After examining the briefs and appellate record, this panel has determined unanimously that oral argument would not materially assist the determination of this appeal. See Fed. R.App. P. 34(a); 10th Cir. R. 34.1.9. The case is therefore ordered submitted without oral argument.
This appeal encompasses three of four cases consolidated in district court. The first, 93-C-953W, is a quiet title action under 28 U.S.C. § 2410, in which plaintiff Karen Dahn initially objected to enforcement of a tax penalty against her property, but later sought to substitute a claim for its wrongful encumbrance and sale for tax liabilities of her husband, Roy Dahn. In the second, 95-C-1120B, plaintiff David Dahn invoked several remedial sources in challenging the seizure of his property to pay tax debts of Roy and Karen Dahn, his parents. The third, 96-C-24C, began as a state action by David to quiet title to property involved in 95-C-1120B, but was removed by the United States pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1446. The district court dismissed Karen Dahn’s claim for failure to allege the statutory requisites for a quiet title action. As for David Dahn, the court held the wrongful levy statute, 26 U.S.C. § 7426, was his exclusive remedy and dismissed his claims as untimely under 26 U.S.C. § 6532(c) (prescribing nine-month limitations period for § 7426 action). On plaintiffs’ joint appeal, we affirm.
I
Section 2410(a) expressly authorizes quiet title actions affecting property on which the United States has a lien only “[ujnder the conditions prescribed in this section,” which include the following mandatory pleading requirements:
The complaint or pleading shall set forth with particularity the nature of the interest or lien of the United States. In actions or suits involving liens arising under the internal revenue laws, the complaint or pleading shall include the name and address of the taxpayer whose liability created the lien and, if a notice of the tax lien was filed, the identity of the internal revenue office which filed the notice, and the date and place such notice of lien was filed.
28 U.S.C. § 2410(b). A noncomplying complaint does not invoke the statutory waiver of sovereign immunity and, consequently, cannot state a claim upon which relief could be granted.
See Clark v. United States,
Karen Dahn’s original complaint failed to satisfy the conditions prescribed in § 2410(b), as she has conceded.
See
Opening Br. of the Appellant at 16-17; Reply Br. of the Appellant at 3. However, in response to the government’s motion to dismiss, she attempted to amend her complaint, and it is the adverse treatment of that effort with which she now takes issue. We review for an abuse of discretion.
See Ketchum v. Cruz,
The district court did not peremptorily preclude Karen Dahn’s effort to salvage her case by amendment. On the contrary, it afforded her full opportunity to correct her pleading deficiencies, but ultimately denied her motion to amend because the proffered amendment was still insufficient under § 2410(b).
See
Appellants’ App. at 24-25, 27. We agree with the district court’s assessment of the amended complaint, and affirm its denial of the attendant motion,
1
see Ketchum,
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Karen Dahn appears also to be objecting that she was not given another,
unrequested
opportunity to correct her defective pleadings after the district court found her amended complaint wanting. However, by that point in the proceeding, the district court had properly (1) rejected her original complaint, (2) denied her motion to amend, and (3) dismissed the action on defendants’ motion. If she desired yet another chance, post-judgment, to save/resurrect her cause of action by amendment, it was incumbent upon her to seek leave from the district court to make the attempt. Instead, she elected to appeal the case as it stood. She cannot now complain of a non-ruling with respect to an amendment she did not give the court a chance to consider. As explained under somewhat similar circumstances in
Glenn v. First National Bank,
Under the facts of this case, we hold that Appellant did not move the court for leave to amend the complaint [following-dismissal for failure to state a claim] and therefore the district judge committed no error in not ruling thereon____ After a motion to dismiss has been granted, plaintiffs must first reopen the case pursuant to a motion under [Fed.R.Civ.P.] 59(e) or [Fed.R.Civ.P.] 60(b) and then file a motion under Rule 15, and properly apply to the court for leave to amend by means of a motion which in turn complies with [Fed. R.Civ.P.] 1.... Appellants availed themselves of none of their legal options. Appellants’ failures are well beyond “mere technicalities” and this court will not protect them from their own inaction.
See also Nulf v. International Paper Co.,
II
Plaintiff David Dahn challenges the dismissal of his pleadings as untimely under § 6532. This statutory time-bar qualifies a waiver of sovereign immunity and, thus, constitutes a limitation on subject matter jurisdiction.
