LAURENCE KEITT DANTZLER, BROOKS WHITTLE DANTZLER, Plаintiffs-Appellees, versus UNITED STATES INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 98-8514
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
(August 10, 1999)
D. C. Docket No. 5:96-CV-94-1 [PUBLISH]
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Middle District of Georgia
* Honorable James L. Watson, Senior Judge, U. S. Court of International Trade, sitting by designation.
EDMONDSON, Circuit Judge:
As legal authority, the binding aspect of an earlier case is found in the actual disposition of the case given its particular essential facts. The power of precedent chiefly is to assure that like cases have like results. Cases that are not essentially alike can rightly have different results. These principles come into play as we decide the government‘s appeal from the district court‘s judgmеnt awarding Taxpayers refunds of their federal income taxes. Because Taxpayers’ claims for refunds were not timely, we reverse.
Background
Each April of 1986, 1987 and 1988, taxpayers Laurence and Brooks Dantzler, who are husband and wife, submitted to the federal Internal Revenue Service (“IRS“) a Form 4868 application for a four-month extеnsion of time for filing their annual federal income tax return. Each year, the Dantzlers enclosed a remittance. These amounts were sent to the IRS: $5,220.00 in 1986; $3,234.64 in 1987; $4,577.89 in 1988. Each time, the IRS granted the Dantzlers’ request for a four-month extension.
The Dantzlers did not file the returns within the respective four-month extension periods, nor did they request additional extensions. Instead, the Dantzlers submitted their tax returns for the years 1985, 1986 and 1987 in December 1992. The returns showed that the Dantzlers’ liability was less than the remittances the Dantzlers had made in connection with the corresponding extension requests, and each return accordingly sought a refund. In November 1993, the Dantzlers requested that the IRS return the excess amounts to them. The IRS later notified the Dantzlers that it had disallowed their refund claims because the claims were barred by the statute of limitations.
The Dantzlers brought this action seeking a refund for the years 1985, 1986, and 1987.1 The government and the Dantzlers filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The district court denied the government‘s motion and granted the Dantzlers’ motion. The govеrnment appeals.
Discussion
This case presents the issue of whether the remittances submitted by the Dantzlers with their 4868 forms, requesting extensions of time for the filing of their 1985, 1986 and 1987 tax returns, constitute payments for purposes of the statute of limitations on a claim for refund. We conclude that the remittances were payments. The Dantzlers’ refund claims are therefore time-barred.
The Internal Revenue Code contains two jurisdictional time bars for tax refund claims.
So, for the Dantzlers to recover, their claims must have been filed, at the latest, within three years and four months from the time the tax was paid. If the remittances submitted with their Form 4868 applications for extensions were payments, their claims are time-barred because the claims at issue in this appeal were made more than three years and four months after each respective remittance was made. But, if the remittancеs were deposits and if the taxes were not paid until the Dantzlers filed their returns in 1992, the Dantzlers’ claims are not barred: the payments would have occurred simultaneously with the refund claims.
The Dantzlers argue that their remittances were no payments. They say that binding precedent of our circuit establishes a per se rule that there can be no payment of a tax until there has been an assessment of a tax. Because an assessment had not been made when the Dantzlers filed their returns in this case3 (at which time they also filed their claim for a refund), the Dantzlers contend that their claims were timely.
The distinction between deposits and payments was initially recognized in Rosenman v. United States, 323 U.S. 658 (1945). In Rosenman, the Supreme Court concluded that a refund claim for a remittance of anticipated (but disputed) estate taxes was not time-barred by the predecessor to
Based on its evaluation of the specific facts before it -- the timing of the remittances and the disputed IRS assessment, which came years later than the remittance; the taxpayers’ intent in making the remittance; and how the IRS treated the remittance upon receipt -- the Court, in Rosenman, ruled that the remittance was a deposit; so the statute of limitations did not apply. The taxpayers were accordingly entitled to a refund. Id. at 661-63.
In Thomas v. Mercantile National Bank, 204 F.2d 943 (5th Cir. 1953), the court seemed to interpret Rosenman as establishing, in effect, a per se rule that а remittance will not be construed as a payment until an assessment of the tax owed has been made. Id. at 944. Thomas involved a remittance for a proposed estate
In Ford v. United States, 618 F.2d 357 (5th Cir. 1980), the court applied Thomas in a case where the taxpayers sought a refund of their federal income taxes. The taxpayers in that case remitted funds in response to a statutory notice of deficiency. After an assessment by the IRS, it was determined they had overpaid. But, the taxpayers did not file a refund claim until the limitations period -- if measured from the time when they remitted funds in response tо the notice of deficiency -- had expired. The Ford court said the case was controlled by Thomas, id. at 361, and while disagreeing with the result, see id. at 359-61 (criticizing Thomas and inviting en banc consideration “of a rule we believe not justified by Supreme Court precedent, the practice of other courts, or the realities of our tax system“), the Ford court concluded that the tax was not deemed paid until the date of assessment of deficiеncy, id. at 361.
