TBL Licensing LLC F.K.A. the Timberland Company, and Subsidiaries (A Consolidated Group) ( 2022 )


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  •                  United States Tax Court
    
    T.C. Memo. 2022-71
    TBL LICENSING LLC f.k.a. THE TIMBERLAND COMPANY, AND
    SUBSIDIARIES (A CONSOLIDATED GROUP),
    Petitioner
    v.
    COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE,
    Respondent 1
    —————
    Docket No. 21146-15.                                  Filed July 12, 2022.
    —————
    P and R each moved for summary judgment on
    issues regarding the application of I.R.C. § 367(d), which
    they presented as the sole issues in the case requiring
    resolution. The Court resolved those issues in TBL
    Licensing LLC & Subs. v. Commissioner, No. 21146-15, 158
    T.C. (Jan. 31, 2022). In March 2022, more than 6½ years
    after filing its Petition, P moved for leave to amend its
    Petition to assert a claim for a research credit under I.R.C.
    § 41. R opposes P’s Motion.
    Held: Whether justice requires granting a motion
    for leave to amend a pleading under Rule 41(a) depends on
    the facts and circumstances of the particular case; no one
    factor (such as the presence or absence of prejudice to the
    nonmoving party) is determinative.
    Held, further, when prejudice to the nonmoving
    party is taken into account, the relevant analysis is not
    limited to the incremental burden the nonmovant would
    bear as a result of the delay in consideration of the issue;
    1 This Memorandum Opinion supplements our prior Opinion TBL Licensing
    LLC & Subs. v. Commissioner, No. 21146-15, 158 T.C. (Jan. 31, 2022).
    Served 07/12/22
    2
    [*2]   the absolute burden (on both the nonmovant and the
    Court) can also be considered.
    Held, further, P’s failure to offer any explanation for
    its lengthy delay in raising its claim to a research credit
    provides a sufficient ground, by itself, for denying P’s
    motion; that consideration of P’s claim could impose a
    considerable burden on R and the Court that would likely
    be greater than if P had raised its claim at the outset of the
    case provides even further grounds for the conclusion that
    justice does not require granting P’s motion.
    —————
    James P. Fuller, Kenneth B. Clark, Larissa B. Neumann, Julia V.
    Ushakova-Stein, Sean P. McElroy, Rajiv Madan, and Nathan P. Wacker,
    for petitioner.
    John E. Budde, Gretchen A. Kindel, Kimberly B. Tyson, and James M.
    Cascino, for respondent.
    SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDUM OPINION
    HALPERN, Judge: This case is before us on petitioner’s Motion
    for Leave to Amend Its Petition (Motion for Leave or Motion). For the
    reasons explained below, we will deny petitioner’s Motion.
    Background
    In our prior Opinion in the case, we resolved in respondent’s favor
    the two issues that the parties had assured us, in respective Motions for
    Summary Judgment, were the only issues for decision. In particular,
    we concluded that (1) petitioner is required to recognize ordinary income
    for its taxable year ended September 23, 2011, under section
    367(d)(2)(A)(ii)(II) 2 as a result of a constructive transfer of intangible
    property to a foreign corporation and (2) in computing the amount of
    income recognized, the value of the transferred properties had to be
    2 Unless otherwise indicated, all statutory references are to the Internal
    Revenue Code, Title 26 U.S.C., in effect for 2011, all regulation references are to the
    Code of Federal Regulations, Title 26 (Treas. Reg.), in effect for 2011, and all Rule
    references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
    3
    [*3] determined on the basis of their actual useful lives, without regard
    to a 20-year limitation provided, for other purposes, in Temporary
    Treasury Regulation § 1.367(d)-1T(c)(3). On February 9, 2022, we
    entered an Order and Decision that purported to sustain the deficiency
    that respondent had determined in a notice of deficiency for the taxable
    year in issue.
