OPINION AND ORDER
Before the Court are several motions relating to plaintiffs’ claims that certain of the workers whose employment taxes are at issue in these cases were actually independent contractors, not employees. Defendant has moved in limine to preclude plaintiffs from asserting their independent contractor claims based principally on the doctrine of variance (docket entry 249, Jan. 15, 2010) (“Def.’s Mot.”). Plaintiffs have opposed defendant’s motion and cross-moved for partial summary judgment, seeking an order determining that the Court possesses jurisdiction to resolve the independent contractor issue (docket entries 311 & 312, May 6, 2010) (“Pis.’ Summ. J. Mot.”). Plaintiffs also seek an order that the IRS’s tax assessments in these eases do not warrant the ordinary “presumption of correctness,” which would mean that defendant would bear the burden of proof on its counterclaims to recover the remainder of the unpaid divisible tax assessments (docket entry 310, May 6, 2010) (“Pis.’ Burden Shift Mot.”). Plaintiffs’ motion also requests that the Court draw, as a sanction for the IRS’s loss or destruction of certain audit-related files, an adverse inference that the IRS considered and denied the independent contractor theory during its administrative review, thus precluding defendant’s variance argument. Id. at 20-31. Finally, plaintiffs have moved for leave to file a consolidated, amended and supplemental complaint that would add allegations about events taking place after the filing of the original complaints as well as allegations based upon information obtained during discovery, including allegations regarding the independent contractor issue (docket entries 302 & 303, Apr. 21, 2010) (“Pis.’ Supp. Compl. Mot.”). The Court heard oral argument on these motions on August 4, 2010. See Transcript of Oral Argument (docket entry 348, filed Aug. 16, 2010) (“Tr.”). For the reasons stated herein, defendant’s motion in limine is GRANTED and plaintiffs’ cross-motion for partial summary judgment is DENIED. Plaintiffs’ motion to shift the burden of proof is DENIED and their motion for a spoliation sanction is DENIED. Plaintiffs’ motion for leave to file a consolidated, amended and supplemental complaint is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART.
I. Background
Plaintiffs are entities that provided payroll services to various movie production compa
In determining the workers’ wage bases, plaintiffs first identified those workers who provided services through “personal services corporations” (“PSCs”). Draney Information Services Corp.’s (“DISC’s”) Response to IRS Information Document Request at 11 & n. 3 (Mar. 17, 1994) (“DISC’s IDR Resp.”), attached as Ex. 11 to Declaration of Fredrick C. Crombie (docket entry 249-1, Jan. 15, 2010, as supplemented by docket entry 327-1, June 23, 2010 and docket entry 336, June 25, 2010) (“Crombie Deck”); Pis.’ Proposed Findings ¶ 24. These PSCs, also known as “loan-out corporations,” are separate corporate entities “through which a [d]i-rector or major |s]tar receives his or her income.” Robert J. Koster, The Budget Booic for Film and Television 129 (2004), excerpts attached as Ex. 9 to Crombie Deck Plaintiffs treated the individuals who accepted income through PSCs as independent contractors and therefore paid no FICA or FUTA taxes on these individuals’ behalf. See DISC’S IDR Resp. at 11 & n. 3; Moul-try-Rand Dep. at 15.
In collecting fees from the production companies, however, plaintiffs generally charged the production companies “as a component of the bill, the FICA and FUTA taxes that would be due from the Lpjroduction [cjompa-nies if the [pjroduction [cjompanies were treated as the [production workers’] employers for federal employment tax purposes.” Id. at 163 (citing Joint Stipulation of Facts ¶ 20 (docket entry 38, Nov. 10, 2003), attached as Ex. 3 to Crombie Deck). Plaintiffs’ business model essentially depended on the profit — referred to as “breakage”— earned from the difference between (1) the employment taxes plaintiffs actually remitted based on the production workers being treated as plaintiffs’ employees and (2) the amount the production companies were billed by plaintiffs, considering the production workers as the production companies’ employees. See Deloitte & Touche, Business Review at 2 (1991), attached as Ex. 8 to Crombie Deck Plaintiffs’ business model therefore depended on the existence of production workers who earned their salaries as employees, not as independent contractors paid through a PSC.
A. Audit of Plaintiffs
1. Investigation and Technical Advice Memorandum (“TAM")
a. Identification of Issues
In 1992, the IRS audited whether plaintiffs were the non-PSC production workers’ employers for FICA and FUTA purposes. See Letter from Revenue Agent Gregory Peake to DISC (May 6, 1992), attached as Ex. 1 to Pis.’ Summ. J. Mot.; Peake Dep. at 10. The audit team recognized from the outset that the main legal issue was the one eventually decided in Cencast I, namely, whether the statutory or common-law employer is properly regarded as the employer for purposes of calculating the FICA and FUTA wage bases. DISC Inc. & Subsidiaries Employment Taxes Audit Plan at l(Oet. 14, 1993) (“Audit Plan”), attached as Ex. 13 to Crombie Deck; see also Cencast I,
After determining that the FICA and FUTA wage bases should be calculated relative to the common-law employer, the audit team concentrated on identifying which entities — plaintiffs or the production companies — were the common-law employers, not whether the workers were employees or independent contractors. After the audit team declined to pursue the employee status of PSC workers, “the status of the production workers as employees as opposed to employees of whom was simply no longer in play.” Shepherd Dep. at 193. Once a taxpayer files a return declaring that an individual is an employee (and thus subject to employment taxes), it would be unusual and administratively burdensome for the IRS to question that characterization. Reale Dep. at 172; see also Shepherd Dep. at 202-03 (“[I]f every time the Service were to conduct an employment tax examination ... it was to go in and try and make a de novo determination as to the worker’s status as an employee or independent contractor when the parties to the relationship have represented that that’s the relationship, ... the system would simply stop functioning.”).
b. TAM Request
Recognizing the complexity of the legal issues involved, the audit team decided to request a TAM from the OCC.
The TAM request was ultimately submitted to the OCC on October 24, 1997, seeking-advice on three issues:
Issue # 1. Who is the common law employer of the entertainment industry production worker employee (“PWE”)?
Issue # 2. Whether [the Payroll] Company is a § 3401(d)(1) employer of PWEs?
Issue # 3. Whether [the Payroll] Company, as a § 3401(d)(1) employer, can aggregate FICA and FUTA wages among the various Production companies?
See TAM Request at 1 (Oct. 24, 1997), attached as Ex. 30 to Pls.’ Summ. J. Mot. (footnote omitted).
Plaintiffs submitted a brief along with the TAM request “reserving] the right to assert that some or all of the PWEs are independent contractors rather than employees and, to that extent, [plaintiffs have] overpaid federal employment taxes.” Taxpayers’ Brief Regarding Request for Technical Advice at 8 n. 3 (Oct. 24, 1997), attached as Ex. 29 to Pls.’ Summ. J. Mot. Defendant believed this assertion was meant to emphasize the risks to the Government from concluding plaintiffs were not the common-law employers of the production workers, specifically, that there would be many more individuals claiming that they were independent contractors and thus not paying any employment taxes. See Shepherd Dep. at 124 (characterizing plaintiffs’ statement as “saber rattling that if you ... eliminate our business model and the way we conduct business then ... you’re going to have all these stray cats running around ... in the entertainment industry”); see also Tr. at 103-04.