In the instant case, the district court believed that Thomas and Ford required it to accept the Dantzlers’ position that their remittances were deposits. So, the district court determined that the provisions of
The district court was correct, of course, that it must follow the law of our circuit. We must do so too. Each panel of this court is bound by an earlier decision of this court which decided an indistinguishable case, unless and until that decision is overruled by the court en banc or by the Supreme Court. See Bonner v. City of Prichard, 661 F.2d 1206, 1209 (11th Cir. 1981) (en banc). The law-of-the-circuit rule, however, will not determine the outcome here, because the Thomas and Ford cases are distinguishable, given the facts of the present case.
The district court erred in concluding that it was bound to follow Thomas and Ford in this case. The courts in Thomas and Ford were not presented with and did not decide the question presented in this case: whether taxpayers’ remittances submitted with a Form 4868 request for an extension of time for the filing of income tax returns constitute payments of tax for purposes of the statute of limitations for refund claims. We do face that particular question; and we conclude that the remittances in this case were not deposits, but were payments.
An automatic extension pursuant to Form 4868 does not relieve the taxpayer of the obligation to pay the taxes on the statutory due date: The regulations for Form 4868 extensions provide, “[n]otwithstanding thе application of
The existence of this specific statute and the implementing regulations -- which constitute part of the material circumstances of this case and, thus, the circumstances on which our decision is based -- distinguishes Thomas and Ford from the instant case. Neither Thomas nor Ford had occasion tо address the collective effect of the provisions which govern the Dantzlers’ remittances. Those cases have different facts: they do not involve remittances of estimated income tax and a statute which specifically defines when a remittance of such a tax constitutes a payment. Thomas involved taxpayеrs who responded to a notice of deficiency in estate tax to forestall the accrual of interest on any potential deficiency, see Thomas, 204 F.2d at 943, and Ford involved taxpayers who responded to a notice of deficiency proposed by the IRS years after the taxpayers had filed their returns, see Ford, 618 F.2d at 358. In this case, thе Dantzlers’ remittances, submitted in conjunction with a request for an extension of time to file their tax returns, were their own undisputed estimates of their tax liability.
To the extent that the Thomas and Ford opinions purport to hold anything extending beyond the facts with which each of those courts was presented, statements to that effect are unnecessary to the Thomas and Ford decisions, that is, the language is dicta. See United States v. Eggеrsdorf, 126 F.3d 1318, 1322 n.4 (11th Cir. 1997) (“[L]anguage in . . . [an opinion] not necessary to deciding the case then before us” is dicta); Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co. v. Tanker Robert Watt Miller, 957 F.2d 1575, 1578 (11th Cir. 1992) (explaining that what is said in a prior opinion about a question not presented there is dicta, so a later panel is “free to give that question fresh consideration“). Neither the Ford nor Thomas court could mаke a judicial decision about an issue which was not squarely presented by the material facts of those cases.
Strictly speaking, judicial opinions do not make binding precedents; judicial decisions do. As the Supreme Court has recently explained, “[t]here is, of course, an important difference between the holding in а case and the reasoning that supports that holding.” Crawford-El v. Britton, 118 S. Ct. 1584, 1590 (1998). A judicial opinion is not a statute, and not every sentence in a judicial opinion is law.6 And there is a big difference between following a precedent where the prior-precedent rule demands it and extending a precedent.
Thomas and Ford are binding, but only on cases presenting fаcts materially the same as those presented to the Thomas and Ford courts. Of course, precedents can have persuasive force that goes beyond their technical powers to bind. The
Although the district court did not rely on it, wе also note that our decision is in no way contrary to the Supreme Court‘s Rosenman decision or opinion. In Rosenman, the Court did not have before it the question whether there can be payment of a tax without assessment, and it made no ruling in that regard. “[Rosenman] involved a complicated, individualized set of circumstances . . . [and] was decided before the IRS adopted the autоmatic extension procedure of Form 4868.” Ott, 141 F.3d at 1307. Thomas‘s unnecessarily broad interpretation of Rosenman -- an interpretation by which the decision in Thomas is explained -- is in no way binding on us. Even the Ford court acknowledged that Rosenman did not require the result in Thomas, see Ford, 618 F.2d at 359 (”Rosenman . . . did not necessarily dictate the disposition of [Thomas].“); see also Fortugno v. Commissioner, 353 F.2d 429, 435 (3d Cir. 1965) (”Rosenman does not foreclose treating as a tax payment a remittance made prior to assessment.“). In addition, Ford‘s unnecessarily broad interpretation8 of Thomas‘s holding is not binding in this case, and it cannot change the dicta in Thomas to something more. See United States v. Hunter, 172 F.3d 1307, 1310 n.1 (11th Cir. 1999) (Carnes, J., concurring) (“Two layers of dicta cannot do what one does not--bind a later panеl.“). We also note that at least six other circuits have rejected the notion that Rosenman establishes a per se test. See Ertman, 165 F.3d at 206-08 (collecting cases and concluding that Form 4868 remittance is payment and not deposit).
So, we conclude that the Dantzlers’ remittances in 1986, 1987 and 1988 with their respective 4868 forms constituted payments rather than deposits. The applicablе limitations periods began to run when those remittances and forms were filed with the IRS. Because they did not seek refunds until 1992, the Dantzlers’ claims are time-barred.
Because the Dantzlers’ refund claims were not timely, the government was entitled to summary judgment. We therefore REVERSE the district court‘s judgment and REMAND for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
