*1
UNITED STATES TAX COURT TIMOTHY M. DEES, Petitioner v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent Docket No. 29397-15. Filed February 2, 2017. P claimed a refundable credit under I.R.C. sec. 36B on his 2014 income tax return. R determined that P was not entitled to the refundable credit and issued a notice of deficiency to P. That notice showed a deficiency of zero on the first page. The attached computation pages stated that there was a decrease to refundable credits but erroneously computed a tax deficiency of “.00”. P timely filed a petition to challenge R’s disallowance of his refundable credit. The Court ordered R to show cause why this case should not be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction, questioning the validity of the notice of deficiency.
Held: When determining whether a notice of deficiency is valid, we review the notice objectively to determine whether it is adequate to inform a reasonable taxpayer that the Commissioner has determined a deficiency. If that test is satisfied the notice of deficiency is valid, and we do not look beyond the notice.
Held, further, if a notice of deficiency is ambiguous as to whether the Commissioner has determined a deficiency, then the party seeking to establish our jurisdiction bears the burden of proving that the Commissioner has determined a deficiency and that the taxpayer was not misled by the ambiguous notice of deficiency. Held, further, R has shown that he determined a deficiency and that P was not misled by the notice of deficiency.
Zachary G. VandeKamp, for petitioner.
Michael Skeen, Linda E. Mosakowski, and Peter Reilly, for respondent.
OPINION
BUCH, Judge: The Commissioner issued a notice of deficiency to Timothy M. Dees that showed a deficiency of zero but also stated that Mr. Dees was not entitled to a claimed refundable credit. Although the notice is ambiguous as to whether the Commissioner determined a deficiency, the Commissioner argues that the notice was sufficient because it identified the adjustment and because Mr. Dees made clear in his petition that he was not misled by the ambiguous notice. Although this notice was ambiguous as to whether the Commissioner had determined a deficiency in tax, the Commissioner showed that he had made a determination and that Mr. Dees was not misled by the ambiguity in the notice. *3 Accordingly, the notice of deficiency is valid, and we have jurisdiction over this case.
Background
Mr. Dees filed a Form 1040, U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, for taxable
year 2014. On his return he claimed a credit pursuant to section 36B.
[1]
Section
36B provides a refundable credit for a portion of premiums paid by a taxpayer
under a qualified health plan and was enacted as part of the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act, Pub. L. No. 111-148, sec. 1401(a),
The Commissioner determined that Mr. Dees was not entitled to the premium tax credit and on September 8, 2015, issued a notice of deficiency for the 2014 taxable year to Mr. Dees and withheld his refundable credit. [2] The first text sentence of the notice stated: “We determined that there is a deficiency in your income tax which is listed above.” Above that sentence the notice stated: “Deficiency: $.00”. The Commissioner included with the notice a tax deficiency *4 computation which decreased refundable credits but erroneously computed a bottom-line deficiency of “.00 ”. Elsewhere, the document states: “A decrease to refundable credit results in a tax increase.”
While residing in California, Mr. Dees timely filed a petition with our Court to challenge the disallowance of the refundable credit. In his petition, he specifically argued that the Commissioner erred in denying his premium tax credit and asserted that he had documents showing he was entitled to the credit.
The Court ordered the Commissioner to explain whether the deficiency determined against Mr. Dees was for “$.00”. The Commissioner responded that there was a “clerical error in the notices of deficiency issued by the Atlanta campus disallowing section 36B premium tax credit and incorrectly reflecting a deficiency in tax of $0.00 on the first page of the notices.” The Commissioner explained that despite this error the “notice of deficiency disallows the refundable premium tax credit in the amount of $484.00” because “[t]he computations for the disallowed credit are attached to the letter portion of the notice of deficiency in which the deficiency is the amount of the disallowed credit.”
The Court then issued an order to show cause why this case should not be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction on the ground that the Commissioner failed to determine a deficiency. The Commissioner filed a response stating that he had *5 determined a deficiency and that this was a clerical error that did not invalidate the notice. The Commissioner argued that Mr. Dees was not misled because he filed a petition and challenged the disallowance of his premium tax credit. Finally, the Commissioner explained that, in the interim, he had obtained information from the Health Insurance Marketplace showing that Mr. Dees was, in fact, entitled to the claimed credit. The Commissioner prepared settlement documents to send to Mr. Dees.
We must resolve whether we have jurisdiction before we can proceed.
Discussion
Our jurisdiction in a deficiency case is predicated on the Commissioner’s
issuing a valid notice of deficiency and the taxpayer’s timely filing a petition with
our Court to challenge the notice. Secs. 6212, 6213, 7442; Rules 13, 20; see, e.g.,
Midland Mortg. Co. v. Commissioner,
I.
General Requirements for a Valid Notice of Deficiency
Although section 6212(a) authorizes the Commissioner to send a notice of
deficiency, the Code does not specify the form of the notice. Jarvis v.
*6
Commissioner,
II. Challenges to the Validity of a Notice
We have often addressed questions regarding the validity of notices of deficiency. We have at times characterized our review of the sufficiency of a notice as an objective test. But our caselaw shows that an objective review is used to establish prima facie validity of a notice of deficiency. When that objective review has led us to conclude that a notice was ambiguous, we have looked *7 beyond the notice to determine whether the Commissioner made a determination and whether the taxpayer knew or should have known that the Commissioner determined a deficiency.