    On March 4, 2022, respondent filed a Motion asking us to vacate
    the February 9th Order and Decision and replace it with one that states
    the amount of the upheld deficiency (rather than simply cross-
    referencing the notice of deficiency). Petitioner opposed respondent’s
    Motion to Vacate, alleging that the deficiency should be reduced by a
    research credit petitioner claimed under section 41 in an amended
    return petitioner apparently filed in June 2015, after respondent had
    issued the notice of deficiency but before petitioner had petitioned this
    Court for redetermination of the deficiency. 3 Petitioner had not made
    any claim to a research credit for the taxable year in issue in its Petition
    or at any other time before March 8, 2022, when petitioner responded to
    respondent’s Motion to Vacate.
    In an order dated March 14, 2022, we granted in part
    respondent’s Motion to Vacate in that we vacated and set aside so much
    of our February 9 Order and Decision as sustained the deficiency
    determined in the notice of deficiency. We refrained from entering a
    new Order and Decision to give petitioner the opportunity to make “an
    appropriate motion.”
    Petitioner filed its Motion for Leave, seeking to raise its claim to
    a research credit, on March 25, 2022. Respondent objects to petitioner’s
    Motion.
    Discussion
    I.      Standards for Amending Pleadings
    As we explained in Markwardt v. Commissioner, 
    64 T.C. 989
    , 997
    (1975), we “will not consider issues which have not been pleaded.”
    Petitioner implicitly acknowledges our long-established practice by
    3 The parties stipulated that “Petitioner did not file any amended Form 1120
    corporate tax return for its short taxable year ended September 23, 2011.” In his
    objection to petitioner’s Motion for Leave, however, respondent states that, in June
    2015, “Petitioner filed with respondent’s service center a Form 1120X that for the first
    time notified respondent of petitioner’s claim for tax year 2011 research credits.”
    4
    [*4] seeking to amend its Petition to raise the issue of its entitlement to
    a research credit for 2011.
    Rule 41(a) allows a party to amend its pleading as a matter of
    right before service of a responsive pleading. Amending a pleading (such
    as a petition) after service of a responsive pleading (such as an answer)
    requires leave of the Court unless the opposing party consents to the
    proposed amendment. But Rule 41(a) directs us to give leave “freely
    when justice so requires.”
    “[D]etermining the justice of a proposed amendment” requires an
    “examin[ation of] the particular circumstances in the case.” Estate of
    Quick v. Commissioner, 
    110 T.C. 172
    , 178 (1998), supplemented by 
    110 T.C. 440
     (1998). Among the circumstances considered are “whether an
    excuse for the delay [in raising the issue] exists and whether the
    opposing party would suffer unfair surprise, disadvantage, or prejudice
    if the motion to amend were granted.” 
    Id.
     We also take into account
    whether the issue sought to be raised would require the consideration of
    “stale evidence,” the availability of relevant witnesses or documents, the
    time passed since the party’s initial pleading, the “remoteness in time of
    [the] taxable years involved in the underlying dispute, or [the]
    completion of discovery and/or trial.” Scar v. Commissioner, 
    81 T.C. 855
    ,
    867 (1983) (Swift, J., concurring), rev’d on other grounds, 
    814 F.2d 1363
    (9th Cir. 1987).
    II.   The Parties’ Arguments
    A.     Petitioner’s Motion
    Petitioner asserts that a movant can be “denied the opportunity
    to amend a pleading only where the amendment would prejudice the
    other party.” It alleges that “[n]o such prejudice exists in this case” and
    that, consequently, “justice is best served by allowing [it] to assert its
    claim to the section 41 tax credits.” According to petitioner, the research
    credit it seeks is not only “specifically authorized by Congress” but is
    also “consistent with a previous agreement with Respondent on the
    same issue for other tax years.”
