DECISION REGARDING CROSS-MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
The plaintiff, 1900 M Restaurant Associates, Inc., is the debtor in the case, pending under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (11 U.S.C.), to which this adversary proceeding relates. Its complaint seeks an order compelling the United States of America to have its Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) consider under § 7122(a) of the Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C.) an offer-in-compromise submitted by the debtor to the IRS on IRS Form 656 in January 2004, after the commencement of the bankruptcy case, but before the filing of any proposed chapter 11 plan. (The offer-in-compromise proposed a schedule of payments to the IRS in satisfaction of its claims for less than the full amount of those claims.) The complaint also seeks a declaration that the IRS’s policy to refuse to consider offers-in-compromise submitted on Form 656 during the pendency of a case under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code, and the IRS’s refusal to consider the January 2004 offer-in-compromise based on that policy, constitute discrimination in violation of 11 U.S.C. § 525(a). Upon consideration of the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment, the court will dismiss the proceeding.
I
Section 7122(a) of the Internal Revenue Code provides:
(a) AUTHORIZATION. — The Secretary may compromise any civil or criminal case arising under the internal revenue law prior to reference to the Department of Justice for prosecution or defense; and the Attorney General or his delegate may compromise any such case after reference to the Department of Justice for prosecution or defense.
An offer to compromise a tax liability pursuant to § 7122 “must be submitted according to the procedures, and in the form and manner, prescribed by the Secretary” (26 C.F.R. § 301.7122-l(d)(l)), and “[t]he IRS may ... return an offer to compromise a tax liability if it determines that the offer was submitted solely to delay collection or was otherwise nonprocessable” (26 C.F.R. § 301.7122-l(d)(2) (emphasis added)). The procedural details regarding offers-in-compromise have been left to Rev. Proc. 2003-71,
In compliance with the Revenue Procedure, the IRS returned the debtor’s January 2004 Form 656 offer-in-compromise as nonprocessable. Subsequently the debtor filed a proposed amended plan of reorganization which assumes that its offer-in-compromise will be processed and which incorporates alternative terms in the event that the offer-in-compromise is not accepted. The IRS, through the Department of Justice, has objected to confirmation of the debtor’s proposed plan.
II
In seeking to compel processing of its offer-in-compromise, the debtor relies on 11 U.S.C. § 525(a) which provides in relevant part that:
a governmental unit may not deny, revoke, suspend, or refuse to renew a license, permit, charter, franchise, or other similar grant to, [or] ... discriminate with respect to such a grant against ... a person that is ... a debtor under this title ... solely because such ... debtor is ... a debtor under this title ....
[Emphasis added.] Based on
Macher v. United States (In re Macher),
To elaborate, the debtor’s asserted “right to submit an offer-in-compromise” on Form 656 is not a “license, permit, charter, or franchise” within the ordinary meaning of those words. Nor is it a “grant” within any of the ordinary meanings of that word as discussed in
Stoltz v. Brattleboro Hous. Auth. (In re Stoltz),
The government’s compromise of tax claims, a modification of debt obligations, is similar to the governmental programs for extensions of credit which were held not to fall within the categories of § 525(a) in
Watts v. Pennsylvania Hous. Fin. Co.
*306
(In re Watts),
Ill
The debtor alternatively seeks an order under 11 U.S.C. § 105(a) compelling the IRS to consider its Form 656 offer-in-compromise. Section 105(a) provides in relevant part that “[t]he court may issue any order, process, or judgment that is necessary or appropriate to carry out the provisions of this title.” To the extent that the debtor is invoking the remedy of mandamus, the relief it seeks is inappropriate.
A.
As noted in the legislative history to § 105(a), the statute:
is similar in effect to the All Writs Statute, 28 U.S.C. 1651 .... The section is repeated here for the sake of continuity from current law and ease of reference, and to cover any powers traditionally exercised by a bankruptcy court that are not encompassed by the All Writs Statute.
