This case is about two taxpayers’ Offer in Compromise (OIC), which is a contract between a taxpayer and the Internal Revenue Service in which the IRS agrees to accept an amount different from what the taxpayer owes in taxes. Specifically, the case is about whether the OIC permits the taxpayers to deduct amounts that they paid under a separate agreement that they had with the IRS. The taxpayers deducted the amount. The IRS objected, on the grounds that the deduction violated the terms of the OIC. The district court agreed with the IRS and. granted the IRS’s motion for summary judgment. We also agree with the IRS, and thus affirm.
To explain our reasoning, we divide this opinion in three parts. In Part I, we detail the facts. In part II, we apply the law — both jurisdictional and contract law — to these facts. In part III, we briefly conclude.
I. '
The taxpayers are Alan Begner and his wife, Cory Begner. They owed three types of back taxes: (1) employment taxes from 1984-1990; (2) unemployment taxes from 1983-1991; and (3) income taxes from 1984-1987.
The Begners could not pay these back taxes and did not want to file for bankruptcy, so they each sought an OIC by submitting Form 656 to the IRS under 26
To release the Begners from their tax liability, the IRS wanted more than just the OIC: as a form of additional consideration, the IRS required the Begners to sign a Collateral Agreements. 2 The Agreement required that in addition to the $100,000 and $30,000, the Begners would “pay out of annual income for the years 1997 to 2001” in the following amounts:
(a) Nothing on the first $144,000.00 of annual income[;]
(b) 30% of annual income more than $144,000.00 and not more than $154,000.00[;]
(c) 50% of annual income more than $154,001.00 and not more than $164,000.00[; and]
(d) 70% of annual income more than $164,001.00[.]
The Begners agreed. The lurking discrepancy in the Begners’ OIC resulted from the Collateral Agreement’s definition of “annual income”:
[T]he term annual income ... means adjusted gross income as defined in section 62 of the Internal Revenue Code (except losses from sales or exchanges of property shall not be allowed), plus all nontaxable income and profits or gains from any source whatsoever (including the fair market value of gifts, bequests, devises and inheritances), minus (a) the Federal income tax paid for the year for which annual income is being computed, and (b) any payment made under the terms of the offer in compromise (Form 656), as shown in item 2, for the year in which such payment is made.
(Emphasis added). To put it simply, the Collateral Agreement referred to “any payment made under” the OIC “as shown in item 2,” but the Begners’ item 2 was their social security numbers. This was a mistake, but one that no one noticed at the time the Begners signed the Collateral Agreement.
For the next few years, the Begners paid amounts that they thought were required by their Collateral Agreement. The district court described these years:
In tax year 1997, plaintiffs reported on their income tax return an adjusted gross income (AGI) of $225,764.00, and paid income tax of $56,628.00. Under the collateral agreement, plaintiffs reported their “annual income” as $169,136.00 (adjusted gross income minus income tax paid). This calculation resulted in a collateral agreement payment of $11,595.00.
For tax year 1998, plaintiffs reported on their income tax return an AGI of $278,622.00, and paid income tax of $70,534.00. Under the collateral agreement, plaintiffs reported their “annual income” as $196,493.00. Plaintiffs reached this amount by deducting from their AGI income tax paid ($70,534.00)and the collateral agreement payment made the previous year ($11,595.00). This calculation led to a collateral agreement payment of $30,745.00.
For tax year 1999, plaintiff computed their “annual income” in a similar fashion. On their income tax return, plaintiffs reported an AGI of $272,629.00, and paid tax of $63,158.00. Plaintiffs calculated their “annual income” of $178,726.00 by subtracting from their AGI both the amount of income tax paid ($63,158.00) and the collateral agreement payment from the previous year ($30,745.00), resulting in a collateral agreement payment of $18,309.00.
Begner v. United States,
No. Civ. A.1:02CV1702GET,
After Cory sent the IRS a letter requesting hardship relief for an illness from which she suffered, the IRS discovered the discrepancy concerning item 2. In a letter to the Begners, the IRS wrote, “you cannot deduct payments made, in prior years, according to the Future Income Collateral Agreement, against Adjusted Gross Income.” The IRS recomputed the Begners’ liability to determine that they should have paid an additional $31,884.84. The IRS then wrote that the Begners were in default, and thus needed to pay the $31,844.84 if they wanted “to keep [their] Offers in force.” The Begners acquiesced, paying the IRS $31,844.84.
The Begners then filed an action to recover the $31,844.84 (plus interest) under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1340 and 1346.
3
The Beg-ners and the IRS filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The district court rejected the IRS’s argument that the court did not have jurisdiction. But it then granted the IRS’s motion for summary judgment, holding that the Begners “incorrectly deducted their past collateral agreement payments from their AGI when computing their ‘annual income’ under the term of their compromise with the IRS.”
Begner,
II.
“[W]e review a district court’s grant of a motion of summary judgment de novo.”