    Petitioner claims that “[r]espondent would not suffer surprise
    because he has known about th[e] [research credit] issue for nearly
    seven years.” Petitioner contends that, under our caselaw, “prejudice
    arises only where the proposed amendment creates a burden that would
    not have existed if the issue were raised in the original pleading.” The
    absence of a “factual overlap” between petitioner’s claim to a research
    5
    [*5] credit and the section 367(d) issues resolved in our prior Opinion
    establishes, in petitioner’s view, that “no such additional burden exists.”
    The independence of the issues means that “there would have been no
    efficiencies created if Petitioner had raised the issue earlier.” Whatever
    difficulties might be imposed on respondent and the Court in addressing
    the research credit issue, petitioner suggests, they would be no greater
    than if it had made its claim for a credit at the outset of the case.
    Petitioner dismisses concerns about judicial economy on the
    ground that “there has been no trial in this case.” Respondent can be
    given “as much time as he needs to consider Petitioner’s entitlement to
    the tax credits.”
    Petitioner acknowledges that “‘undue delay’ may be a factor in
    deciding whether to grant a motion to amend a pleading” but insists that
    “delay is not by itself a justification for denying leave to amend.”
    Quoting (with added emphasis) our opinion in Nolte v. Commissioner,
    
    T.C. Memo. 1995-57
    , 
    1995 WL 37631
    , at *3, aff’d, 
    99 F.3d 1146
     (9th Cir.
    1996), petitioner reminds us that “an untimely amendment may
    properly be denied where there is no excuse for delay and there is
    prejudice or substantial inconvenience to the adverse party.” From that
    proposition, petitioner draws the conclusion that its Motion for Leave
    “should be denied only if Respondent can demonstrate prejudice
    resulting from allowing Petitioner to raise the section 41 issue at this
    time.”
    Apparently relying on “Respondent’s history of allowing [it] to
    claim” what it describes as “the same tax credits on the same basis for
    other tax years,” petitioner assures us that “the question of whether [it]
    is entitled to the additional tax credits can be decided quickly and
    without any significant delay.” Toward that end, it vows to “promptly
    provide to Respondent any additional support needed to verify [its]
    entitlement to the additional tax credits.”
    B.     Respondent’s Objection
    Respondent points out that petitioner, in its Motion for Leave,
    “offered no explanation of or justification for its failure to timely
    prosecute” its research credit claim. Respondent asks that, if we grant
    petitioner’s Motion, we also give respondent leave to amend his Answer
    to raise a new issue of his own that, he says, would increase
    6
    [*6] petitioner’s deficiency even if we allow petitioner the research
    credits it claims.
    Respondent presents a history of the case in which, “at every
    critical moment,” petitioner remained silent in regard to its claim for a
    research credit. Petitioner’s repeated failures to raise the issue,
    respondent asserts, “became an admission that the research credit claim
    had been abandoned.”
    According to respondent, his counsel and petitioner’s counsel first
    discussed the case in a phone call in October 2015. At that time,
    respondent’s counsel was apparently aware of petitioner’s claim to a
    research credit. In that initial call, respondent’s counsel asked
    petitioner’s counsel whether petitioner planned to amend its Petition to
    raise the research credit claim. A few days later, after discussing the
    matter with their client, petitioner’s counsel allegedly advised
    respondent’s counsel that petitioner had no plans to amend its Petition.
    The case was then sent to respondent’s Appeals office. Appeals’
    consideration of the case was apparently limited to the applicability of
    section 367: Petitioner did not raise the research credit issue in its
    initial protest or at any other time while the case was before Appeals.
    In March 2019, however, petitioner did amend its Petition. But
    its Amended Petition—raising the 20-year useful life limitation
    provided in prior regulations—addressed only the amount of gain it
    should be required to recognize were section 367’s gain recognition rule
    determined to apply. Petitioner’ s Amended Petition made no mention
    of the research credit. Thereafter, petitioner joined respondent in
    advising the Court that resolution of the section 367 issue would fully
    dispose of the case. During a conference call on July 10, 2019, “the
    parties expressly advised the Court that the case could be disposed of in
    its entirety by cross motions for summary judgment.”