H.R. Rep. 95-595, 95th Cong., 1st Sess., at 316-17 (1977),
reprinted in
1978 U.S.Code Cong. & Ad. News 5963, 6273-74.
3
To the extent the debtor seeks to compel performance of an alleged duty, the relief the debtor seeks is in the nature of mandamus.
See Georges v. Quinn,
Although there is also a specific mandamus statute applicable to officers and agents of the United States, 28 U.S.C. § 1361, that provision was enacted as part of the Mandamus and Venue Act of 1962 which was intended to make the use of the remedy more readily available by, for example, not limiting mandamus actions to the district in which the agency’s head resided.
See Stafford v. Briggs,
As observed in
Consolidated Edison Co. of New York, Inc. v. Ashcroft,
“[A] ‘drastic’ remedy, ‘to be invoked only in extraordinary situations,’ ” In re Papandreou,139 F.3d 247 , 249 (D.C.Cir.1998) (quoting Kerr v. U.S. Dist. Court,426 U.S. 394 , 402,96 S.Ct. 2119 , 2123,48 L.Ed.2d 725 (1976)), mandamus is inappropriate except where a public official has violated a “ministerial” duty. Such a duty must be “so plainly prescribed as to be free from doubt and equivalent to a positive command.... [WJhere the duty is not thus plainly prescribed, but depends on a statute or statutes the construction or application of which is not free from doubt, it is regarded as involving the character of judgment or discretion which cannot be controlled by mandamus.” Wilbur v. United States,281 U.S. 206 , 218-19,50 S.Ct. 320 , 324-25,74 L.Ed. 809 (1930).
And as observed in
Power v. Barnhart,
The “remedy of mandamus is a drastic one, to be invoked only in extraordinary circumstances.” Mandamus is available only if: “(1) the plaintiff has a clear right to relief; (2) the defendant has a clear duty to act; and (3) there is no other adequate remedy available to plaintiff.” The party seeking mandamus “has the burden of showing that ‘its right to issuance of the writ is clear and indisputable.’ ”
(Citations omitted.)
See also Heckler v. Ringer,
B.
The IRS owes no clear duty to the debtor under § 7122 to process an offer-in-compromise submitted on Form 656 which its Revenue Procedure has specifically treated as nonprocessable when a bankruptcy case of the taxpayer is pending. Section 7122 does not command the Secretary to consider an offer-in-compromise; it only provides that the Secretary or the Department of Justice, as the case may be, may compromise a civil tax liability. The discretion vested in the Secretary to compromise carries with it the discretion not to exercise the Secretary’s discretion.
See United States v. Smith, Barney, Harris, Upham and Co.,
45 AFTR2d 80-1105,
Although
Mills,
will at most be allowed to come in, and will be listened to, but no negotiations will be engaged in until after the investigation has been completed, and the internal reviews that follow have resulted in a decision (arrived at unilaterally by IRS and not by negotiation) not to refer [the case] to the Department of Justice [for criminal prosecution].
Garden State,
In exercising the statutory discretion of § 7122(a), the Secretary is generally free to specify what types of offers will be processed.
See Boulez v. Commissioner,
The details of what offers-in-compromise are nonprocessable has been left to Rev. Proc. 2003-71, § 5 (“When an Offer Becomes Pending and Return of Offers”), 2003-
The only statutory limitations on the Secretary’s discretion under § 7122(a) arise implicitly from three parts of 26 U.S.C. § 7122(c):
• The first of these is the command of § 7122(c)(2)(B) that the Secretary’s guidelines for determining whether an offer-in-compromise is adequate and should be accepted must, in effect, direct IRS personnel not blindly to apply standard allowances prescribed under the guidelines for basic living expenses. 8 This implicitly means that the Secretary has no discretion to treat an offer as nonprocessable solely because the offer proposes not to follow the guidelines’ standard allowances for basic living expenses.