2. Destruction and Loss of Documents
As part of its investigation, the audit team sent a detailed survey to production workers consisting of IRS Form SS-8, which is typically used to distinguish an employee from an independent contractor using 20 “common-law factors.” See Draft Survey (Feb. 18, 1994), attached as Ex. 11 to Pis.’ Summ. J. Mot. This 20-factor test is also used, however, to determine which entity is the common law employer. See e.g., Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co. v. Darden,
Documents were first lost in 1997 when Mr. Perrin’s car was stolen with his laptop in the trunk. Randy Perrin Deck ¶ 2 (Apr. 9, 2010) (“Perrin Deel”), attached as Ex. 34 to Defendant’s Opposition in Response to Plaintiffs’ March 23, 2010 Motion to Compel (docket entry 295, Apr. 9, 2010). While Mr. Perrin did not recall exactly which documents were on his laptop, he stated that “it likely included correspondence with DISC entities and their representatives, information document requests, and case memoran-da. There might also have been some email, but [he] did not use email very frequently in 1997, so these would have been limited.” Id. ¶ 3.
The second loss of documents occurred in June of 1998, when an intern inadvertently shredded documents in file cabinet drawers at the IRS regional office in El Segundo, California. See id. ¶ 4. Mr. Perrin never figured out how the intern obtained access to the locked file cabinet. Perrin Dep. at 192. Apparently Mr. Perrin’s supervisor instructed the intern to shred binders related to an entertainment seminar, but the intern shredded the wrong documents. See Memo from Randy W. Perrin to Ira Brown (May 20, 1999) (“May Shredding Memo”), attached as Ex. 7 to Pis.’ Burden Shift Mot. The destroyed material included, inter alia, information regarding the TAM request, survey
3. Adverse Finding and Assessments
In January 1998, Neil Shepherd, the OCC attorney drafting the TAM, concluded that the result would be adverse to plaintiffs. Pursuant to Revenue Procedure 97-2,
At the conference, plaintiffs again emphasized the increased administrative burden of an adverse finding and its effect upon their business model and the collection of employment taxes.
1. Taxpayer was not the common law employer of the workers performing services for the Opei’ating Companies.6 Rather, the Operating Companies were the employers.
2. Taxpayer was the employer under § 3401(d)(1) with respect to compensation paid by Taxpayer to the workers.
3. Taxpayer was not the employer for purposes of determining a worker’s wages under §§ 3121(a)(1) [FICA] and 3306(b)(1) [FUTA]. Rather, a separate wage base under §§ 3121(a)(1) [FICA] or 3306(b)(1) [FUTA] applied to the compensation paid to a worker for the services performed for each Operating Company.
TAM at 17, attached as Ex. 36 to Pis.’ Summ. J. Mot. Consistent with these findings, the IRS issued assessments to plaintiffs on February 14, 2001 for approximately $43.7 million in unpaid FUTA taxes and approximately $15.6 million in unpaid FICA taxes, plus interest and penalties. Pis.’ Proposed Findings ¶ 56; see IRS Assessments (Feb. 14, 2001), attached as Ex. 39 to Pls.’ Summ. J. Mot.
B. Administrative Claim for Refund
Plaintiffs paid a portion of these assessments
C. Request for Reconsideration of the TAM
Shortly thereafter, plaintiffs requested that the OCC reconsider the TAM. See Letter from Stuart E. Siegel, Arnold & Porter LLP, to Hon. B. John Williams, Chief Counsel, IRS (May 23, 2002) (“Reconsideration Letter”), attached as Ex. 43 to Pis.’ Summ. J. Mot; Shepherd Dep. at 254 — 76. Plaintiffs again pointed out the practical implications of the IRS’s position on plaintiffs’ business model and consequently on the IRS’s ability to collect payroll taxes with respect to individuals such as production workers. Reconsideration Letter at 2; Shepherd Dep. at 256. That is, if plaintiffs had to revise their business model, “the collection of federal income and employment taxes in the entertainment industry would be adversely impacted” because, inter alia, “[mjany of the individuals who provide services in the production of filmed entertainment material are, or would take the position that they are, independent contractors, not subject to federal income tax withholding and employment taxes.” Reconsideration Letter at 2.
The threat that without the business model under which plaintiffs operated, a significant number of workers would self-classify as independent contractors was taken into account by the IRS, but Mr. Shepherd, the principal author of the TAM, believed that “independent contractor argument would have been an act of self-destruction [by plaintiffs] given their business model, ... [ajnd it just wasn’t something that was considered viable, to the extent that it was considered at all.” Shepherd Dep. at 187-88; see also Tr. at 40. Eventually, OCC decided to “main-taint] the position that was taken in the” TAM, and OCC took no action on plaintiffs’ request for reconsideration. Shepherd Dep. at 282, 338; see also 30(b)(6) Dep. at 167.
D. Litigation and Identification of Relevant Issues
After the OCC declined to reconsider the TAM, plaintiffs filed suit in this court seeking a refund of the employment taxes paid, and the Government counterclaimed for the remaining unpaid assessments. In a 2004 Opinion and Order, the Court determined that the appropriate employer for calculation of the FICA and FUTA wage bases is the common-law employer. Cencast I,
*437 • Whether the computations of the FICA and FUTA taxes in issue erroneously included in the calculation of wages amounts that were paid under accountable plans, as defined by Treas. Reg § 1.62-2(c), or amounts otherwise not in-cludable in wages for purposes of the FICA and FUTA taxes in issue.
• If the amount of wages, for purposes of determining FICA and FUTA liabilities, is determined with respect to the common law employers of the workers, and if plaintiffs were not the common law employers, did the IRS, in computing taxable wages, misidentify some of the employers so as to treat, in some instances, a single employer of a worker as being-two or more employers.
Cencast I,
On August 25, 2008, the parties participated in a status conference with the Court to discuss the resolution of the remaining issues in the case. During this conference, counsel for plaintiffs stated that “there are certain classes of production workers who are independent contractors, and the Plaintiffs treated them, for purposes of withholding and reporting and remitting employment taxes, ... as employees_[IJf, indeed, they were independent contractors, the Plaintiffs would be entitled to a credit” for those workers’ FICA and FUTA taxes. Aug. 25, 2008 Status Conf. Tr. at 6 (docket entry 122, filed Sept. 10, 2008), attached as Ex. 16 to Crom-bie Decl. This was the first mention of plaintiffs’ independent contractor theory in this litigation, which, at that time, had been pending for approximately six years.