    Respondent also offers reasons why addressing the research
    credit issue at this stage in the case would be more difficult than if
    petitioner had raised the issue at the outset. Those involved in the
    examination of petitioner’s prior research credit claims, for example,
    may have retired or been reassigned.
    C.     Petitioner’s Response to Respondent’s Objection
    Petitioner devotes most of its response to respondent’s objection
    arguing that, if we were to grant its Motion and allow it to put before us
    7
    [*7] its claim to a research credit for 2011, we should nonetheless not
    allow respondent to raise the new issue he described in his objection.
    Petitioner makes no arguments in support of its own Motion beyond
    those made in the Motion itself. Moreover, petitioner again offers no
    explanation for its delay in seeking to raise the research credit issue.
    Nor does it refute any of the procedural background respondent provides
    in his objection to petitioner’s Motion.
    III.   Analysis
    The argument petitioner advances in support of its Motion can be
    distilled to three points. First, undue delay in raising an issue cannot,
    by itself, be grounds to deny a motion for leave to amend a pleading;
    instead, such a motion can be denied only if the nonmoving party would
    be prejudiced. Second, prejudice to the nonmoving party must be
    measured on an incremental basis, comparing the burden that party
    would have to bear in addressing the belatedly raised issue to the
    burden that party would have borne if the issue had been raised at the
    outset of the case. And third, respondent would bear no incremental
    burden in this case because the research credit issue is completely
    independent of the section 367(d) issues addressed in our prior Opinion.
    As explained below, we disagree with petitioner on all three points.
    A.    Prejudice as the Sole Ground for Denial of a Motion for
    Leave to Amend a Pleading
    Petitioner’s claim that prejudice is the sole ground that justifies
    denial of a motion for leave to amend a pleading misreads our caselaw.
    In Ax v. Commissioner, 
    146 T.C. 153
    , 166–67 (2016), one of the cases on
    which petitioner relies, we wrote that “prejudice to the non-moving
    party is one of the reasons to disallow an amendment to the movant’s
    pleadings.” (Emphasis added.) We thus recognized that other reasons
    might also justify, in and of themselves, denial of a motion for leave to
    amend a pleading.
    To say, as we did in Nolte, that a motion for leave to amend a
    pleading can be denied when each of two factors (absence of excuse and
    prejudice) is present does not mean that the motion must be granted
    unless both factors are present. That absence of excuse and prejudice
    are sufficient factors to justify denial of a motion for leave to amend a
    pleading does not mean that either factor is necessary.
    The statement in Nolte on which petitioner relies draws a
    conclusion from the opinion of the Supreme Court in Foman v. Davis,
    8
    [*8] 
    371 U.S. 178
    , 182 (1962).        The following excerpt places the
    statement in context:
    In Foman v. Davis . . . the Supreme Court stated that leave
    to amend may be inappropriate in cases where there is:
    any apparent or declared reason–such as
    undue delay, bad faith or dilatory motive on
    the part of the movant, repeated failure to
    cure deficiencies by amendments previously
    allowed, undue prejudice to the opposing
    party by virtue of allowance of the
    amendment, futility of the amendment, etc.
    ***
    Accordingly, an untimely amendment may properly be
    denied where there is no excuse for delay and there is
    prejudice or substantial inconvenience to the adverse
    party.
    Nolte v. Commissioner, 
    1995 WL 37631
    , at *2–3. Foman suggested that
    any one of several listed factors—including “undue delay”—could justify
    a court’s denial of a motion for leave to amend a pleading. If any one of
    those factors could justify denial of a motion, then, a fortiori, as we said
    in Nolte, a trial court would not abuse its discretion in denying a motion
    when two of those factors are present.
    In its Motion for Leave, petitioner offered us no explanation for
    its having waited so long to raise its claim to a research credit for 2011.
