The district court dismissed this suit for a refund of federal income tax because the taxpayer had failed to file a timely claim with the Internal Revenue Service. See
The plaintiffs, affiliated insurance companies that file a joint return and that the parties refer to as “BCS,” entered into a contract with another insurance company in 1981. The contract granted to BCS, for three years, certain rights in the other company’s insurance policies in exchange- for “ceding commissions,” on which see
Colonial American Life Ins. Co. v. Commissioner,
BCS deducted the commissions in their entirety on its 1981 return. An IRS agent named Peterson audited the return and told BCS it would have to spread the deduction over the three-year life of the contract. The audit was conducted shortly before September 16, 1985, which was the date on which BCS, having received an extension of time within which to file its return for 1984, filed it. The return claimed no deduction for the commissions because BCS considered itself entitled to deduct them in full on its 1981 return.
Peterson completed the audit and gave BCS a copy of the audit report (dated September 26, 1985) that he had made for his superiors, repeating what he had told the company. BCS appealed to the IRS’s appeals office. In a “report transmittal” to the appeals office that BCS was not shown, Peterson stated that because BCS’s contract with the other insurer had terminated in 1984, “any costs not previously amortized would be allowable as a current deduction,” that is, in 1984.
When the case landed in the appeals office, the appeals officer assigned to the case and representatives of BCS began discussing the possibility of settling the dispute. Settlement negotiations dragged on for years. Not until March of 1988 did a settlement become final. The settlement was generally favorable to BCS, permitting it to deduct 70 percent of the commissions on its 1981 return. But 70 percent is not 100 percent; the settlement required that the other 30 percent be spread over the life of the contract, implying that a portion of the commissions could be deducted only in 1984. But in its 1984 return, as we said, BCS claimed no deduction for them. None of the settlement documents, though they include a claim by BCS for a refund relating to an earlier year (1982), contains a claim for a refund for 1984, and none of the IRS agents involved in the settlement negotiations advised BCS’s representatives that it was entitled to a refund for 1984. Not until June 20, 1989, some fifteen months after the settlement had become final—and almost four years after BCS had filed its 1984 return—did BCS file a claim for a refund of the more than $800,000 in federal income tax that it would not have paid on that return had it deducted in 1984 the por
The Internal Revenue Code provides that no suit for a tax refund may be maintained until a claim for a refund has been filed with the IRS in accordance with the applicable Treasury regulations. 26 U.S.C. § 7422(a). The Code further provides that the claim must be filed (with an immaterial exception) no later than three years after the filing of the return pursuant to which the taxes were paid that the taxpayer is trying to get back. 26 U.S.C. § 6511(a). A Treasury regulation requires that the claim set forth its grounds “in detail,” along with “facts sufficient to apprise the [IRS] of the [claim’s] exact basis,” and that “the statement of the grounds and facts ... be verified.” 26 C.F.R. § 301.6402-2(b)(l). The regulation goes on to provide that “a claim which does not comply with this paragraph will not be considered for any purpose as a claim for refund.” Despite this last sentence the courts have, with the IRS’s reluctant acquiescence, occasionally allowed a “claim” that does not satisfy all the requirements of the regulation to arrest the running of the three-year period.
Commissioner v. Lundy,
— U.S. -, -,
When a statute of limitations establishes a deadline for filing a suit in court as distinct from an administrative claim, a technical defect in the pleading that commences the suit and by doing so arrests the running of the statute of limitations is unlikely to be fatal. A complaint afflicted with merely formal defects can ordinarily be amended to correct them with relation back to the date of the original filing of the suit. Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(c);
Woods v. Indiana University-Purdue University,
But so construed the informal-claim doctrine cannot help BCS. For the company did not file within the statutory three-year period a claim for a refund that was deficient merely in one or two of the technical requirements imposed by the Treasury regulation. It filed nothing except a set of claims, incident to the settlement, that did not mention 1984. A reader of the settlement papers might well infer that BCS would be able to claim a refund for that year. But to claim a refund for 1981 is not to claim a refund for 1984, even if the logic underlying the 1981 claim would suggest to a person knowledgeable about tax law and the affairs of the
But we cannot stop with these observations, for there is more to the informal-claim doctrine than forgiveness of purely technical defects. The doctrine is also one of waiver. What counts as a claim is specified not in the Code itself but in the Treasury regulation; and courts say that the Treasury, through its delegate the IRS, can waive the regulation.
Tucker v. Alexander,
This rationale is in considerable tension with the principle that while the executive branch can change an executive-branch regulation, it is bound by it until it is changed.
United States v. Nixon,
Despite the tensions between the informal-claim doctrine, when interpreted as a doctrine of waiver or estoppel rather than merely as one of forgiveness of technical deficiencies, and other principles of law, the Supreme Court has never retracted its approval of the doctrine, and we therefore consider ourselves bound to follow it.
Khan v. State Oil Co.,
BCS filed its 1984 return in 1985, and, as there is no suggestion that the delay was blameworthy, the statute of limitations for filing a claim for a refund expired in 1988. Suppose the IRS had not completed its audit of BCS’s 1981 return until 1990—five years after BCS had filed its 1984 return. On these assumptions, BCS would not have known that it had a claim for a refund in 1984 until the statute of limitations for filing such a claim had run. Could it file a conditional claim of refund before the completion of the audit and any ensuing settlement negotiations? It could,
United States v. Commercial National Bank, supra,
A large business firm represented by sophisticated lawyers and accountants, BCS should have had no difficulty filing a timely claim. The firm does not explain why it took more than a year to file the claim after the settlement became final. It is reduced to arguing that since the IRS knew by the time of the settlement in 1988 that the company was entitled to a tax refund for 1984—in-deed, this was Agent Peterson’s position as early as 1986—the essential purpose of requiring a claim for a refund, that of alerting the IRS to the fact that the taxpayer has overpaid his taxes, has been fulfilled. But it would be an extraordinary inroad into statutes of limitations to hold that the running of a limitations period stopped as soon as the defendant realized that he was a
potential
defendant. Suppose
B
carelessly knocks over A’s precious Ming vase, shattering it into a thousand pieces. A scowls but says nothing.
B
knows the value of the vase, knows that he was negligent in knocking it
The government urges us to hold that the doctrine is never satisfied when the only written evidence of a potential claim is an internal government document. This position cannot be sustained either. Suppose the taxpayer makes a detailed and unequivocal oral claim to an IRS agent who writes it down verbatim and without showing it to the taxpayer files it as a claim for a refund. That would be a strong case for the application of the doctrine. There is a written claim, it contains all the required information, and all that is missing is the taxpayer’s signature. But we agree that it is a rare case in which the doctrine can be successfully invoked when the only document is internal to the government; and this is not that rare case, for there was no oral claim by the taxpayer.
Although federal tax law is dominated by an intricate web of highly detailed statutory provisions and Treasury regulations, there are some important judge-made doctrines of tax law, such as the “substance over form” doctrine that we have discussed in
Yosha v. Commissioner,
Affirmed.