• The second is the command of § 7122(c)(3)(A) that IRS personnel “shall not reject an offer-in-compromise from a low-income taxpayer solely on *310 the basis of the amount of the offer.” This implicitly requires that the IRS not treat an offer-in-compromise as nonpro-cessable solely because it fails to propose payment of some minimum amount.
• Finally, § 7122(c)(3)(B) provides that in the case of an offer-in-compromise which relates only to issues of liability of the taxpayer, “(ii) the taxpayer shall not be required to provide a financial statement.” Accordingly, such an offer-in-compromise could not be treated as non-processable solely because it lacked a financial statement.
Except for those implicit restrictions, however, the statute is silent regarding what offers the Secretary may treat as nonpro-cessable. Plainly the decision under the Revenue Procedure not to process an offer-in-compromise submitted when a taxpayer is in bankruptcy does not run afoul of those restrictions.
That administrative review and administrative appeal rights exist under § 7122(d) with respect to any rejection of a proposed offer-in-compromise does not alter this analysis. Under 26 C.F.R. § 301.7122-l(f)(5)(ii), a regulation which has the force of law, treating an offer as nonprocessable is not the same thing as rejecting a proces-sible offer-in-compromise. The IRS was completely within the limits of its permissible discretion in refusing to process an offer-in-compromise that was presented in a vacuum without a chapter 11 plan having been filed. 9
Although
Chavez v. United States,
93 AFTR2d 2004-2386,
*311 Moreover, even if review were available, the court would not view as an abuse of discretion the IRS’s decision to treat the debtor’s offer-in-compromise as nonpro-cessable when the debtor is in bankruptcy. When a bankruptcy case is pending, the IRS rationally can determine that it is inappropriate to assay the treatment of the IRS’s claims of offer-in-compromise procedures in isolation from the terms of a proposed plan and from the plan confirmation process. This is particularly true when the offer-in-compromise, as here, does not include all of the terms of any proposed plan. Even when a taxpayer’s offer-in-compromise includes a proposed plan, the debtor is not in a position to guarantee that it can honor an acceptance of the offer-in-compromise because a proposed plan’s effectiveness is contingent on confirmation of the plan by the bankruptcy court. Moreover, if a plan is unsatisfactory, and referred on that basis to the Department of Justice for objection, the IRS loses jurisdiction to accept the offer-in-compromise. It makes sense for the IRS to decide that the treatment of the IRS’s claims in bankruptcy must be addressed by the IRS by way of the plan confirmation process instead of the ordinary offer-in-compromise procedure.
The Chavez court viewed the Internal Revenue Manual provision regarding returning an offer-in-compromise as inconsistent with 26 C.F.R. § 301.7122-l(b)(3)(iii) which set forth grounds for rejection that mirror the Internal Revenue Manual’s standard for returning (and treating as no longer processible) an offer-in-compromise based on a taxpayer’s continuing failure to comply with ongoing obligations to file tax returns and make timely deposits of employment taxes. Treating an offer-in-compromise as nonprocessible when the taxpayer is in bankruptcy does not conflict with any part of 26 C.F.R. § 301.7122-1.
Chavez also pointed to the fact that the Internal Revenue Manual does not have the force of law, as is true of Revenue Procedures as well, but not true of 26 C.F.R. § 301.7122-1. That observation was necessary to support the determination in Chavez that an Internal Revenue Manual provision may not override a Treasury Regulation, but it does not alter the analysis here. It was entirely appropriate for the Secretary to leave the issue of nonpro-cessibility to a Revenue Procedure instead of a Treasury Regulation. Section 7122 charges the Secretary to prescribe “guidelines,” not “regulations,” in contrast to other provisions of the Internal Revenue Code (such as 26 U.S.C. §§ 1(g)(7)(C); l(g)(7)(h)(9); 21(f); 23(i); and 4462(i)(4)) which require the Secretary to prescribe regulations. 10 The Revenue Procedure provision at issue, requiring offers-in-eom-promise to be treated as nonprocessable when the taxpayer is in bankruptcy, was thus duly promulgated, and does not conflict with either 26 U.S.C. § 7122 or 26 C.F.R. § 301.7122-1.