See Dieckmann v. United States,
Under § 6532(c)(1), a person subject to a wrongful tax levy has nine months “from the date of the levy” to seek judicial relief pursuant to § 7426. By David Dahn’s own allegation, the property involved herein was overtly seized years before he filed suit. Howeverhe now contends that the limitations period commences only with the service of a notice of levy, that he did not receive such notice, and, therefore, that his action cannot be untimely, regardless of the delay between seizure and suit. The government states, without contradiction from David Dahn, that this argument—entailing both legal and factual questions—was not advanced in district court. Nor have we have found any trace of it in the record. Under the circumstances, we deem the contention waived.
See generally Tele-Communications, Inc. v. Commissioner,
As noted at the outset, David Dahn invoked several other remedial sources for his claim against the government. For the reasons that follow, we reject this attempt to circumvent the § 7426/ § 6532 time-bar through multiplicious pleading.
After enactment of § 7426, the circuits held it was the exclusive remedy for a third party seeking redress against the IRS for levying on his property to satisfy the tax liability of another.
See, e.g., Williams v. United States,
David Dahn argues, however, that the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
United States v. Williams,
We are not persuaded
Williams
is apposite here, for two reasons. First, there were no tax levies involved in that case. Thus, the Court was concerned solely with the reach of § 1346 per se; the exclusivity of a concurrent § 7426 claim was never in issue. Indeed, the Court specifically emphasized the inapplicability of § 7426 (or any other meaningful remedy) to reinforce its broad reading of § 1346.
See Williams,
*1254 Second, and in any event, David Dahn clearly does not fall within the exceptional category exemplified by the plaintiff in Williams. He did not deliberately and affirmatively proffer payment for the tax liabilities of his parents to obtain the prompt release of property encumbered therefor; he was simply a passive, collateral subject of IRS collection activities. If Williams were applicable to this case, anyone claiming financial losses tied .to the collection of someone else’s taxes could arguably be a “taxpayer” entitled to seek a “refund” — perhaps long after the remedy specifically devised for the situation by Congress had expired. We decline to extend Williams in this imprudent and implausible manner.
David Dahn also invoked, in general terms, two constitutional provisions in his complaint. He alleged that, as a procedural matter, the seizure and sale of his property was conducted in violation of due process prescriptions and, as a substantive matter, the loss of his property constituted an uncompensated taking in violation of the Fifth Amendment. Neither of these allegations supplies an alternative basis for jurisdiction in this ease.
The direct, constitutional remedy recognized in
Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents,
The United States has assented to suit for constitutional claims through the Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1491 (exclusive jurisdiction in Court of Federal Claims), and Little Tucker Act § 1346(a)(2) (concurrent jurisdiction in district court for cases not exceeding $10,-000), but this waiver of sovereign immunity does not avail David Dahn, for several reasons. First of all, as this remedy is statutory, it would appear that the exclusivity of § 7426 should control here as well. Indeed, Tucker Act case law specifically holds that the Act’s remedy is not available when the challenged action was taken under statutory authority “evidenc[ing] a congressional intent to withdraw[ ] the Tucker Act grant of jurisdiction.”
Clouser v. Espy,
Because the Tucker Act is solely remedial and, thus, creates no substantive right to damages, it provides jurisdiction only for claims resting on constitutional provisions that “can fairly be interpreted as mandating compensation by the Federal Government.”
United States v. Testan,
In contrast, the Fifth Amendment takings clause includes an express directive for governmental recompense. Thus, “[generally, an individual claiming that the United States has taken his property can seek just compensation under the Tucker [or Little Tucker] Act.”
Ruckelshaus,
Finally, David Dahn insists that the district court should have remanded his removed action back to state court at the conclusion of the proceedings. As all of the federal claims had been dismissed for lack of jurisdiction, it was within the discretion of the district court to dismiss without prejudice, rather than remand, whatever state causes of action were implicated in the pleadings.
See generally Carnegie-Mellon Univ. v. Cohill,
The judgment of the United States District Court for the District of Utah is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Moreover, the amended complaint asserts a distinctly different claim, objecting not to liens arising from Karen's own lax liabilities, but to
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collection efforts resulting in the sale of her property for her husband’s tax debts. A quiet title claim in this regard, first made when any liens involved no longer existed, was barred ab initio.
See, e.g., Hughes v. United States,
. ’ Initial confusion on this point in
WWSM Investors v. United States,
. It also appears that David Dahn's claim, involving two Salt Lake County lots, an aircraft, several vehicles, construction equipment, building materials, and other substantial items of personal property, must exceed the $10,000 ceiling for Little Tucker Act jurisdiction in district court. Dismissal evidently would have been proper for this reason as well.
See, e.g., Gunn v. United States Dep't of Agrie.,