Cuvillier v. Rockdale County,
There are two issues on appeal: (1) whether the district court had jurisdiction to hear the case, and (2) whether the terms of the Begners’ OIC and Collateral Agreement permit them to deduct their previous year’s Collateral Agreement payments. Like the district court, we answer the first question in the affirmative and the second question in the negative.
A.
There are two statutory players in determining jurisdiction in the instant case: the Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1491(a)(1),
The IRS bases its argument on the Tucker Act, which provides that “[t]he United States Court of Federal Claims shall have jurisdiction to render judgment upon any claim against the United States founded ... upon any express or implied contract with the United States.” 28 U.S.C. § 1491(a)(1). Under the Tucker Act, the Court of Federal Claims has exclusive jurisdiction for contracts in excess of $10,000.
Friedman v. United States,
Unlike the IRS’s focus on the Tucker Act, the Begners focus on section 1346(a)(1), the tax-refund statute. The Begners rely on section 1346(a)(1) because without it, the United States, as a sovereign, could not be sued.
F.D.I.C. v. Meyer,
The jurisdiction issue is thus simple: are the Begners and the district court correct that this is a tax-refund case under section 1346(a)(1), or is it a contract case under the Tucker Act? If it’s the former, we have jurisdiction; if it is the latter, we do not.
In addressing this issue, courts look past the form of the action and determine whether the claim is, “at its essence,” a contract or a tax-refund case.
Megapulse, Inc. v. Lewis,
We must determine whether the Beg-ners’ claim is at its essence a contract or a
Any civil action against the United States for recovery of any internal-revenue tax alleged to have been erroneously or illegally assessed or collected, or any penalty claimed to have been collected without authority or any sum alleged to have been excessive or in any manner wrongfully collected under the internal-revenue laws ....
28 U.S.C. § 1346(a)(1);
see also United States v. Williams,
If we rely on the plain language of section 1346(a)(1), this case is easy. The Beg-ners deducted their Collateral Agreement payments from the previous year when computing their current Collateral Agreement liability. The IRS said that this violated the terms of its agreement with the Begners, and it determined the full amount that the Begners should have paid. The IRS said that if the Begners did not pay this full amount (i.e., the $31,844.84), they would default on their OIC. The Begners paid, and then filed an action seeking to recover the $31,844.84 (plus im" terest). Reducing the above facts to their essence, here is what happened: the Beg-ners deducted amounts from their payments to the IRS that the IRS thought the Begners could not deduct, the IRS collected those amounts from the Begners, and the Begners consequently sued the IRS for a refund. The broad, plain language of section 1346(a)(1) encompasses this scenario.
No case is directly on point, but there are several cases that are sufficiently similar to be useful. The most important case, and the one on which the district court relied, is
Roberts v. United States,
Another useful case is
Wilkens v. United States,
No. 03-Civ.-1837,
In this case, as in Roberts, the true nature of the suit is not contractual. While [taxpayers] dispute the amount owed ... under the Offers in Compromise, the Offers in Compromise reflect an agreement concerning monies ultimately due and owing as a result of the internal revenue laws.
Id.
at *3,
These same principles apply here. True, the dispute is about how the OIC defines “annual income.” In computing their Collateral Agreement payments for 1998 and 1999, the Begners deducted the Collateral Agreement payments they made in the previous years. That this case is a dispute about contract interpretation, however, “does not negate the fact that the monies at issues were paid pursuant to the internal-revenue laws.”
Roberts,
The IRS cannot rebut this plain reading. It tries by making several iterations of the same argument: because the Begners’ claims are based on the terms of their OIC and Collateral Agreement with the IRS, and because contract law governs, this case is at its essence a contract case. As stated above, however, that the case turns on an interpretation of a contract does not take it out of the reach of section 1346(a)(1). As such, we have jurisdiction to hear this case.
B.
An OIC is a contract between a taxpayer and the IRS in which the IRS agrees to accept a payment different from what the taxpayer owes. Traditional rules of contract law apply to an OIC.
United States v. Lane,
Federal courts use federal common law to evaluate government contracts.
Falls Riverway Realty v. City of Niagara Falls,
Under Georgia law, courts examine a contract in its entirety in order to interpret any part there of. Ga.Code Ann. § 13-2-2(4). Specifically, courts follow a three-step process in examining contracts:
At least initially, construction is a matter of law for the court. First, the trial court must decide whether the language is clear and unambiguous. If it is, the court simply enforces the contract according to its clear terms; the contract alone is looked to for its meaning. Next, if the contract is ambiguous in some respect, the court must apply the rules of contract construction to resolve the ambiguity. Finally, if the ambiguity remains after applying the rules of construction, the issue of what the ambiguous language means and what the parties intended must be resolved by [the trier of fact],
Eudy v. Universal Wrestling Corp.,
To move beyond the first step, we must decide that the contract is ambiguous. Whether or not a contract is ambiguous is a question of law for the court. Ga.Code Ann. § 13-2-1;
Techwerks v. Retail Tech. Corp.,
Here, we can halt our analysis after the first step because the contract (i.e., the OIC and Collateral Agreement) is unambiguous: neither the plain meaning of the OIC nor. the Collateral Agreement permit the Begners to deduct past Collateral Agreement payments.