In conclusion, the court cannot find that treating offers-in-compromise as nonpro-cessable in bankruptcy violates a clear •nondiscretionary duty on the part of the IRS. Accordingly, mandamus is unavailable to compel the IRS to process the debtor’s offer-in-compromise.
C.
Mandamus is also unavailable on an alternative ground. As held in
DRG Funding Corp. v. Secretary of HUD,
The debtor is still free to discuss compromise on modified terms with the Department of Justice, or to attempt to obtain confirmation of a plan in accordance with the requirements of the Bankruptcy Code. If the debtor’s plan does not pass muster under those requirements, the government’s refusal to accept that treatment has not deprived the debtor of any relief to which it is entitled. If confirmation is denied, leading to a dismissal, the debtor may take steps, as in Chavez, to obtain administrative review under 26 U.S.C. § 6330(d)(1) of any IRS decision to proceed with levy instead of compromising.
D.
In the midst of the pendency of this adversary proceeding, the debtor has proposed a plan to which the IRS, through the Department of Justice, has objected. Upon objecting to the debtor’s plan on behalf of the IRS, the Department of Justice is vested with the authority to compromise under § 7122, and it obviously can insist on negotiating the terms of a plan in a fashion different than the use of Form 656, as 26 C.F.R. § 301.7122-1 does not apply to the Department of Justice.
See In re Matter of Grand Jury Applicants (C. Schmidt & Sons, Inc.),
E.
Similarly, 11 U.S.C. § 1129(a)(9)(C) imposes no nondiscretionary duty on the IRS to process offers-in-compromise. Section 1129(a)(9)(C) specifies a treatment a plan must accord certain tax claims of the IRS unless the IRS agrees to a different treatment. Obviously the IRS has complete discretion to decide whether to agree to such different treatment or whether even *313 to consider agreeing to such different treatment. In any event, the plan process is an adequate alternative remedy available to the debtor to obtain the IRS’s position in the case.
F.
In conclusion, mandamus is inappropriate here. When a taxpayer becomes a debtor in a chapter 11 bankruptcy case, the Secretary has concluded, pursuant to an exercise of discretion embodied in the applicable Revenue Procedure, that the best interests of the government warrant addressing the treatment of the government’s tax claims in the context only of considering a proposed plan, and to return any Form 656 offers-in-compromise as nonprocessable. This discretionary decision under 26 U.S.C. § 7122 and 11 U.S.C. § 1129(a)(9)(C) is not to be countermanded by the employment of the mandamus remedy which is limited to compelling the performance of strictly ministerial duties, and which is unavailable when, as here, an alternative adequate remedy (the plan confirmation process) is available to learn the IRS’s position.
IV
The debtor properly observes that in invoking § 105(a), it is not confined to seeking mandamus relief. It urges that the requested order is necessary to the plan confirmation process because it will allow the debtor to obtain a tax repayment agreement that will permit it to formulate a chapter 11 plan. Accordingly, the debtor urges that the requested relief is justified under § 105(a), not as mandamus relief, but as necessary to facilitate reorganization.
In
Macher,
A.
First, “the common sense realities of bankruptcy reorganizations” referred to by Macher warrant allowing the IRS to treat Form 656 offers-in-compromise as nonpro-cessable once a chapter 11 bankruptcy case intervenes. Macher and its progeny fail fully to consider the dynamic which arises from a bankruptcy case and which warrants the IRS being allowed to address treatment of its claims other than through the Form 656 offer-in-compromise process that is divorced from the realities of that dynamic. The Chief Counsel Notice makes clear the IRS’s willingness, principally in the context of addressing a proposed plan, to consider agreeing to payment of less than the full amount of its tax claims. That Notice lays out sound policy grounds for the IRS’s decision (and for bankruptcy courts’ not countermanding that decision) to address treatment of its tax claims in a chapter 11 case principally in the context of a proposed plan instead of Form 656 offers-in-compromise.