    In his objection to petitioner’s motion, respondent made allegations
    indicating that petitioner made a considered decision not to raise the
    research credit issue at each of several opportunities. In its response to
    respondent’s objection, petitioner makes no effort to refute respondent’s
    allegations, which we will therefore accept as accurately reflecting the
    procedural history.
    Petitioner’s efforts to elevate prejudice or substantial
    inconvenience as the sole dispositive factor, coupled with its repeated
    failures to provide any explanation for its delay in raising before the
    Court its claim to a research credit for 2011, convince us that petitioner
    has no good excuse for its delay. In respondent’s unrefuted telling of the
    procedural history, petitioner’s failure to have raised the research credit
    issue reflects a conscious decision not to pursue the issue.
    9
    [*9] Petitioner’s failure to advance any excuse for its delay in raising
    the research credit issue gives us a sufficient basis for denying its motion
    for leave. As noted above, the Supreme Court suggested in Foman that
    “undue delay,” or any one of several other listed factors, could by itself
    justify a court’s denial of a motion to amend a pleading. And this Court
    confirmed in Chanik v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 1972-174
    , 
    31 T.C.M. (CCH) 851
    , 864, aff’d, 
    492 F.2d 1182
     (6th Cir. 1974), that a moving
    party’s “lack of diligence” in raising an issue timely can be “a sufficient
    reason to deny [a] motion to amend.”
    B.     Measuring Burden on          the   Nonmoving     Party:   Ax’s
    Incremental Analysis
    We need not rest our denial of petitioner’s Motion solely on its
    inability to explain its belated efforts to put before us its claim to a
    research credit. Consideration of petitioner’s claim could impose a
    significant burden on both the Court and respondent. Claims for
    research credits tend to be fact intensive. As we explained in Little
    Sandy Coal Co. v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 2021-15
    , at *20:
    Given the complexity of factual issues involved in
    determining a taxpayer’s eligibility for the research credit,
    it is not unusual for the taxpayer and the Commissioner to
    agree, in conducting cases that involve the credit, to single
    out a sample of research projects to be addressed by the
    court in the expectation that the court’s decision in regard
    to the sample projects will enable the parties to resolve
    their differences in regard to the other projects.
    Petitioner’s claim for a research credit for 2011 cannot be
    identical to the claims respondent allegedly allowed, at least in part, for
    prior years. Repeating in 2011 the very research activities conducted in
    prior years would have been pointless. Petitioner asks that we take its
    word that its claim for a credit against its 2011 tax liability raises no
    factual or legal issues not already considered and resolved in prior years.
    Respondent advises us, however, that his agents have not examined
    petitioner’s 2011 research credit claim. Because the research credit
    claim has not previously been in the case, respondent’s counsel “did not
    perform discovery on the research credit claim during the pendency of
    this case.”     As respondent observes, “[p]etitioner has made no
    demonstration of its entitlement to the claimed research credits.” We
    cannot know, at this juncture, the extent to which respondent might
    10
    [*10] agree to petitioner’s claim for a research credit or how difficult it
    might prove to be to resolve any disagreements.
    Petitioner suggests that, however difficult resolution of the
    research credit issue might be, it would be no more difficult now than if
    petitioner had raised the issue in the petition it originally filed. Our
    opinion in Ax provides some support for such an incremental analysis.
    Ax was a captive insurance case involving taxpayers’ claims to
    deductions for premiums paid to a related insurer. In the notice of
    deficiency, the Commissioner disallowed the deductions because, he
    alleged, the taxpayers had not demonstrated that the deductions
    reflected expenses that had actually been paid. The Commissioner
    sought to amend his answer to assert that the amounts in issue were
    not “ordinary and necessary” within the meaning of section 162(a) and
    also to challenge the economic substance of the captive insurance
    arrangement.
    The taxpayers’ argument that the proposed amendment would
    prejudice them amounted to a claim that the additional grounds for
    denial of the deductions in issue would reduce their chances of
    prevailing. They described as “very simple” the issues raised in the
    notice of deficiency. Ax, 
    146 T.C. at 166
    . In its initial posture, the case
    was, in the taxpayers’ words, “a straightforward expense substantiation
    dispute.” 