E. 2008 Seizure of Assets in Nevada and Motion to Amend and S'upplemeut Complaint
In December of 2008, the IRS served notices of levy on Wells Fargo Bank in Las Vegas, Nevada, seeking to collect money allegedly transferred by nine of the ten plaintiffs — excluding Cenex — to two affiliates of plaintiffs, DISC and WRLJ Maple Corp. (“WRLJ”). Pis.’ Supp. Compl. Mot. at 2. Pursuant to these notices of levy, Wells Fargo froze $3,206,407.63 in the bank account of DISC and $1,080,518.09 in the bank account of WRLJ, for a total of $4,286,925.72. Id.; Defendant’s Objections to Plaintiffs’ Motion for Leave to File an Amended and Supplemental Consolidated Complaint at 6 (docket entry 328, June 23, 2010) (“Def.’s Supp. Compl. Opp.”). Defendant asserts that the IRS “concluded that the interests of the United States were not adequately protected in that the funds were under a significant threat of dissipation by those transferees.” Def.’s Supp. Compl. Opp. at 7; see also Amended Answer ¶34, Draney Info. Servs. Corp. v. United States (“DISC Nevada Action”), 2:09-cv-0040-LDG (D.Nev. Mar. 27, 2009), attached as Ex. 69 to Crombie Decl.
After exhausting administrative remedies, DISC and WRLJ sued the IRS in the United States District Court for the District of Nevada pursuant to Internal Revenue Code § 7426(a), alleging, inter alia, that the IRS had wrongfully levied upon their property. Amended Complaint, DISC Nevada Action, 2:09-cv-0040-LDG (D.Nev. Feb. 13, 2009) (“Nevada Compl.”).
1. Proposed Supplementation of Plaintiffs’ Complaints
While the Nevada litigation was pending, plaintiffs filed protective claims with the IRS
2. Proposed Amendments to Plaintiffs’ Complaints
Plaintiffs also wish to amend their complaints, based upon information obtained in discovery, to include factual allegations regarding the IRS’s consideration of the independent contractor issue during the audit. For instance, plaintiffs allege that “during the examination, plaintiffs repeatedly stated orally and in writing that if the IRS maintained its position” that the production companies were the common-law employers, then “plaintiffs would seek refunds with respect to the independent contractors.” Id. ¶ 37. Plaintiffs therefore seek at this point to amend their complaints to allege that “the assessments erroneously failed to give plaintiffs credit for FUTA and FICA taxes paid in respect of workers who were actually not common-law employees of anyone (i.e. independent contractors).”
II. The Court Lacks Jurisdiction Over Plaintiffs’ Independent Contractor Theory
Defendant contends that the Court does not possess jurisdiction to hear plaintiffs’ independent contractor claims because plaintiffs never raised that theory in their administrative claims for refund. Def.’s Mot. at 22. Alternatively, defendant argues that the Court should not permit plaintiffs to raise the theory so late in the litigation.
Plaintiffs proffer five arguments in opposition to defendant’s motion: (1) their administrative refund claims implicitly included the independent contractor theory, Pis.’ Summ. J. Mot. at 23; (2) they are entitled to a setoff against defendant’s counterclaims, which they contend is not affected by the doctrine of variance, id. at 15; (3) either the informal claim exception or (4) the waiver exception to the variance doctrine permit the Court to consider the independent contractor theory, id. at 25; and (5) the Court should draw an adverse inference resulting from the destruction of documents. Pis.’ Burden Shift Mot. at 20. Plaintiffs characterize defendant’s argument that they waited too long to raise the independent contractor issue as “frivolous.” Pis.’ Summ. J. Mot. at 40.
A. The Variance Doctrine
The doctrine of variance had its origin in the Revenue Act of 1921. United. States v. Felt & Tarrant Mfg. Co.,
No suit or proceeding shall be maintained in any court for the recovery of any internal revenue tax ... until a claim for refund or credit has been duly filed with the Secretary, according to the provisions*439 of law in that regard, and the regidations of the Secretary established in pursuance thereof.
Id. (emphasis added). The implementing-regulation provides that a viable claim for refund “must set forth in detail each ground upon which a credit or refund is claimed and facts sufficient to apprise the Commissioner of the exact basis thereof.... A claim which does not comply with this paragraph will not be considered for any purpose as a claim for refund or credit.” Treas. Reg. § 301.6402-2(b)(1) (as amended in 1982).
The taxpayer is barred “from presenting claims in a tax refund suit that ‘substantially vary’ the legal theories and factual bases set forth in the tax refund claim presented to the IRS.” Lockheed Martin Corp. v. United States,
This court, therefore, lacks jurisdiction to consider complaints asserting arguments at variance with plaintiffs’ administrative claims. The parties joust over the appropriate form of motion to raise the variance issue. Pls.’ Summ. J. Mot. at 13; Def.’s Resp. to Proposed Findings at 1. Because the court lacks jurisdiction to hear the case if plaintiffs complaint varies from the administrative claim, Rule 12(b)(1) of the Rules of the Court of Federal Claims (“RCFC”) appears to be the proper vehicle.
B. The Variance Doctrine Bars Plaintiffs from Raising the Independent Contractor Theory Before This Court
1. Plaintiffs’ Complaints Are at Variance with Their Administrative Claims for Refund
Plaintiffs confess that their administrative claims for refund did “not mention the existence of independent contractors in haec ver-ba.” Pis.’ Summ. J. Mot. at 11. Plaintiffs nonetheless suggest that the independent contractor issue was “integral to” determining who was the eommonlaw employer. Id. at 23. Plaintiffs argue that their claims raised the question “which entity is the common-law employer,” and answering that inquiry entails the possibility that the answer is “no one.” To succeed on this issue, their claim had to fairly present the IRS with the question “which entity, if any, is the common-law employer.” Id.
Unfortunately for plaintiffs, the evidence does not support their position. Our system of taxation relies heavily on self-reporting. See, e.g., United States v. Rodgers,
Plaintiffs rely heavily on the fact that the 20-factor test used to identify which entity is the common-law employer is the same one used to identify whether an individual is an employee or independent contractor. Pis.’ Summ. J. Mot. at 32; Plaintiffs’ Reply in Support of Cross-Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on Subject Matter Jurisdiction at 15 (docket entry 344, July 26, 2010) (“Pls.’ Summ. J. Reply”); see also Darden,
The audit team was not asked to and did not investigate whether any production workers were actually independent contractors.
The independent contractor theory cannot, therefore, be said to be “fairly contained within the refund claim” and is barred by the variance doctrine. Blakley v. United States,
2. Plaintiffs Cannot Avoid the Bar of the Variance Doctrine by Labeling Their Independent Contractor Claims as a “Defensive Setoff”
As noted above, plaintiffs seek refunds of the divisible payments made, while defendant’s counterclaim asserts entitlement to the remainder of the tax assessments. Plaintiffs argue that they are entitled to a “defensive setoff’ that would reduce defendant’s recovery on its counterclaim to zero. Although this purported setoff has not been pled, plaintiffs argue that success on their independent contractor theory would justify such a defensive setoff and plaintiffs contend that such a defensive setoff would not be subject to the variance doctrine. Pis.’ Summ. J. Mot. at 15-16 (“This Court has declined to apply the variance doctrine to a taxpayer’s assertion of a ‘defensive setoff.’ ”). Because defendant’s counterclaim merely reasserts the position the IRS has maintained throughout the administrative process, plaintiffs’ position is incorrect, and the assertion of any defensive setoff does not alter the application of the variance doctrine.