As recognized by 11 U.S.C. § 1112(a)(4) and (5), the ultimate goal of such a case generally ought to be to achieve a confirmed plan, and chapter 11 plans present an entirely different dynamic than exists outside of a bankruptcy case. Addressing *314 a proposed compromise of tax claims in a •chapter 11 case in a context other than the new playing field that arises from the commencement of that case would be to consider the IRS’s interests in a vacuum. Principally, the IRS will prudently wish to consider compromise in the context of a proposed plan. 11 Among factors a creditor may consider in electing to agree to a proposed plan are the specific treatment of its claim, and the treatment of other creditors’ claims (such as whether such claims are being paid more generously or more quickly), as well as the feasibility of the plan, and default provisions. Those issues cannot be assessed without a proposed plan. The chapter 11 process enables creditors to assess a proposed plan, 12 and affords procedures for a creditor’s participation in the plan confirmation process. 13 To require the IRS to process a Form 656 offer-in-compromise, particularly one which utterly fails to set forth terms of a proposed chapter 11 plan, is neither “necessary or appropriate to carry out the provisions of [the Bankruptcy Code]” as required to grant § 105(a) relief.
Moreover, § 105(a) does not confer on a bankruptcy court a license to impose on a creditor restrictions regarding how that creditor shall address its rights in a bankruptcy case according to the bankruptcy court’s views of the “common sense realities of bankruptcy reorganization”:
[S]ection 105(a) does not provide bankruptcy courts with a roving writ, much less a free hand. The authority bestowed thereunder may be invoked only if, and to the extent that, the equitable remedy dispensed by the court is necessary to preserve an identifiable right conferred elsewhere in the Bankruptcy Code. See Norwest Bank Worthington v. Ahlers,485 U.S. 197 , 206,108 S.Ct. 963 ,99 L.Ed.2d 169 (1988) (explaining that a bankruptcy court’s equitable powers “can only be exercised within the confines of the Bankruptcy Code”); Noonan v. Sec’y of HHS (In re Ludlow Hosp. Soc’y, Inc.),124 F.3d 22 , 27 (1st Cir.1997) (similar).
Jamo v. Katahdin Fed. Credit Union (In re Jamo),
Where a statute specifically addresses the particular issue at hand, it is that authority, and not the All Writs Act, that is controlling. Although that Act empowers federal courts to fashion extraordinary remedies when the need arises, it does not authorize them to issue ad hoc writs whenever compliance with statutory procedures appears inconvenient or less appropriate.
Pennsylvania Bureau of Correction v. U.S. Marshals Serv.,
B.
Second, the “fresh start” principle is no basis for commanding the IRS to process a Form 656 offer-in-compromise in a vacuum divorced from consideration of a proposed plan. The so-called “fresh start” is not a specific statutory provision. Instead, certain provisions are viewed as giving the debtor certain “fresh start” relief, as in the case of the Bankruptcy Code’s anti-discrimination provision already discussed (§ 525(a)) and the Bankruptcy Code’s discharge and exemption provisions
(see
11 U.S.C. §§ 522, 524, and 1141(d)(1)). Those provisions, however, are limited in scope and are not a license to employ § 105(a) to create additional “fresh start” relief out of whole cloth without statutory authorization. Again, as
Jamo,
As already demonstrated, § 525(a) (one of the statutory forms of “fresh start” relief) is unavailable to entitle the debtor to “fresh start” relief in the form of barring the IRS from treating Form 656 offers-in-compromise as nonprocessable once bankruptcy intervenes. It would be entirely inappropriate to seize on the “fresh start” principles that underlie § 525(a) and to expand the reach of those principles beyond the carefully limited relief afforded by § 525(a).
C.
