Taxpayers Daniel and Linda Rutherford claim that Internal Revenue Service Agent Marvin Kuntz violated their constitutional right to due process by willfully and maliciously assessing them for taxes they did not owe, harassing them into paying those taxes, and forcing them to sue for a refund. The district court
I.
Since the complaint was dismissed for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted,
1
we will present the facts as the plaintiffs claim them to be in their pleadings.
Cruz v. Beto,
The Rutherfords say their problems started in the spring of 1974, when IRS Agent Marvin Kuntz began an audit of their 1971, 1972, and 1973 tax returns. Over the next eighteen months, Kuntz harassed the Ruth-erfords with unjustified tax assessments and abusive displays of authority. He invented additional gross income of $5943.83 for the year 1971 and $83,000 for the year 1973; he intentionally assessed them twice on the same income by adding $8215.75 which had been reported and taxed in 1974 to their 1973 receipts, while refusing to make a compensating adjustment to their 1974 return. He made repeated demands for useless documentation, charged them with hiding money, and once insisted that Daniel Rutherford empty his pockets of money and let him count it. He told Daniel Rutherford “You don’t think I am going to spend this much time on this audit and not come up with a considerable sum of money due and owing.” And in the coup de grace, he arranged for his audit report to be delivered to the Rutherfords’ home at 4:30 p.m. on Christmas Eve 1974. His abusive conduct caused the Rutherfords severe mental anguish; in Daniel’s case, it was disabling, and he sought medical attention.
The adverse audit report eventually resulted in a deficiency assessment of $30,-958.40. Over the next few years, the Ruth-erfords retained a number of tax advisors and engaged in a series of administrative *582 proceedings and negotiations with the Government, but their conciliatory efforts were unsuccessful. In 1978, the Government liquidated part of its claim against them by applying their current tax payments to the disputed assessment. Two years later, the Rutherfords initiated an action in the district court for recovery of those monies applied in partial payment. The Government resisted, arguing that the district court was without jurisdiction over the refund suit because the entire assessment had not been paid; the plaintiffs, in an attempt to set the jurisdictional issue aright, filed an amended complaint stating that three days after filing the original complaint they had satisfied the jurisdictional prerequisites by paying the balance of $27,356.81 owing on the assessments.
It was at this point that the Rutherfords’ claim against Agent Kuntz first surfaced. Count II of the amended complaint cast the Rutherfords’ tale of the Agent’s malfeasance as a willful and malicious violation of their fourteenth amendment rights; in recompense, the plaintiffs demanded compensatory damages for mental anguish and for the legal fees incurred in resisting the Government’s claim, and punitive damages in retribution for Kuntz’ abuses of authority-
In due course, the district court dismissed the refund claim for want of jurisdiction at the time the action was filed,
Flora v. United States,
The district court construed the Rutherfords’ invocation of the fourteenth amendment as an attempt to allege a
Bivens
action
3
under the fifth amendment.
4
It interpreted their story of Kuntz’ abusive behavior as a complaint that they were forced to pay taxes not due and owing; placing primary emphasis on a taxpayers’ interest in recovering monies wrongfully assessed and unnecessarily paid, the court concluded that, “the only source [it could] find [] for the plaintiffs’ claim against Kuntz is in the Fifth Amendment’s proscription against any person’s being ‘deprived of ...
property,
without due process of law,’ ” (emphasis added). The district court’s construction of the plaintiffs’ allegations as a statement of a property interest guided its inquiry into the constitutional adequacy of procedural protections afforded them. It observed that post-deprivation process existed in the form of available administrative and judicial proceedings for recovery of taxes over-assessed, 26 U.S.C. § 7422; 28 U.S.C. § 1346(a)(1); and that these remedies had been held constitutionally adequate,
Phillips v. Commissioner,
The plaintiffs appeal its decision on the single, narrow ground that due process has not been accorded, because the available actions for recovery of taxes over-assessed are not responsive to their claims of harassment by the tax collector.
II.
