This is an appeal from a ruling of the United States Tax Court against appellants.
Dowell v. Commissioner,
The Government used the amended returns in its fraud investigation, and also used them to convict taxpayers of willfully filing fraudulent returns for 1963-1966.
United States v. Dowell,
The Government apparently also used the amended returns to determine additional taxes due for all four years plus penalties and interest. Taxpayers received a notice of deficiency issued December 11, 1974, and filed a petition in the Tax Court which sought a refund and a bar against further assessments.
The taxpayers’ position is that the non-fraudulent amended returns satisfied the requirements of 26 U.S.C. § 6501(a), and accordingly started the three-year period of *1265 limitation. Thus they assert that the Government failed to assess within the three-year period. The Tax Court held in substance that there was no limitation period for assessment of the 1963-1966 taxes because the original returns were fraudulent, and the matter was governed only by § 6501(c)(1) which entitled the Government to assess tax “at any time.” Thus it held that the taxpayers could not start the period provided in § 6501(a). For the reasons that follow we must disagree with the ruling of the Tax Court.
The general statute of limitations, 26 U.S.C. § 6501(a), provides “any tax imposed by this title shall be assessed within 3 years after the return was filed.” However, it is often difficult to determine whether certain filings are “returns.” The Supreme Court in
Zellerbach Paper Co. v. Helvering,
“Perfect accuracy or completeness is not necessary to rescue a return from nullity, if it purports to be a return, is sworn to as such . . . , and evinces an honest and genuine endeavor to satisfy the law. This is so though at the time of filing the omissions or inaccuracies are such as to make amendment necessary.”
Thus once the taxpayer has evinced an honest and genuine effort to satisfy the law by filing such a return, the § 6501(a) period begins to run.
In
John D. Alkire Inv. Co. v. Nicholas,
In
Bennett v. Commissioner,
“For, once a nonfraudulent return is filed, putting the Commissioner on notice of a taxpayer’s receipts and deductions, there can be no policy in favor of permitting assessment thereafter at any time without limitation. We think that the statute of limitations begins to run with the filing of such returns.”
This reasoning is equally compelling in this case. Furthermore, the Internal Revenue Service adopted the
Bennett
holding in Rev.Rul. 79-178, 1979-
The question ^would seem to be whether taxpayers have filed a return that meets the requirements of § 6501(a) and Zellerbach, not whether the return was “original” or “amended.” The fraudulent returns filed in the first instance here were really not “returns” within the meaning of § 6501(a) or Zellerbach. They started no statute of limitations; they simply entitled the Government to make its assessment “at any time” as provided in § 6501(c)(1). This “at any time” does not mean regardless of what may take place. It is not, as the Government argues, some sort of period of limitation or “statute of limitations.” We are thus not concerned with an act which stops the running of a period of limitations. We are concerned instead with something which starts the period. Section 6501(c) represents the antithesis of a limitations *1266 concept, and in the absence of anything else the commencement of any period of repose for fraudulent or evasive “returns” is put in limbo.
The purpose of § 6501(c) is to provide the Government time to unearth information the taxpayer did not furnish and to file an assessment. Once the Government has the information from a
Zellerbach
filing or as in
Alkire
or as said in
Bennett,
“there can be no policy in favor of permitting assessment thereafter at any time without limitation.” Thus the Government’s reliance on cases such as
Kaltreider Construction, Inc. v. United States,
The original returns in the case before us are in many respects comparable to those in
John D. Alkire Inv. Co. v. Nicholas,
“The returns not only failed to disclose requisite information but were misleading and calculated to prevent discovery of material facts. Returns of that kind are not effective to start the period of limitation running.”
The amended returns were held to be sufficient to start the period of limitations. We consider that the Alkire decision is not necessarily controlling, but is sufficiently similar to indicate the conclusion to be reached in this appeal.
The position of the Government also fails to recognize that §§ 6501(c)(1) and 6501(c)(3) are in
pari materia
and accordingly should be construed consistently with one another. The Revenue Act of 1921 extended the unlimited assessment period to include failure-to-file situations, and also included this in the same subsection with fraudulent filings.
See
10
J. Mertens, The Law of Federal Income Taxation
§§ 57.09 and 57.10 (1976). These two situations were so included in the same subsection through the Internal Revenue Code of 1939, § 276(a).
See Colony, Inc. v. Commissioner,
The Government raises the additional argument that the statute governing failure to file a return, § 6501(c)(3), would be rendered superfluous by taxpayers’ reading of § 6501(c)(1) (fraudulent filing). This argument is not persuasive, and it has carried little weight through the decades of litigation on this point. It is a better reading of § 6501 to conclude that Congress foresaw the need for express exceptions to the general statute of limitations in at least two situations — fraudulent filing and failure to file. The fraud penalties and criminal prosecution take care of the fraud problem. The “at any time” assessment is not a further penalty. Once the taxpayer has filed a Zellerbach-Alkire return the “at any time” reason is removed, and the matter proceeds as in any tax case. No irrevocable forfeiture of the benefits of limitation periods is contemplated as an additional punishment or penalty. That the “case” may be in one division of the IRS or in another division can make no difference.
The Government raises two subsidiary issues. It argues taxpayers’ amended returns for 1963 and 1964 were unsigned, and it contends that taxpayers consented to an extension of the limitations period for 1966. We find no evidence that an unconditional consent to the extension of the limitation period was made. As to the unsigned returns, it is well-settled that as a general proposition an unsigned return does not start the statute of limitations period.
Kalb v. United States,
We find no merit to the contention that as to the original 1966 return the 25% provision applied to extend the limitation period. Section 6501(e) was not applicable thereto.
The judgment of the Tax Court is REVERSED and the case is REMANDED.