From the foregoing, it is readily evident that the IRS’s discretionary authority under § 1129(a)(9)(C) to agree to less than full payment of its claims is not an identifiable Bankruptcy Code right of a debtor which warrants § 105(a) relief of the character sought here. The right rests in the IRS, not the debtor, and the relief sought here is neither necessary or appropriate to carry out that statutory right, and would
*316
impose on the IRS a nonexistent duty unenforceable by way of mandamus. The IRS should be allowed to exercise its discretion under § 1129(a)(9)(C), without interference by the court in how the IRS decides to approach that right.
Cf. Norwest Bank,
The debtor can point to no identifiable right conferred by the Bankruptcy Code whose preservation warrants requiring the IRS to process an offer-in-compromise in a vacuum divorced from an actual proposed plan. A debtor has no right to have the IRS agree to a treatment of its claims less favorable than what is required by the Bankruptcy Code, and no right to compel the IRS to consider agreeing to such treatment in a vacuum devoid of an actual proposed plan. The Bankruptcy Code and Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure themselves set forth the procedures by which a debtor may attempt to obtain a confirmed plan, and the IRS has not acted contrary to those provisions. Indeed, it has made clear that it is in the context of those procedures that it will address the treatment to which its claims will be subjected.
A court may (or may not) have the inherent authority to order parties to attempt to negotiate acceptable terms of a plan, but I need not decide that issue. 15 Assuming that such a power exists, it does not extend to directing a creditor to consider a compromise of how much of its claims are to be paid under a nonbank-ruptcy offer-in-compromise program in isolation from the plan confirmation process. The Chief Counsel Notice prescribes consideration by IRS insolvency employees of a debtor’s proposed plan, submitted in accordance with bankruptcy procedures, to determine whether it is in the IRS’s best interests. A court ought not impose on the IRS instead the ill-fitted offer-in-compromise procedures the IRS utilizes outside of bankruptcy.
D.
The IRS ought not be treated differently than any other creditor in enjoying freedom to choose how it will deal with debtors in bankruptcy. Consider the following example. A private mortgagee has a unit which administers a mortgage default workout program outside of bankruptcy, but bars that unit from processing workout proposals once bankruptcy intervenes, and requires that consideration of treatment of its mortgage once bankruptcy intervenes will be addressed by a special bankruptcy unit and in the context of its rights under the Bankruptcy Code, not solely under the criteria that exist outside of a bankruptcy case. Section 105(a) would be no basis for commanding the mortgagee to have its workout unit process a workout proposal under the criteria that exist outside bankruptcy, and it ought similarly not be employed against the IRS in the fashion the debtor seeks here.
This is reinforced by the character of the United States’ form of government. A bankruptcy court, as a part of the judicial branch of government, and in the absence of clear legislative authority to do so, ought to be loathe to interfere with the conduct in a bankruptcy case of a unit of the executive branch of government in protecting its interest in bankruptcy, particu *317 larly when that unit is charged with collecting the public fisc.
The courts that have employed § 105(a) against the IRS to command it to process Form 656 offers-in-compromise may have done so on a gut reaction that it is unfair discriminatory treatment for the IRS, as a governmental unit, to deprive a debtor of an opportunity the debtor would have outside of bankruptcy. However, unfair discriminatory treatment of a debtor is the topic that § 525(a) addresses, and as already demonstrated, § 525(a) does not bar the differing treatment the IRS accords debtors in and outside bankruptcy. Just as a private creditor ought not be straight-jacketed by a grant of relief of the kind that the debtor seeks here, the IRS ought not be either.
V
For the foregoing reasons, the court will enter a judgment dismissing this adversary proceeding on the merits.
[Signed above.]
Notes
. For the sake of brevity, the court incorporates by reference the Stoltz opinion’s discussion of the ordinary meaning of the word "grant.”
. However, it is debatable (as discussed in the dissenting opinion) whether the lease was a grant similar to a "license, permit, charter, [or] franchise” as required by § 525(a).