The ordinary use of the term “set-off” in tax refund cases refers to the Government’s ability to reduce a taxpayer’s recovery on its refund claim by other amounts owed to the Government for the same tax year. See Dysart v. United States,
But when the Government’s counterclaim or offset does not raise a new issue, plaintiff cannot assert a “setoff’ otherwise barred by the variance doctrine. Kafka & Cavanagh § 16.03; see also I.R.M. § 34.5.2.4.2.2 (2009) (“When the Government raises new issues by way of setoff, the taxpayer may raise its own setoffs to defeat the Government’s setoffs. The taxpayer can only use its setoffs to defeat the Government’s setoff, and it cannot use its setoffs to increase the amount of its original claim for refund. A taxpayer is otherwise limited to arguing in his refund suit only the grounds listed in the original refund claim.”) (internal citation omitted); Consol. Edison Co. of N.Y. v. United States, No. 97-Civ-4366,
The Supreme Court’s decision in United States v. Dalm,
As in Dalm, administrative assertion of a claim is a jurisdictional prerequi
Plaintiffs may not take advantage of the divisible nature of employment taxes to insert an otherwise barred issue into this litigation. Plaintiffs observe that the Government may elect between counterclaiming for the remainder of the divisible assessment or pursuing a separate collection action in a district court, arguing that if the Government had not counterclaimed, plaintiffs would only be litigating regarding the few employees whose assessments were paid.
Plaintiffs were fully apprised of the IRS’s position and could have raised the independent contractor issue in their administrative claims for refund. Thus “it cannot be argued ‘that the IRS created any “substantial variance” from the initial [administrative] claims.’” Consol. Edison Co. of N.Y.,
3. Neither the Waiver Doctrine nor the Informal Claim Doctrine Permits the Court to Consider Plaintiffs’ Independent Contractor Claims
Plaintiffs next argue that two recognized exceptions to the variance doctrine permit them to raise the independent contractor theory in this action: the waiver doctrine and the informal claim doctrine. See Computer-vision,
a. Defendant Has Not Waived the Requirements of Treasury Regulation § 301.6402 — 2(b)(1)
The waiver doctrine is an exception to the requirement in Treasury Regulation § 301.6402 — 2(b)(1) that each claim be “set forth in detail.” See Angelus Milling, Co. v. Comm’r,
Plaintiffs ask that the Court draw an adverse inference that the documents destroyed by the IRS would have shown that the IRS considered and made a determination on the independent contractor issue. Pis.’ Burden Shift Mot. at 21-22; Reply in Support of Plaintiffs’ Motion to Shift Burden and for a Spoliation Sanction at 9 (docket entry 342, July 23, 2010) (“Pis.’ Burden Shift Reply”). Based solely upon this inference, the plaintiffs would have the Court find that they fall within the waiver exception to the specificity requirement. Pis.’ Burden Shift Reply at 9.
An adverse inference based upon the destruction of evidence is only appropriate when:
(1) the party having control over the evidence had an obligation to preserve it at the time it was destroyed; (2) the records were destroyed with a culpable state of mind; and (3) the destroyed evidence was relevant to the party’s claim or defense such that a reasonable trier of fact could find that it would support the claim or defense.
Jandreau v. Nicholson,
Under any applicable test, the level of culpability is relevant to the propriety of a sanction. See, e.g., Roadway Express, Inc. v. Piper,
The Court assumes, without deciding, that defendant was obliged to preserve evidence when Mr. Perrin’s laptop was stolen.
Additional evidence further counsels against the imposition of a sanction. Plaintiffs made an extensive request pursuant to the Freedom of Information Act at the end of 1995, and received a significant number of documents from the agency’s files. Def.’s Opposition in Response to Plaintiffs’ March 23, 2010 Motion to Compel at 10 & Exs. 8,11. This production likely contained copies of some of the documents that were destroyed. In addition, copies of some of the files that were destroyed remained in the files of the district office. See June Shredding Memo. The documents that do exist indicate that the audit team was not asked to examine the independent contractor theory as a ground for refund and therefore conducted no such investigation. Any adverse inference “completely vanishes upon the introduction of evidence sufficient to support a finding of the nonexistence of the presumed fact.” A.C. Ankerman Co. v. R.L. Chaides Constr. Co.,
ii. Defendant Has Not in Fact Waived the Specificity Requirement
To prevail on the waiver argument, plaintiffs must present “unmistakable” evidence that they notified the IRS they were seeking a refund on the independent contractor theory and that the IRS actually considered and denied that claim. See Pls.’ Summ. J. Mot. at 25; Angelus Milling, Co.,
First, plaintiffs observe that the handwritten notes of Ms. Moultry-Rand, an employment tax specialist for the audit team, dia-gramed the “potential enforcement issues” involved in the audit and wrote under the “employment taxes” category, “determine if worker qualifies as an employee.” Notes of Katrina Moultry-Rand at 1 (Sept. 16, 1993), attached as Ex. 7 to Pis.’ Summ. J. Mot. Second, in a submission to the IRS plaintiffs noted that “DISC [p]aid [t]axes [wjith [r]e-spect [t]o [rjemuneration of [wjorkers [w]ho Lajre [a]etually [¡Independent [cjontraetors.” Presentation by DISC to Internal Revenue Service at 2 (June 23, 1994), attached as Ex. 17 to Pis.’ Summ. J. Mot. Revenue agent Gregory Peake wrote on this document: “Who are these actual independent contractors?” Id. Third, various handwritten notes by individuals involved in the audit referred to the possibility that people who had previously classified themselves as employees would classify themselves as independent contractors if the audit concluded that the production companies were the common-law employers. Pls.’ Summ. J. Mot. at 27; see, e.g., Notes of Randy Perrin at IRS-ADMIN-29710 (Feb. 24, 1998), attached as Ex. 33 to Pis.’ Summ. J. Mot. Fourth, plaintiffs state that in 1998, in a memorandum to the IRS, counsel for plaintiffs stated that “it is quite clear that many of the individuals in the filmed entertainment industry are indepen
Ultimately, the evidence demonstrates only that, as an argument supporting a substantive finding in their favor, plaintiffs pointed out one consequence of an adverse finding that would adversely impact the IRS — namely, that individuals would begin to report themselves as independent contractors, resulting in less employment taxes collected.
Fairly read, the evidence supports a conclusion that at most plaintiffs only suggested that they might seek a refund on the ground that individuals identified as employees were actually independent contractors in the context of reserving their right to later assert such a claim. See Taxpayers’ Brief Regarding Request for Technical Advice at 8 n. 3 (Oct. 24, 1997), attached as Ex. 29 to Pls.’ Summ. J. Mot.; Letter from Stuart Seigel to Neil Shepherd at 22 (Apr. 9, 1998), attached as Ex. 35 to Pls. Summ. J. Mot.; see also Tr. at 66 (“[T]he statements were ... essentially ... if you maintain your position ... which they did ... you can count on us raising this issue.”). These statements of a future intent to file such a refund claim are insufficient to alert the IRS that plaintiffs were actually making claims for refund based on that theory. Mobil Corp. v. United States,
Furthermore, the context of plaintiffs’ reservation of their right to assert the independent contractor theory as a ground for refund undercuts their claim that this reservation was a present claim for refund. Plaintiffs’ formal statement reserving their right to assert the independent contractor theory was contained in a footnote to the following statement in their brief regarding the TAM request: “Moreover, the issue in the case at hand is not whether the workers are employees or independent contractors. [Plaintiffs] ha[ve] always treated the [production workers] as employees.” Taxpayers’ Brief Regarding Request for Technical Advice at 8. Given the context, the IRS acted reasonably in not investigating whether certain of the production workers were independent contractors; therefore, the IRS cannot be said to have waived the specificity requirement.