Parratt
held that existing state tort remedies for negligent, episodic deprivations of property by state officials can satisfy the federal constitutional guarantee of procedural due process,
Parratt,
The importance of congruity between the interests at issue and the remedies available was re-emphasized in
Logan v. Zimmerman Brush Co.,
We view the Rutherfords’ factual allegations from a different legal perspective than did the district court. That Court thought that the heart of the Rutherfords’ complaint laid in their allegation that their taxes had been over-assessed, and characterized their claim as the pursuit of a property interest. We believe that a fair reading of their charges against Agent Kuntz discloses an attempt to lay claim not to a property interest, but to a liberty interest derived from and protected by the substantive aspects of the due process clause. The
*584
Rutherfords’ complaint, viewed in a favorable light, sketches a portrait of a lawless and arbitrary vendetta fueled by the power of the state, designed to harass by unwarranted intrusion into the minutia of their financial affairs, and intended to abuse by the creation of palpably unfounded claims against their property which they can set to right only by unnecessary litigation. The plaintiffs ask in recompense for the agent’s alleged abuses not a return of their taxes—
that
remedy they sought in their associated refund proceeding against the Government — but damages for the grief the Agent is said to have caused,
see Baskin v. Parker,
III.
A number of questions remain unresolved. Foremost is whether the substantive aspects of the due process clause actually does create in taxpayers a liberty interest in freedom from abusive behavior of the kind, degree and effect as that attributed to Agent Kuntz. Implication of nontextual substantive rights from the general monitions of the due process clause is a matter not to be undertaken lightly, but only with the caution of seasoned and mature thought. We have not had the benefit of arguments on this question; indeed, it has neither yet been addressed by the parties nor considered by the district court. In these circumstances we believe it best left for initial decision by the district court on remand,
see KSLA-TV, Inc. v. Radio Corporation of America,
If the district court should find that such an interest does exist, Kuntz’ claim of qualified immunity will come into play. Resolution of that claim will turn in large part on an assessment of the quality of the underlying substantive interests: under the Supreme Court’s recent reformulation of the doctrine, qualified immunity attaches unless Kuntz’ “conduct violated clearly established constitutional rights of which a reasonable person should have known,”
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
-U.S.-,
Decision of these issues in the Ruther-fords’ favor would lead the district court to the
Bivens
issue. The Supreme Court counseled in
Carlson
v.
Green,
And finally, there remains the question of whether the Rutherfords’ claim is, in any case, barred by the statute of limitations. Resolution of this issue will require,
inter alia,
that the district court decide when the Rutherfords’ claim accrued, and, possibly, whether circumstances existed which tolled the running of the proscriptive period. This issue, too, is dependent on a clearer definition of the Rutherfords’ cause of action, and also on resolution of conflicting factual accounts,
Hall v. Board of School Commissioners of Mobile County, Alabama,
IV.
We reverse the district court’s judgment and remand for reconsideration of the Rutherfords’ constitutional claim. We urge the district court on reconsideration to give special attention to determining the date on which the Rutherfords’ claim accrued, and to deciding whether the Rutherfords have shown that Kuntz’ actions violated a constitutional right so clearly established that immunity would not attach.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Although the district court styled its decision for Agent Kuntz as a summary judgment, a reading of its order discloses that it dismissed the claim because it believed that the facts stated in the Rutherfords’ pleadings did not describe a constitutional violation. Its action is properly understood as a dismissal for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted, Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), and will be reviewed as such.
Martin v. Morgan Drive Away, Inc.,
. Although the Rutherfords’ notice of appeal included the constitutional decision, the jurisdictional decision, and a separate order striking their second, unauthorized amended complaint, they abandoned their challenges to the latter two aspects of the judgment by omitting them from their briefs and oral argument.
Fehlhaber v. Fehlhaber,
.
Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents,
. The court was, of course, quite correct in doing so. Defendant Kuntz is a federal official, acting under color of federal law rather than state law. The fourteenth amendment’s restrictions on the powers of the states do not apply to the federal government. The analogous limitations on federal action are embodied in the fifth amendment.
Cf. Broadway v. Block,
. We recognize that the Court discounted certain dissimilarities between the available state tort remedy and the § 1983 remedy claimed by the plaintiff. It found irrelevant that the state tort remedy “provides only for an action against the State as opposed to its individual employees, it contains no provisions for punitive damages, and that there is no right to a trial by jury,”
Parratt,
. Kuntz has suggested that, failing acceptance of the district court’s reasoning, this Court uphold its result on a finding that he is immune from liability, or that the statute of limitations ran on the Rutherfords’ claim against him before they filed their action. The necessity of resolution first of the liberty interest issue, and our decision to leave this question for initial consideration in the district court, requires that decision of the immunity question be deferred.