    Id.
     Simply proving payment, they reasoned, would have
    allowed them to “easily prevail.” 
    Id.
     By contrast, the taxpayers viewed
    the new issues the Commissioner sought to raise as “very complicated,”
    
    id.,
     implicitly admitting that they were less likely to prevail on those
    issues.
    In addressing the taxpayers’ argument, we made the obvious
    point that “‘prejudice’ . . . does not mean mere disadvantage.” 
    Id. at 168
    .
    A party would not seek to amend its pleading unless it saw a potential
    advantage in doing so. And an amendment that advantages the moving
    party would necessarily disadvantage the party’s opponent. That the
    issues that would be raised in an amended pleading “would make the
    case harder or more expensive for the other party than a pleading that
    lacks those issues,” we reasoned, does not establish prejudice for
    purposes of Rule 41(a). 
    Id.
     While we might have stopped there, we went
    on to suggest the incremental analysis petitioner embraces: “[T]he
    question is whether the addition of those new issues by a later
    amendment, rather than by inclusion in the initial pleading, works an
    unfair disadvantage to the other party.” Id.
    11
    [*11] While Ax’s incremental analysis may be useful, it should not be
    understood to render irrelevant the absolute burden the nonmoving
    party would bear from consideration of the new issue or issues. In prior
    cases, we emphasized the absolute burden the nonmoving party would
    bear from consideration of a new issue without explicitly considering
    how that burden might have been different (and lesser) had the movant
    raised the new issue at the outset. In Wyman-Gordon Co. v.
    Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 1985-433
    , 
    50 T.C.M. (CCH) 842
    , for example,
    the Commissioner sought to amend his answer to allege that purported
    loans made by one member of a consolidated group to its second-tier
    subsidiary were in fact equity investments. The original issue in the
    case had involved the excess loss account rules provided in Treasury
    Regulation § 1.1502-19. In denying the Commissioner’s motion, we
    observed: “[T]he debt-equity issue [the Commissioner] now seeks to
    raise will not otherwise be litigated. Furthermore, it raises factual
    questions involving evidence quite dissimilar from the legal analysis
    which will be necessary to resolve the consolidated return issue.”
    Wyman-Gordon Co., 50 T.C.M. (CCH) at 843. We accepted as “obvious”
    that the “time and expense that would be incurred in litigating a debt-
    equity question involving a $2,038,161 loan” would be “substantial.” Id.
    Under the circumstances, there was no apparent reason to believe that
    the time and expense of litigating the debt-equity issue would have been
    any less substantial had the Commissioner raised the issue in his initial
    answer, filed less than 11 months before his motion for leave to amend
    that answer.
    Leahy v. Commissioner, 
    87 T.C. 56
     (1986), involved investment
    tax credits claimed in respect of a movie purchased by a partnership in
    which the taxpayer-husband was a limited partner. In his notice of
    deficiency, the Commissioner had advanced several grounds for
    disallowing the credits. The parties submitted the case fully stipulated.
    On brief, the Commissioner raised for the first time an additional
    ground for disallowing the credits: the partnership and the taxpayers’
    failure to attach to their returns a statement required by the
    regulations. We acknowledged that “[i]t is within our discretion to
    permit a new issue or ground if we find that the opposing party is not
    prejudiced by such permission.” 
    Id. at 64
    . “Of key importance in
    evaluating the existence of prejudice,” we wrote, “is the amount of
    surprise and the need for additional evidence on behalf of the party in
    opposition to the new position.” 
    Id.
     Because the Commissioner had not
    raised the issue of compliance with the reporting requirement in the
    notice of deficiency or in his pleadings, we accepted that the taxpayers
    “were surprised to learn of respondent’s ‘regulation position’ on brief.”
    12
    [*12] 
    Id.