Because plaintiffs chose to file an administrative refund claim setting forth certain grounds and omitting others, the IRS rationally concluded that the claims asserted by plaintiffs, and only those claims, were the issues plaintiffs had chosen to litigate. Finding waiver of the specificity requirement in these circumstances would undermine the principal goal of the variance doctrine, which is to provide clear notice to the IRS of the specific grounds that the taxpayer will litigate. A reservation of rights to later assert a theory of refund does not excuse plaintiffs from actually making the claim. Disabled Am. Veterans,
Plaintiffs neither gave the IRS notice that a claim for refund had been or was being asserted based on the independent contractor theory, nor did they provide evidence that the IRS actually considered and decided this claim they did not assert. Thus, plaintiffs have not shown that the IRS waived the specificity requirement, and the variance doctrine continues to bar their independent contractor claim.
b. Plaintiffs Do Not Meet the Requirements of the Informal Claim Doctrine
The second arguably applicable exception to the variance doctrine, the “informal claim doctrine,” allows a “timely claim with purely formal defects ... if it fairly apprises the IRS of the basis for the claim within the limitations period.” Computervision,
The informal claim doctrine “is of no assistance to the taxpayer here” because plaintiffs’ “original complaint was formal, and contained no specific suggestion that” plaintiffs would raise other grounds for relief. Id. at 1365. In this case, plaintiffs stated that they might seek a refund on an independent contractor theory later but in no way did they alert the IRS that they were actually making such a claim. Mobil Corp.,
There were no formal defects to be cured in plaintiffs’ claims; plaintiffs properly alerted the IRS to a very specific list of alleged grounds for refund. Davis,
In light of the foregoing, plaintiffs’ assertion of the independent contractor theory is, therefore, barred by the doctrine of variance. The Court accordingly GRANTS defendant’s motion in limine and DENIES plaintiffs’ cross-motion for summary judgment, treating both as motions under Rule 12(b)(1).
Defendant further argues that the Court should refuse to consider the independent contractor theory “because plaintiffs have inexcusably and unduly delayed in asserting it.” Def.’s Mot. at 29. Plaintiffs’ first mention of the independent contractor theory was approximately six years into the litigation on August 25, 2008. This was despite a February 23, 2007 deadline by which the parties were required to seek leave to amend their pleadings. Def.’s Supp. Compl. Opp. at 12; Tr. at 33; see also Scheduling Order at 1 (docket entry 84, Jan. 23, 2007). Plaintiffs provide no reason justifying their failure to assert this claim before the 2007 deadline. Defendant’s Reply Brief in Support of its Motion In Limine at 41-42 (docket entry 327, June 23, 2010) (“Def.’s Reply”).
If a party in a tax dispute unreasonably delays the assertion of a ground for setoff, the court may preclude that party from raising the ground if its assertion would prejudice the other side. Bank of Am. v. United States,
Despite waiting six years to assert their theory in court, plaintiffs accuse defendant of unduly waiting a year to “unveil its ‘variance’ defense in writing.” Id. at 48. Even if the Court were to fault defendant for this delay, variance implicates the court’s jurisdiction and, therefore, it cannot be waived. See, e.g., Ottawa Silica Co.,
Allowing plaintiffs to introduce the independent contractor theory at this point would prejudice defendant, which has already devoted significant resources to litigating the issues long recognized as raised by this case. The parties have engaged in extensive discovery regarding the aggregation issue; each side has sought judicial intervention in the discovery process.
IV. Plaintiffs May File a Consolidated, Amended and Supplemental Complaint But May Not Assert the Independent Contractor Theory
Because the Court has already concluded that it lacks jurisdiction to hear claims regarding plaintiffs’ independent contractor theory, any amendment adding such a cause of action would be futile. Therefore, plaintiffs’ motion is DENIED to the extent that it seeks to amend the complaints to add a claim for refund based upon the independent contractor theory.
A. Plaintiffs May Supplement Their Complaints But May Not Assert a Claim for Refund Based Upon Their Independent Contractor Theory with Regard to the $1.3 Million Seized in Nevada
The events giving rise to plaintiffs’ new allegations regarding the seizure of assets in Nevada occurred after the Court’s February 2007 deadline for the parties to seek leave to amend their pleadings. Thus, no matter how diligent plaintiffs were, they could not have met the Court’s February 2007 deadline. Pis.’ Supp. Compl. Reply at 2 n. 2; see, e.g., Ulibarri v. City & County of Denver, Colo., No. 07-cv-1814,
Supplementation of pleadings “should be allowed where post-commencement events are material to the action, consideration of those events could be accommodated within the orderly progression of the case to trial or other disposition, and supplementation would not prejudice any party.” Sys. Fuels, Inc. v. United States,
1. Plaintiffs May Not Assert a Claim for Refund Based Upon Their Independent Contractor Theory with Respect to the $U-3 Million Seized in Nevada
Plaintiffs first contend that whether or not their independent contractor theory is barred by variance as to the principal allegations of their complaint, the variance doctrine does not preclude raising the independent contractor issue with respect to the $4.3 million seized in Nevada because plaintiffs raised that issue in their administrative claim for refund in September of 2009. Pis.’ Summ. J. Mot. at 22; Pis.’ Supp. Compl. Reply at 3; see also Proposed Compl. ¶¶ 65-76, 88(d). That is, plaintiffs argue that they have cured the failure of their 2001 administrative claim to raise the independent contractor theory because after the seizure of the $4.3 million in Nevada, DISC and WRLJ raised the independent contractor issue in their 2009 administrative refund claims. Pis.’ Summ. J. Mot. at 22.
“The existence of federal jurisdiction ordinarily depends on the facts as they exist when the complaint is filed.” Walton v. United States,
The administrative refund claim submitted in 2009 does not cure the jurisdictional defect created by plaintiffs’ failure to raise the independent contractor issue in their 2001 administrative refund claims. This court is only vested with jurisdiction over a refund claim when specific processes laid out in the Internal Revenue Code and its implementing regulations are followed. Permitting plaintiffs to cure a jurisdictional defect by filing a second and overlapping refund claim would contravene these jurisdictional requirements by allowing taxpayers to alter the grounds for their refund claim after a suit has been filed in court, even outside the limitations period. See Computervision,
Plaintiffs argue that parties have previously amended their pleadings to incorporate later-filed administrative refund claims. Pis.’ Suppl. Compl. Reply at 7. But in none of the cited eases did plaintiff add a theory different from those set forth in the pre-litigation administrative claim for refund. See, e.g., Houston Indus. Inc. & Subsidiaries v. United States,
Allowing plaintiffs in this case to raise new and different administrative claims after the case has been brought to court to “cure” the jurisdictional defect created by the variance doctrine would contravene the fundamental goal of that doctrine “and thus effectively would read [I.R.C. § 7422(a)] out of the stab ute.”