Stoltz,
. 28 U.S.C. § 1651(a) provides:
The Supreme Court and all courts established by Act of Congress may issue all writs necessary or appropriate in aid of their respective jurisdictions and agreeable to the usages and principles of law.
.
See also Carlson v. United States (In re Carlson),
.
See also Garden State,
. Indeed, the same district judge who wrote the decision in
Garden State
appears to have retreated from his dictum because he later observed that what he said in
Garden State
“was said by way of hope or expectation that ... the comments might induce both taxpayers and I.R.S. to undertake good faith negotiations for resolution of any disagreement
"Pseudonym Taxpayer" v. Miller,
. The Revenue Procedure’s § 5 ("When an Offer Becomes Pending and Return of Offers”) addresses what offers to compromise tax liabilities are nonprocessable. Section 5.01 of the Revenue Procedure provides that one of the minimum requirements making an offer-in-compromise processible is that "the taxpayer is not in bankruptcy.” In turn, § 5.03 provides that an offer not meeting this or other minimum requirements is not pro-cessible.
. To explain in greater detail, § 7122(c)(1) requires the Secretary to "prescribe guidelines for [IRS personnel] to determine whether an offer-in-compromise is adequate and should be accepted to resolve a dispute.” In turn, § 7122(c)(2)(A) requires that "[i]n prescribing guidelines ..., the Secretary shall develop and publish schedules of national and local allowances designed to provide that taxpayers entering into a compromise have an adequate means to provide for basic living expenses.” Then, § 7122(c)(2)(B) requires that the Secretary’s guidelines must “provide that [IRS personnel] shall determine, on the basis of the facts and circumstances of each taxpayer, whether the use of the schedules published under subparagraph (A) is appropriate and shall not use the schedules to the extent such use would result in the taxpayer not having adequate means to provide for basic living expenses.” [Emphasis added.]
. If the IRS accepts a debtor's proposed plan which proposes less than full payment of the IRS's claims, and the plan is confirmed, the result is a compromise for which the authority to compromise is § 7122(a). However, the plan is not an offer-in-compromise because a plan becomes a binding compromise through the plan confirmation process, not through the IRS’s having accepted the plan. It would not make sense, given the time limits for objecting to plans, to treat a plan itself as an offer-in-compromise with the delays that would arise from administrative review and administrative appeal under § 7122(d). The issue is an academic one here because the IRS has referred the debtor's plan to the Department of Justice for objection, thus depriving the IRS of any further ability to act under § 7122(a).
. Section 4462(i)(4) is particularly instructive because it requires the Secretary to prescribe regulations, not guidelines, governing settlements of certain excise tax claims.
. The IRS also negotiates treatment of its claims in the context of other specialized aspects of bankruptcy such as a debtor's requests under 11 U.S.C. § 363 to use cash collateral or to sell IRS collateral free and clear of liens.
. The bankruptcy courts require debtors-in-possession to file operating reports in a chapter 11 case in part to allow interested parties to assay the feasibility of a proposed plan. To obtain confirmation of a plan, the debtor generally must file a disclosure statement under 11 U.S.C. § 1125 which provides information which permits creditors to make informed judgments regarding voting on the plan.
.Under 11 U.S.C. § 1129(a)(9)(C), the IRS can choose to agree or not agree to the treatment of its allowed claims entitled to priority under 11 U.S.C. § 507(a)(8). Under 11 U.S.C. § 1126, the IRS can vote to accept the plan or to reject the plan with respect to its non-priority tax claims (that is, any claims in a class of allowed secured claims or a class of allowed unsecured claims not entitled to priority). The IRS can also elect, as occurred here, to request the Department of Justice to object under F.R. Bankr.P. 3020(b) to the debtor's plan.
. In Grupo Mexicano, the Court held that the equity jurisdiction conferred on federal courts does not empower a court to freeze assets for the benefit of a creditor.
. The strongest case for arguing that such a power exists is when the parties have appeared through counsel in the case and the order is directed to the attorneys as officers of the court.
