxpayer in
    Webb, it accepted the indebtedness in order to acquire what
    it perceived to be a future benefit—DeVilbiss. Part of ITW’s
    process of valuing the DeVilbiss assets and arriving at the
    purchase price included evaluating the Lemelson lawsuit.
    In that due diligence phase, ITW assessed a value to the
    suit based on how it foresaw the litigation unfolding once it
    took control of the defense. Its ability to affect the outcome
    of the Lemelson lawsuit was therefore already factored in.
    That things did not go according to plan, and that, in
    retrospect, it should have paid far less for DeVilbiss to
    account for size of the judgment assigned, does not change
    the tax character of the judgment in this case.
    C. Staley’s Application
    Finally, Staley does not warrant a different outcome, as
    ITW insists. In Staley, this Court reversed the tax court’s
    12                                               No. 02-1239
    determination that fees paid to investment bankers to
    unsuccessfully ward off a hostile takeover had to be cap-
    italized by the defending company, rather than deducted as
    an ordinary business 
    expense. 119 F.3d at 483
    . The
    tax court, in determining that these incidental fees were
    part of the capital transaction ultimately resulting in the
    taxpayer’s hostile acquisition by a corporate raider, pur-
    ported to follow the Supreme Court’s decision in INDOPCO
    v. Commissioner, 
    503 U.S. 79
    (1992). 
    Id. at 485.
    The
    INDOPCO case also involved investment banking fees,
    but in the context of a friendly, as opposed to hostile, take-
    over of National Starch by Unilever. There the Court
    found that the money paid to the investment bankers by
    National Starch was for the purpose of facilitating a favor-
    able merger with Unilever, thus changing the corporate
    structure for the benefit of future operations—a capital
    expense. 
    INDOPCO, 503 U.S. at 88-90
    .
    In disagreeing with the tax court’s application of
    INDOPCO, we found it significant that the majority of
    the fees paid in Staley were for the purpose of defending
    against what the company perceived to be an unfavorable,
    hostile takeover. 
    Staley, 119 F.3d at 491
    . Because defending
    a company against attack is considered a necessary and
    ordinary business expense, designed to benefit current
    operations, 
    id. at 487,
    we remanded the case to the tax
    court. We asked it to allocate the fees paid between those
    activities that were considered in defense of the company,
    an ordinary expense immediately deductible, and those that
    facilitated the ultimate merger, a capital expense meant to
    benefit the company into the future. 
    Id. at 492-493.
      Our analysis in Staley was based on the recognition that
    distinguishing between ordinary expenses and those that
    must be capitalized can sometimes be difficult. 
    Id. at 487
    (“As the Supreme Court has noted, ‘the cases sometimes
    appear difficult to harmonize,’ and ‘each case turns on its
    No. 02-1239                                                     13
    special facts.’ ” (quoting 
    INDOPCO, 503 U.S. at 86
    )). When
    faced with this challenge, we observed that “distinguishing
    between ordinary and capital costs often requires a rather
    pragmatic approach.” 
    Id. Staley was
    such a case, with its
    factual similarities to the INDOPCO decision and turning
    on incidental, rather than direct, costs of an acquisition.
    Therefore, we specifically applied a “pragmatic assessment”
    to the underlying facts in order to decipher whether the fees
    incident to the hostile takeover were for current defense of
    the company or for an ultimate corporate change with
    benefits lasting into the future. See 
    id. at 487-92.
      Our task here is easier than in Staley. The taxpayer
    points us to no decision in conflict with Webb, where pay-
    ments made to satisfy an obligation directly assumed as
    part of a bargained-for acquisition have not been capitalized
    as part of the purchase price of the asset. Regardless,
    applying the pragmatic approach called for in Staley results
    in the same outcome, and is implicit, if not explicit, in the
    tax court’s opinion.4 The record consists of three sets of
    stipulated facts with dozens of attendant exhibits and
    a day-long trial transcript in which ITW presents seven
    witnesses. The tax court’s opinion coalesced that testimony
    4
    We find it curious that ITW would choose to attack Judge Cohen
    for failing to engage in the appropriate open-minded, fact-based
    inquiry advocated in Staley. Judge Cohen, who served as trial
    judge in the Staley case, as well as here, dissented from the tax
    court opinion from which the Staley appeal was taken. A.E. Staley
    Mfg. Co. v. Commissioner, 
    105 T.C. 166
    , 210 (1995) (Cohen, J.,
    dissenting). It was her dissent that this Court cited favorably in
    its ruling reversing the tax court. See 
    Staley, 119 F.3d at 491
    n.8.