     The longer the delay in a party’s disclosing a new theory, we
    reasoned, the greater the likelihood of prejudice to the other party. That
    was “especially true” in Leahy, “where there was no trial and the facts
    were fixed by agreement.” 
    Id. at 65
    . We presumed that the parties’
    submission of the case fully stipulated reflected “an understanding of
    the legal issues to be presented and defended.” 
    Id.
     at 64–65. A party’s
    attempt to raise a new issue, we reasoned, is more likely to surprise his
    opponent if the parties had previously reached an agreement that
    circumscribed the relevant issues. We thus held that the taxpayers
    “were surprised by the new ground and their ability to present their case
    was prejudiced.” 
    Id. at 65
    . The prejudice followed from the surprise.
    We did not in Leahy engage in any explicit analysis of the incremental
    burden on the taxpayers of the Commissioner’s having raised the
    reporting issue on brief instead of in his initial answer.
    “Whether a motion seeking amendment [of a pleading] should be
    allowed lies within the sound discretion of the Court.” Estate of Quick,
    
    110 T.C. at 178
    . An appeals court will overturn a denial of leave to
    amend “only for an abuse of that discretion.” Manzoli v. Commissioner,
    
    904 F.2d 101
    , 107 (1st Cir. 1990), aff’g 
    T.C. Memo. 1988-299
    . Given the
    broad discretion allowed to a trial judge to determine, on the basis of the
    particular facts and circumstances, whether a motion for leave to amend
    a pleading should be granted in a case, Ax should not be read to have
    established a hard and fast rule requiring the use of an incremental
    analysis to measure prejudice. Moreover, as explained above, prejudice
    to the nonmoving party is not, as petitioner would have it, a strict
    prerequisite for denial of a motion for leave to amend a pleading. The
    possibility of prejudice is simply one factor to be considered. It follows
    that a trial judge has latitude to determine not only the weight to be
    given to potential prejudice but also how that prejudice should be
    measured.
    C.     Respondent’s Incremental Burden in the Present Case
    Even if a determination of prejudice were to require an
    incremental analysis of the type suggested in Ax, we are convinced that
    resolution of the research credit issue would be more difficult now than
    would have been had petitioner raised the issue in its initial petition.
    As noted above, we accepted in Leahy that the possibility of prejudice
    varies directly with the extent of the delay in raising the new issue.
    Recognition of that inevitable reality also influenced our decisions in
    Estate of Ravetti v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 1992-697
    , 
    1992 WL 357823
    , and Nolte.
    13
    [*13] Estate of Ravetti involved an executor’s motion for leave to amend
    her petition to assert a statute of limitations defense. Although the
    decedent had executed consents to extend the statute, the executor
    claimed that the decedent had been incompetent when he did so. In
    explaining our denial of the executor’s motion, we wrote:
    Under the circumstances of this case, we are not
    persuaded that justice would be served by allowance of the
    proposed amendment. Petitioner’s proposed amendment
    would substantially inconvenience and unfairly prejudice
    respondent. Amendment of the petition here would require
    respondent to contest the competency 9 years ago of a
    taxpayer now long deceased. Most, if not all, of the
    evidence bearing on Silvio Ravetti’s competence is under
    the control of and in the possession of petitioner.
    Petitioner’s amendment necessarily would require a new
    round of discovery relating to Silvio Ravetti’s mental
    competency in 1983. Respondent now would be required to
    locate witnesses and experts to testify regarding
    circumstances of 9 years ago. We do not believe that justice
    would be served by placing this burden on respondent at
    this time with respect to a consent on which respondent
    reasonably has relied for 9 years.
    Estate of Ravetti v. Commissioner, 
    1992 WL 357823
    , at *2.
    Nolte also involved taxpayers’ belated attempt to raise the statute
    of limitations as an affirmative defense. The Commissioner alleged that
    the taxpayers had executed a Form 872–A, Special Consent to Extend
    the Time to Assess Tax, consenting to extend the limitation period.
