Robert Cleveland filed a petition in the Tax Court with the idea of keeping the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) from increasing the amount of income tax withheld from his wages. His legal theory parrots a claim now making the rounds in the courts. The Tax Court dismissed the case for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. We affirm that decision.
After concluding that Cleveland’s employer was not withholding enough income tax from his paychecks, the IRS invalidated the Form W-4, Employee’s Withholding Allowance Certificate, on file for Cleveland. The IRS notified the employer, using Form Letter 2800C, to withhold income tax at a specified rate and to ignore any future Form W-4s received from Cleveland. Cleveland learned about the increase of his withholding rate when the IRS mailed him a corresponding Form Letter 2801C, which included instructions for averting the lock in rate by contacting the IRS to verify or correct the information in his invalidated Form W-4.
See
26 C.F.R. § 31.3402(f)(2)-1(g)(2); I.R.M. ¶ 5.19.11.3.3 (2009). These form letters, commonly called “Lock-in Letters,” are integral to the Withholding Compliance Program as a means to reign in those taxpayers who attempt to circumvent the withholding requirement, or try to evade the proper payment of income tax, by overstating their withholding allowances or falsely claiming exempt status.
See
I.R.M. ¶ 5.19.11.1.1 (2009);
Davis v. Comm’r,
After receiving the letter, Cleveland filed a petition in the Tax Court to initiate a Collection Due Process hearing contesting that the IRS improperly increased the withholding rate on his wages. Under 26 U.S.C. § 6330(d), a taxpayer who initiates a Collection Due Process hearing in order that he or she might contest a proposed levy may challenge an unfavorable decision by the IRS Office of Appeals — the “notice of determination,”
see
26 C.F.R. § 301.6330-l(e)(3) (A-E8) — in the Tax Court. On the one hand Cleveland described his Lock-in Letter as the “notice of determination” he was appealing; on the other hand he asserted that the letter constituted a “levy” on his wages without the statutorily mandated prior notice and opportunity to request a Collection Due Process hearing.
See
26 U.S.C. §§ 6330(a)(1), (a)(3)(B), 6331(b), (d)(1). In his petition, Cleveland asked for an order commanding the IRS to return the money withheld by
The jurisdiction of the Tax Court is limited. 26 U.S.C. § 7442;
Comm’r v. McCoy,
Furthermore, we wish to make clear that we do not agree with Cleveland’s premise. A Collection Due Process hearing is available to taxpayers when the IRS attempts to collect a tax liability by levy, 26 U.S.C. § 6330(a), (b)(1), but the withholding of tax from a paycheck is not a “levy” as that term is understood in 26 U.S.C. § 6331(b). A levy, Cleveland believes, includes “the power of distraint and seizure by any means,”
id.,
and withholding, according to him, is a coercive taking of his wages. As the Commissioner points out, Cleveland conflates two distinct statutory mechanisms: one for withholding tax before the filing of a return has fixed the taxpayer’s liability, and the other for seizing a tax-payer’s property to satisfy an already determined but unpaid tax liability. Cleveland’s displeasure with the pay-as-you-go nature of withholding does not make the deductions from his paycheck the type of “forcible means of extracting taxes from a recalcitrant taxpayer” that qualifies as a levy.
See Interfirst Bank Dallas, N.A. v. United States,
At its core, Cleveland’s action fails to fall within the ambit of the process for Tax Court review of a proposed collection by levy. What Cleveland really argues — quoting his brief — is that a lock-in without “at least
some
sort of administrative hearing or substantial due process” is unfair, and what he really seeks from the Tax Court is an injunction commanding the IRS to stop invalidating his Form W-4s and cease efforts to withhold tax from his pay. But that relief is forbidden by the Anti-Injunction Act,
see
26 U.S.C. § 7421(a);
Am. Friends Serv. Comm.,
Affirmed.