    And, in her closing instructions to the parties about their post-
    trial briefs in the present matter, she discusses Staley and its
    possible implications, describing her involvement in that case. (Tr.
    at 214-15.)
    14                                               No. 02-1239
    and documentary evidence into findings of fact, which ITW,
    by its own admission, embraces. From those facts and the
    arguments advanced by the parties, the tax court deduced
    that this was not a case in which the general rule articu-
    lated in Webb would not apply.
    Looking at the facts, we agree. The ultimate goal of the
    pragmatic assessment advanced by Staley is to decode
    whether an expenditure is ordinary or capital in nature.
    Although ITW argues that paying $16 million more than
    the Lemelson lawsuit was allegedly worth could have no
    positive impact on the future of the company, it loses sight
    of the fact that what it got in exchange for its obligation to
    pay the judgment was the DeVilbiss assets. In this way, the
    Lemelson judgment was “ ‘incurred for the purpose of
    changing the corporate structure for the benefit of future
    operations’ ” and must be capitalized. 
    Staley, 119 F.3d at 489
    (quoting 
    INDOPCO, 503 U.S. at 89
    ). As stated by the
    court in United States v. Smith, observing that the sub-
    stance, not the form of the transaction governs when deter-
    mining tax treatment of a settlement paid to a former
    employee:
    If the corporation at its inception assumed a contingent
    obligation to pay [the employee], it is that assumption
    of liability which obligated the corporation and not any
    subsequent legitimate business purpose. In other
    words, the corporation did not have to pay because of
    the unfavorable judgment or because its directors
    deemed payment advisable but rather the corporation
    paid because it assumed the obligation when it became
    incorporated.
    
    418 F.2d 589
    , 596 (5th Cir. 1969); see also 
    Staley, 119 F.3d at 491
    (noting that “the substance of the transaction, not its
    form, is controlling” (citing Clark Oil & Refining Corp. v.
    United States, 
    473 F.2d 1217
    , 1220-21 (7th Cir. 1973)). So
    too here it was not ITW’s failure to accept the settlement
    No. 02-1239                                                 15
    offer that obligated it to pay the jury award, but its assump-
    tion of the lawsuit in order to acquire DeVilbiss.
    If we examine the events post-acquisition, as ITW urges,
    the result is still the same. ITW focuses our attention
    primarily on its missed opportunity to settle the case,
    contending that had it only taken Lemelson up on his final
    $1 million offer, instead of staunchly placing its faith in its
    own valuation of the case, then the liability it acquired
    along with the DeVilbiss assets would not have increased
    exponentially. It states, “[t]hus, a ‘pragmatic,’ ‘real-life’
    assessment of the facts demonstrates that ITW’s decision,
    made in the ordinary course of its business, to reject
    Lemelson’s settlement offers was the proximate cause of the
    amount ultimately owed to Lemelson.” (Appellant’s Opening
    Br. at 32.) Yet, the patent suit claimed damages for infring-
    ing robots sold from 1979 to 1985, years before ITW ac-
    quired DeVilbiss. ITW’s predecessor failed to accept
    Lemelson’s $500,000 settlement offer in 1989. And, as noted
    by the patent trial court in upholding the jury’s finding of
    willfulness: “Defendant’s entire course of conduct from its
    total disregard of Plaintiff’s 1975 letter to its unexplained
    failure to secure an authoritative opinion until two months
    before trial, demonstrates an utter lack of concern over
    Plaintiff’s patent rights.” (Tr. Ex. 19-J ¶ 23.) A pragmatic
    assessment of this case leads to the conclusion that the
    Lemelson lawsuit was mishandled from the outset, arriving
    in ITW’s hands fully formed. ITW’s mistakes and missed
    opportunities had little to do with the ultimate valuation
    placed on the matter by the jury.
    III. Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, the decision of the tax court is
    AFFIRMED.
    16                                        No. 02-1239
    A true Copy:
    Teste:
    ________________________________
    Clerk of the United States Court of
    Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
    USCA-02-C-0072—1-21-04