    While she was unable to find an executed consent form in her files, she
    said that her administrative file included “secondary evidence” of
    execution of consents. Nolte v. Commissioner, 
    1995 WL 37631
    , at *2.
    We denied the taxpayers’ motion for leave to amend in Nolte,
    reasoning that their “proposed amendment would substantially
    inconvenience and unfairly prejudice” the Commissioner. Id. at *3.
    “Amendment of the petition,” we observed, “would require [the
    Commissioner] to locate witnesses to testify about events occurring
    more than 8 years ago regarding the alleged execution of the Form
    872–A for” the year in issue. Id.
    14
    [*14] Allowing petitioner to amend its Petition would require
    respondent to undertake an examination of petitioner’s entitlement to a
    research credit for a taxable year that ended more than 10 years ago.
    The prospect of stale evidence looms larger now than it would have had
    petitioner given respondent reason to open an examination back in 2015.
    Cf. Scar, 
    81 T.C. at 867
     (Swift, J., concurring).
    Petitioner apparently expects that, upon a quick and relatively
    effortless perusal of the documentation it promises to provide,
    respondent will readily accept petitioner’s entitlement to the claimed
    credit. We cannot share petitioner’s confidence.
    Petitioner’s apparent ability to have reached an agreement with
    respondent concerning the allowance of research credits for years before
    2011 does not establish that the parties would easily resolve any
    differences in regard to petitioner’s 2011 claim. Petitioner advises us
    that its 2011 claim “follows the same methodology” it used in claiming
    credits for 2008 through 2010.          Petitioner provides no further
    description of its “methodology.” Whatever petitioner means by that
    term, its 2011 claim will necessarily involve facts that differ from those
    considered in prior years. Those different facts may raise different legal
    issues. And the relevant legal landscape may have changed in the many
    intervening years.
    D.     Considerations of Judicial Economy
    Finally, we are unpersuaded by petitioner’s “judicial economy”
    argument. Petitioner acknowledges that we have “denied motions to
    amend pleadings that were filed after a trial based upon ‘the established
    policy of this Court to try all the issues raised in a case in one
    proceeding.’” The prospect that a posttrial motion for leave can properly
    be denied does not establish that we have no choice but to grant a motion
    for leave made in any case in which no trial has yet been held. Although
    we resolved without trial the section 367(d) issues the parties presented
    on summary judgment, the case required extensive proceedings up to
    that point. The parties submitted thousands of pages of stipulated
    documents in connection with their Motions for Summary Judgment.
    The burden on the Court of resolving the section 367(d) issues was not
    materially different because the parties submitted those documents by
    stipulation rather than in a trial. In positing that respondent be given
    “as much time as he needs to consider [its] entitlement to tax credits,”
    petitioner, in effect, asks that we put on indefinite hold a case we have
    already decided and require respondent to open, conduct, and complete
    15
    [*15] an examination of a previously unexamined issue. Our caselaw
    does not establish that parties are, in all events, entitled to one trial. In
    several of the cases discussed above (Nolte, Wyman-Gordon Co., Leahy,
    and Estate of Ravetti), we denied motions for leave to amend pleadings
    in cases in which no trial had yet been held.
    IV.   Conclusion
    In short, petitioner’s repeated failure to offer any explanation for
    its lengthy delay in seeking to raise its claim to a research credit for the
    taxable year in issue is sufficient justification, by itself, to warrant
    denial of its motion. Moreover, considering petitioner’s claim to a
    research credit more than 10 years after the close of the taxable year in
    issue could impose a considerable burden on respondent and the Court–
    a burden likely to be greater than it would have been had petitioner
    raised the issue in the petition it filed more than 6½ years ago. Taking
    into account “the particular circumstances in the case,” Estate of Quick,
    110 T.C. at 178, we conclude that justice does not require granting
    petitioner leave to amend its petition.
    An appropriate order and decision will be entered.