2. Plaintiffs May Amend to Add Their “Illegal Exaction” Claim and Supplement Their Complaint to Include Allegations About the Events in Nevada
Next, defendant argues that the motion to amend the complaint to include an illegal
An “illegal exaction” occurs when money was “improperly paid, exacted, or taken from the claimant in contravention of’ federal law. Norman v. United States,
A tax refund suit is the classic example of an illegal exaction claim. United States v. Clintwood Elkhorn Mining Co. (“Clintwood"),
Defendant has conceded that if plaintiffs prevail in these actions, it would be required to “refund ... [the] money collected” in Nevada. Def.’s Supp. Compl. Opp. at 36. Plaintiffs merely ask that the Court consider the money “exacted” in Nevada as part of the final resolution of these actions. Pis.’ Supp. Compl. Reply at 12. Defendant is, therefore, incorrect that plaintiffs have not alleged the violation of a statute that implies as a remedy the return of money to plaintiffs.
Defendant further argues that because plaintiffs’ “illegal exaction” cause of action is subject to the procedural strictures of the Internal Revenue Code, Clintwood,
Defendant also seeks to dismiss the illegal exaction claims because plaintiffs have allegedly not adequately pleaded an ownership interest in the funds seized in Nevada. But plaintiffs’ argument in the Nevada action is that the levies against DISC and WRLJ were “wrongful ... because [plaintiffs] have no property or rights to property in DISC[ ] and WRLJ’s bank accounts at Wells Fargo.” Nevada Compl. ¶¶ 51, 54. Plaintiffs could, however, lose in the Nevada action and prevail here. In that event, the only means of protecting their claim for the refund of the Nevada funds is to present a claim to this court “that the $4.3 million is either property
Finally, the Court finds that defendant will not suffer prejudice as a result of the addition of this cause of action, which adds no new issues to the proceedings. Defendant’s arguments regarding prejudice focus only on whether plaintiffs should be able to “inject their independent contractor theory” into the proceedings, which the Court has already precluded. Def.’s Supp. Compl. Opp. at 21. Thus, defendant’s concerns regarding prejudice are moot.
B. Plaintiffs May File a Consolidated, Amended and Supplemental Complaint
Plaintiffs further seek leave to file their complaints as a single consolidated, amended and supplemental complaint. Pis.’ Supp. Compl. Mot. at 8. The new consolidated complaint would include factual allegations that plaintiffs assert were developed in discovery. Defendant opposes, contending that because the seizure of funds in Nevada did not affect all of the plaintiffs here, this tactic is an attempt to raise the independent contractor theory with respect to plaintiffs that were not affected by the seizure in Nevada. Def.’s Supp. Compl. Opp. at 10 n. 8. However, the danger of such “bootstrapping” is non-existent, given that the Court has precluded plaintiffs from raising their independent contractor theory.
In the absence of this concern, a single consolidated complaint would serve the interests of administrative convenience and would ameliorate a significant logistical burden on the parties and the Court. Plaintiffs attached exhibits to the proposed consolidated complaint dealing with each individual plaintiff, providing a roadmap to the allocation of the total amount of any refund among the plaintiffs. Proposed Compl. Exs. A-J.
The Court also finds that good cause exists to modify the January 2007 scheduling order to permit the amendment of the complaint to include allegations of facts learned through discovery. See RCFC 16(b)(4); see also Burns ex rel. Office of Pub. Guardian v. Hale & Dorr, LLP,
Accordingly, plaintiffs’ motion for leave to file a consolidated, amended and supplemental complaint is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART. Plaintiffs may not assert claims based on their independent contractor theory. Plaintiffs are permitted,
V. Defendant’s Assessments Are Entitled to a Presumption of Correctness and the Burden of Proof with Respect to the Amounts Owed by Plaintiffs is Properly on Plaintiffs
Finally, plaintiffs allege that the IRS’s assessments in these cases do not warrant the ordinary “presumption of correctness” and seek to shift the burden of proof to defendant.
In general, a tax refund suit is a cle novo proceeding and any subsidiary factual findings of the IRS are given no weight by the court. Cook,
The presumption of correctness ordinarily “prohibits a court from looking behind the Commissioner’s determination, even though it may be based on hearsay or evidence inadmissible at trial.” Cook,
must be more than incorrect, for the correctness of the amount assessed is quite irrelevant. It must be arbitrary in the sense that the calculation has no support and the true amount of tax owed is incapable of being ascertained. Thus, where records supporting an assessment were excluded from evidence, or are nonexistent, so that the basis upon which an assessment is calculated is beyond the knowledge of the court, the assessment is “arbitrary and erroneous.” It is beyond saving.
United States v. Schroeder,
An assessment is not “naked” “as long as the method the IRS used” to estimate the amount of liability “is a ‘reasonable’ one.” Fior D’Italia,
Next, plaintiffs assert that the TAM “provided clear marching orders for the examination team: determine the FUTA and FICA wage bases for each production company with which each production worker has a common-law employment relationship,” but the errors they allege simply restate their substantive disagreements with the assessments. Pis.’ Burden Shift Mot. at 5. For example, plaintiffs maintain that the assessments were “grossly overstated” because of the IRS’s “double-counting” of “millions of dollars of wages,” but in the next sentence recognize that this alleged error is one of the bases of their claim for refund, namely, the “aggregation issue.” Pis.’ Burden Shift Mot. at 8. They likewise restate their independent contractor theory as contravening an allegedly clear instruction in the TAM not to include “hundreds of millions of dollars paid to individuals who had no common-law employer at all,” ie., independent contractors.
Mere allegations of error on the part of the agency are not sufficient to show that an assessment is naked. Schroeder,
The IRS assessments rested upon extensive analysis and evidence, including a statement of facts that plaintiffs agreed to, a “16-page, factor-by-factor analysis” in the TAM request, and the legal analysis in the TAM as promulgated, in which the OCC agreed with the position taken by the IRS.
Plaintiffs lastly contend that the destruction of documents described above—in addition to supporting an adverse inference regarding a waiver of the specificity requirement, see supra Part II.B.l—also warrants depriving the assessments of the presumption of correctness. But the IRS may rely on any evidence to demonstrate that its assessments have a rational foundation; “it is irrelevant whether it is the same evidence that the Service relied upon in originally making its assessment.” Cook,
Plaintiffs’ argument that defendant should bear the ultimate burden of proof on its counterclaims also fails. In a refund suit, even after rebutting the presumption of correctness, the taxpayer bears the burden of proving the “exact dollar amount of the alleged overpayment to which it claims a refund.” Sara Lee,
Therefore, plaintiffs’ motion, based in part on their request for a spoliation sanction, that seeks to abrogate the presumption that the assessments are correct and to shift the burden of proof to defendant with respect to its counterclaims is DENIED.