Undeterred ' by the' contract’s plain meaning, the Begners search for ambiguity, arguing that the Collateral Agreement’s (Form 2261) definition of “annual income” renders the OIC and Collateral Agreement ambiguous. The Collateral Agreement defines “annual income,” in part as “any payment made under’the terms of the offer in compromise (Form 656), as shown in item 2, for the year in which such payment is made.” As stated above, because the IRS used an older version of Form 2261, it incorrectly refer
Although the IRS’ inadvertent use of an older Form 656 creates confusion, that confusion does not rise to the level of ambiguity — much less suffice to allow the Begners to deduct past Collateral Agreement payments from their annual income. Despite the item-number mix-up, the OIC and Collateral Agreement in their entirety indicate that only the lump-sum payment listed on Form 656 is a permissible deduction under part (b) of Form 2261. The OIC payment can only be deducted under part (b) of Form 2261 if it is paid in the same year as the first Collateral Agreement payment. Because the Begners’ first Collateral Agreement payment was due in 1998 for the year 1997, they could not deduct the OIC amount of $130,000 they paid in 1996 from their annual income. As the Collateral Agreement began the year after the IRS accepted the Begners’ OIC payment, the $130,000 does not fall within permissible deductions under part (b) of Form 2261.
Resolute in their search for ambiguity, the Begners argue that because the IRS prevented the $130,000 payment deduction, part (b) must be interpreted to include the deduction of Collateral Agreement payments. It does not follow that the Beg-ners — prohibited from deducting the OIC amount explicitly permitted under part (b) of Form 2261 by timing issues — can deduct an alternative amount not specified in any portion of the contract. Form 656 only shows the amount of the lump-sum OIC payment of $130,000 and does not list any of the Collateral Agreement payments. Because part (b) specifies that only payments on Form 656 can be deducted for the purposes of calculating annual income, the lump-sum OIC payment is the only permissible deduction.
So despite the Begners’s search for ambiguity, there is none. We could end the opinion here, and it would be complete. Nevertheless, there is one nagging question: if the use of the older version of Form 2261 that mistakenly referenced item 2 instead of item 5 on Form 656 is not ambiguous, then what is it? Stated more simply: if we can not call the mistake an ambiguity, what do we call it?
Fortunately, the Georgia Supreme Court answered this question in
Benedict v. Snead,
Here, the parties contracted with the clear intent of settling the Begners’ past-due tax liabilities. The use of an older version of the Form 2261 was not a sufficient error to defeat this intent. Form 2261 references an item line in Form 656 that permits the illogical deduction of a social security number. This reference does not make sense under Form 2261’s definition of “annual income.” Part (b) of Form 2261 is meant to reference a number listed in Form 656 that could permissibly be deducted in a calculation of annual income like the lump-sum OIC payment made by the. Begners. Therefore, Form 2261’s reference to the Begners’ social security numbers is a clerical error because it cannot be used to calculate an annual income upon which to base future Collateral Agreement payments.
For an example of the difference between a clerical error and an error that creates ambiguity, consider
United States v. Hodgekins,
In contrast to Hodgekins and its intent-modifying mistake, the mistake in this case (i.e., the mis-reference to item 2 instead of item 5) is a mere clerical error that is not sufficiently misleading so as to create ambiguity. Because this clerical error found does not affect the legality of the contract or the relationship between the parties, it can be corrected without parol evidence or contract reformation.
In sum, despite the Begners search for ambiguity, we are left with an unambiguous contract that does not permit the Beg-ners to deduct their Collateral Agreement payments. Accordingly, we reject the Begners’ effort to reread the contract to reflect, an unexpressed term permitting their deduction of previous Collateral Agreement payments because a term cannot be read into a contract where there is no indication that it should be there.
Hempel v. United States,
III.
For the reasons stated above, this Court concludes that the district court did not err in granting the IRS’s motion for summary judgment.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Although Alan and Cory Begner submitted separate OIC's, because they did so on identical forms, we treat their two OIC's as one OIC.
. Although Alan and Cory Begner signed separate Collateral Agreements, because they did so on identical forms, we treat their two Collateral Agreements as one Collateral Agreement.
. We discuss section 1346 in Part II.A. Section 1340 provides that "[t]he district courts shall have original jurisdiction of any civil action arising under any Act of Congress providing for internal revenue, or revenue from imports or tonnage except matters within the jurisdiction of the Court of International Trade.” We do not focus on section 1340 because it, unlike section 1346, does not explicitly waive sovereign immunity.
. The Tucker Act has a sibling, known as the Little Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1346(a)(2), which "grants concurrent jurisdiction to both U.S. district courts and the Court of Federal Claims for contractual claims against the United States not exceeding $10,000."
Roberts v. United States,