CONCLUSION
For the above reasons, defendant’s Motion in Limine, treated as a motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, is GRANTED. Plaintiffs are precluded from raising the claim that they are entitled to a refund because certain of the production workers were independent contractors. Plaintiffs’ cross-motion for partial summary judgment that the Court has jurisdiction over plaintiffs’ independent contractor theory is DENIED. Plaintiffs’ motion for an order shifting the burden of proof on the accuracy of defendant’s assessments is DENIED; their motion for a spoliation sanction is also DENIED. Plaintiffs’ motion for leave to file a consolidated, amended and supplemental complaint is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART.
In view of the foregoing, the Court FURTHER ORDERS as follows:
(1) Plaintiffs shall file their Consolidated Amended and Supplemental Complaint on or before Friday, September 10, 2010, in the form filed with their Motion for Leave to File Amended and Supplemental Consolidated Complaint, except that plaintiffs’ Consolidated, Amended and Supplemental Complaint shall not include paragraphs 82(d) and 88(d), which set forth claims for relief predicated on the theory that certain of the production workers were independent contractors.
(2) Defendant shall answer or otherwise respond to plaintiffs’ Consolidated, Amended and Supplemental Complaint by Friday, September 24, 2010.
(3) Plaintiffs shall file their reply, if any, to defendant’s response by Friday, October 15, 2010.
(4) The parties shall file a joint status report by Friday, October 22, 2010, describing the issues that remain to be resolved, the current status of discovery, and the nature and timing of further proceedings looking toward a final decision on the merits with respect to the remaining issues.
(5) The parties shall participate with the Court in a status conference on Friday, October 29, 2010 at 10.00 a.m. Eastern Time at the National Courts Building, 717 Madison Place N.W., Washington, D.C., to discuss the contents of the parties’ October 22, 2010 joint status report.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The Court will describe only the background necessary to the resolution of the pending motions. For more detailed background information, see Cencast Servs. L.P. v. United States,
. Plaintiffs have attached the complete transcripts from various depositions of IRS and Office of Chief Counsel (“OCC”) employees. For purposes of citation, these depositions are: Deposition of Gregory Peake (Mar. 2, 2010) ("Peake Dep."), attached as Ex. 57 to Pis.’ Summ. J. Mot.; Deposition of Randy Perrin (Mar. 3, 2010) (“Perrin Dep.”), attached as Ex. 58 to PLs.' Summ. J. Mot.; Deposition of Katrina Moultry-Rand (Mar. 4, 2010) ("Moultry-Rand Dep.”), attached as Ex. 59 to Pis.’ Summ. J. Mot.; Deposition of Debra L. Reale (Mar. 16, 2010) ("Reale Dep.”), attached as Ex. 60 to Pis.’ Summ. J. Mot; Deposition of Neil D. Shepherd (Mar. 25, 2010) ("Shepherd Dep."), attached as Ex. 61 to Pis.' Summ. J. Mot.; and Rule 30(b)(6) Deposition of Neil D. Shepherd (Apr. 8, 2010) ("30(b)(6) Dep.”), attached as Ex. 62 to Pis.’ Summ. J. Mot.
. A TAM involves
advice or guidance as lo the interpretation and proper application of internal revenue laws, related statutes, and regulations, to a specific set of facts, furnished by the National Office upon request of a district office in connection with the examination of a taxpayer’s return or consideration of a taxpayer's return claim for refund or credit.
Tieas. Reg. § 601.105(b)(5)(i)(a) (as amended in 1987).
. Revenue Procedure 97-2 permits the taxpayer to participate in a conference to advocate its views “[i]f, after the technical advice request is analyzed, it appears that technical advice adverse to the taxpayer will be given.” Rev. Proc. 97-2 § 12.01 (Jan. 6, 1997), current version at Rev. Proc.2010-2 § 9 (Jan. 4, 2010).
. Plaintiffs also asked OCC to consider a Market Segment Understanding ("MSU”) document published by the IRS entitled Classification of Workers Within the Television Commercial Production and Professional Video Communication Industries. See Debra Reale, Notes from Adverse Finding Conference at 7 (dated Feb. 24, 1998) ("Reale Conf. Notes”), attached as Ex. 34 to Pis.’ Summ. J. Mot.; MSU, attached as Ex. 14 to Pis.' Summ. J. Mot. Consistent with OCC’s assumption that the workers were employees of some employer, Mr. Shepherd discounted the utility of the MSU, stating that the relevant inquiry was which entity was the employer, not the status of dle worker (employee or independent contractor). See Reale Conf. Notes at 7; Shepherd Dep. at 151.
. The IRS used the term "operating company” to refer to what the Court has been calling the "production company.” See Defendant's Objection to Plaintiffs' Motion to Shift Burden and for a Spoliation Sanction at 10 n. 7 (docket entry 333, June 25, 2010) (“Def.’s Burden Shift Opp.”).
. Ordinarily, full payment of the assessed tax is a jurisdictional prerequisite to the filing of a refund suit in this court or the district court. Flora v. United States,
. I.R.M. § 4.23.13.4(l)(g) provides:
(1) No consideration will be given to a claim for refund of employment tax which:
(g) is based solely on an issue considered in previously examined returns of the claimant who requests in writing the immediate issuance of a statutory notice of claim disallowance.
. There were four other issues identified in Cen-cast /, namely (1) ”[w]helher the plaintiffs or the production companies ... were the common law employers of the workers,” Cencast I,
. The Nevada action remains pending. As of the date of this writing, the parties arc continuing to conduct discovery in that action.
. Plaintiffs also ask to add allegations regarding the request for reconsideration of the TAM, further alleging that defendant "failed to process plaintiffs’ case on the basis of the conclusions expressed in the TAM” and the assessment of penalties was arbitrary and capricious. Proposed Compl. ¶¶ 65-68, 49, 82(a), 53-58, 82(f). The parties have already agreed that defendant will not seek penalties with respect to plaintiffs’ assessments. See supra note 9; see also Pis.’ Burden Shift Mot. at 15 ("Defendant has now stipulated that it will not seek penalties.”). It is, therefore, unclear why plaintiffs wish to add these allegations, though defendant does not specifically oppose this alteration. Plaintiffs also request to add allegations that the audit team's conduct exhibited "personal animus toward Taxpayers" and "gross negligence and willfulness in the destruction of documents.” Proposed Compl. ¶¶ 59-60. These amendments will also be allowed, despite their uncertain benefit in view of the Court's finding as set forth in this Opinion.
. Given the Court’s conclusion in this section, the Court finds it unnecessary to address defendant's other alternative arguments, which rest upon a joint stipulation of facts and a union contribution statute. Def.'s Mot. at 21, 33.
. Plaintiffs' complaints do not currently include a cause of action barred by variance. Thus defendant concluded that it could not move to dismiss a claim that was not contained in plaintiffs' complaints. Def.'s Mot. at 1 n. 1. Instead, defendant filed a motion in limine pursuant to RCFC 16 to obtain "a pretrial order simplifying issues for trial, including the exclusion of irrelevant evidence on the ground that it is offered to prove a legally deficient claim.” White Mountain Apache Tribe of Ariz v. United States,
. Plaintiffs urge that "ft]o the extent the witnesses' self-contradictory testimony raises a genuine issue of material fact, the Court should schedule a hearing to weigh the witnesses’ credibility.” Pls.’ Summ. J. Reply at 24 n. 18. The Court does not find any material conflicts in the witnesses' deposition testimony. All of the deponents admitted that they knew of the independent contractor issue and that plaintiffs had identified the issue as a potential ground for refund, but this ground was, in fact, never asserted in any claim for refund.
. Plaintiffs are at pains to emphasize that individuals may be reclassified as independent contractors after they were classified as employees. Pis.' Summ. J. Reply at 15. This is undoubtedly true, but the issue is not whether the IRS may reclassify taxpayers as independent contractors but whether plaintiffs here raised that issue in their administrative refund claims. Thus, for instance in Ware v. United States,
. The authors of the Litigation of Federal Tax Controversies treatise coin the terra "counter-setoff,” which the Court adopts. Kafka & Cavanagh § 16.03. Previous courts have not distinguished between the Government's setoff and the taxpayer’s subsequent setoff to the Government's setoff, referring to both as an attempted "setoff.” See, e.g., Bessemer City Bd. of Educ.,
. In Shore, the Government conceded in its motion for reconsideration that the plaintiff should be permitted to raise counter-setoffs that would otherwise be barred by variance because the Government itself created the variance by inserting a new issue into the litigation before the court. Shore,
. Plaintiffs point to the grant of jurisdiction in 28 U.S.C. § 2508 as supporting the argument that they should be permitted to raise the independent contractor issue as a setoff. Pis.' Summ. J. Mot. at 17 & n. 12. But that provision grants the court jurisdiction to hear the Government's setoffs against a plaintiff making an affirmative claim in this Court and does not waive sovereign immunity for claims against the United States. Haustechnik v. United States,
. It is unclear whether plaintiffs' argument could ever be viable in light of Fior D'ltalia,
. The Federal Circuit has only discussed spoliation sand ions in patent cases where it has applied the rule of the applicable regional circuit. United Med. Supply,
. An IRS audit does not nece'ssarily mean that defendant could have anticipated litigation and thus does not automatically give rise lo a duty to preserve evidence. Compare Consol. Edison Co. of N.Y., Inc. v. United States,
.The same is true for the alleged destruction of e-mails. Routine document management processes within the IRS and OCC require employees "to delete all data from their computers when their official duties no longer require access to sensitive personally identifiable informa
. The parties debate whether IRS consideration of an issue during the audit phase can waive the specificity requirement, a matter upon which the authorities seem to conflict. In Disabled American Veterans v. United States,
. The parties previously proposed competing discovery plans with respect to identifying whether certain production workers were independent contractors or employees and requested that the Court determine which plan should be followed. See, e.g., Defendant’s Reply Brief in
. Plaintiffs also observe that the Joint Preliminary Status Report (docket entry 34, July 22, 2003), only stated the issues that the parlies had “so far” identified. Pis.' Summ. J. Mol. at 45. This may be so, but it does not relieve plaintiffs of the obligation to raise their other claims in a timely fashion.
. In addition to the motions described in note 24, supra, seeking discovery regarding the identify of workers as employees or independent contractors, the parties have also sought judicial intervention into the discoveiy process on numerous other occasions. See Plaintiffs' Motion to Compel Production of Documents Concerning Destruction of Documents and ESI (docket entry 283, Mar. 23, 2010); Plaintiffs' Motion to Compel Production of Documents (docket entry 277, Mar. 9, 2010); Defendant's Motion to Compel
. Defendant also asserts that I.R.C. § 7122(a) and Executive Order No. 6166, § 5 (June 10, 1933), reprinted in 5 U.S.C. § 901, transfer all authority to "compromise” a dispute from the IRS to the Department of Justice once a lawsuit regarding the dispute is filed in court. The Court agrees that this rationale provides an additional basis for preventing plaintiffs from "curing” the jurisdictional defect raised by the variance doctrine. If the IRS had granted plaintiffs' 2009 refund claim, the agency would have conceded that plaintiffs were entitled to a refund on a portion of their claim in this court, an action that would constitute a partial "compromise.” See Computervsion,
.For similar reasons, defendant’s argument about whether plaintiffs have adequately prepaid the $4.3 million in Nevada in order to seek a refund is unavailing. Def.'s Supp. Compl. Opp. at 29-30. This argument fails to account for the realities of plaintiffs’ situation. Certainly if DISC and WRLJ prevail in the Nevada action, plaintiffs’ “illegal exaction” cause of action will necessarily fail here — none of plaintiffs' property will have been exacted. But the "conditional” nature of the seizure is accounted for in lhe alternate nature of the pleading, which merely protects plaintiffs in the event that they lose in Nevada but prevail here. That is, the cause of action here assumes as a factual predicate that plaintiffs are found to have a property interest in the $4.3 million and this money is not returned to DISC or WRLJ.
. The Court considers plaintiffs' 2001 administrative refund claim to put at issue plaintiffs' entire tax liability, including any subsequent credits against their liability. The Court will permit plaintiff to assert this cause of action but is mindful of its potential overlap with the original claim for refund. Cf. Anchor Sav. Bank, FSB v. United States,
. Defendant's argument (hat many of the allegations are of "dubious veracity” is beside the point. Def.'s Supp. Compl. Opp. at 9 n. 6. Defendant has already controverted those allegations, thereby identifying factual matters that may be in dispute. Such factual disputes can, if necessary, be resolved in the course of further proceedings.
. Although courts generally refer to two parts of the burden of proof — the burden of production and the risk of non-persuasion — "in this court, which conducts trials without juries and does not employ a directed verdict procedure, the burden of production is largely meaningless." Cook v. United States,
. The presumption of correctness is ordinarily justified because of the "strong need of the government to accomplish swill collection of revenues and in order to encourage recordkeeping by taxpayers.” Cook,
. I.R.M. § 4.23.12.4 requires the IRS to disallow an administrative claim for refund without further analysis if the issue has already been fully examined and the plaintiffs request an automatic disallowance. See supra note 8 and accompanying text.
. Plaintiffs' reliance on Sara Lee Corp.,
. The other allegations relate to substantive disputes that are already resolved: the matter of the SUI credits, Pls.' Burden Shift Mot. at 15, which was resolved by court decision; and assessment of penalties, which the parties have settled. Id.
.Plaintiffs appear to argue that defendant cannot rely upon this analysis because none of these actions were taken after 1999, the "point in time the IRS actually prepared the assessments.” Pis.' Burden Shift Reply at 3. Plaintiffs cite no law creating such a temporal limitation on ihe evidence the IRS may rely upon in arguing that the assessments have a rational foundation. Moreover, this argument is belied by plaintiffs' own description of the facts in these cases, which places heavy emphasis on the TAM process as the focus of the parties' efforts. See, e.g., Pis.' Summ. J. Mot. at 10.