This approach is evident in Miles Prod. Co. v. Commissioner,
We do not hold that we would necessarily find jurisdiction if the statutory notice were not so detailed and traceable to the forms filed by the taxpayer or if the forms filed by the taxpayer were for improper taxable periods. But here, the taxpayer encounters no difficulty in ascertaining the specific NIL computation that is being adjusted in the statutory notice of deficiency.
Id. at 604. The Court went further and also determined that the notice was sufficient because the taxpayer was not misled. Id. Referring to another similar case, the Court explained:
In holding that we had jurisdiction in Burford v. Commissioner * * *
[,
Id.
Indeed, in Burford v. Commissioner,
First, we look to see whether the notice objectively put a reasonable
taxpayer on notice that the Commissioner determined a deficiency in tax for a
*9
particular year and amount. If the notice, viewed objectively, sets forth this
information, then it is a valid notice. Indeed, it is well established that “the notice
is only to advise the person who is to pay the deficiency that the Commissioner
means to assess him; anything that does this unequivocally is good enough.”
Olsen v. Helvering,
But what if, as here, the notice is ambiguous? Then our caselaw requires the party seeking to establish jurisdiction to establish that the Commissioner made a determination and that the taxpayer was not misled by the ambiguous notice.
Where the notice is ambiguous, it must be established that the
Commissioner made a determination. In Campbell v. Commissioner,
of deficiency does not reveal on its face that the Commissioner failed to make a
determination, a presumption arises that there was a deficiency determination.”
Id. at 113 (relying on Scar v. Commissioner,
In addition to showing that the Commissioner made a determination, we
also have inquired as to whether a taxpayer was prejudiced by an ambiguous
*11
notice. In Erickson v. Commissioner,
We applied a subjective approach in Saint Paul Bottling Co. v.
Commissioner,
Likewise in Wilkens & Lange v. Commissioner,
*13
Even our last known address cases are somewhat analogous. Section
6212(b)(1) requires the Commissioner to send a notice of deficiency to the
taxpayer’s last known address; if mailed to the last known address, it is sufficient
even if the taxpayer did not receive actual notice. See, e.g., Zenco Eng’g Corp. v.
Commissioner,
III. The Notice in This Case
The notice of deficiency that the Commissioner sent to Mr. Dees was ambiguous. The notice stated that the deficiency was “$.00” and the computation page stated that the “Tax Deficiency / Increase in Tax” was “.00”. But the notice also stated that the Commissioner was disallowing a refundable credit and *14 identified the amount of that disallowance. [3] The notice went further and informed Mr. Dees: “A decrease to refundable credit results in a tax increase.”
The notice on its face is ambiguous, but the Commissioner has established that he made a determination and that Mr. Dees was not misled by the notice. Mr. Dees timely filed a petition to challenge the notice, and that petition makes clear that Mr. Dees understood that the Commissioner had disallowed his refundable credit: He stated in his petition both that the Commissioner had erred in denying his premium tax credit and that he had documents to substantiate his entitlement to the credit. This establishes that Mr. Dees was not misled by the notice.
Conclusion
Despite the errors in the notice of deficiency, it stated that the Commissioner was disallowing Mr. Dees’ refundable credit and withholding his refund. The notice was ambiguous, but the Commissioner has established that he determined a deficiency. The records also makes clear that Mr. Dees was not *15 misled by the ambiguous notice of deficiency, as evidenced by the content of his timely filed petition. Accordingly, we have jurisdiction.
An appropriate order will be issued.
Reviewed by the Court.
THORNTON, HOLMES, KERRIGAN, LAUBER, NEGA, and PUGH, JJ., agree with this opinion of the Court.
MARVEL, CJ., concurring: The opinion of the Court appropriately points
out that, under our caselaw, a valid notice of deficiency must “provide a formal
notification that a deficiency in taxes has been determined.” Pietz v.
Commissioner,
This Court has previously dealt with an ambiguous notice and the
jurisdictional issue that such a notice presents. In Campbell v. Commissioner, 90
T.C. 110, 113 (1988), we relied on two footnotes in the Court of Appeals for the
*17
Ninth Circuit’s opinion in Scar v. Commissioner,
Since we released our Opinion in Campbell, we have relied on it at various
times to support the use of evidence outside the four corners of the notice of
deficiency, such as tax returns, to confirm that an allegedly ambiguous notice of
deficiency reflected a determination with respect to the taxpayer’s return. See,
e.g., Hanashiro v. Commissioner,
The opinion of the Court first applies what it calls an “objective test” to “establish prima facie validity of a notice of deficiency.” See op. Ct. p. 6. If the objective test reveals that the notice is ambiguous, then the opinion of the Court applies a subjective test to determine “whether the Commissioner made a determination and whether the taxpayer knew or should have known that the Commissioner determined a deficiency.” See op. Ct. pp. 6-7 (emphasis added). While I agree that our caselaw supports the proposition that information outside the notice of deficiency, such as a taxpayer’s return, may be examined to resolve a *19 jurisdictional ambiguity in a notice of deficiency, I disagree that our caselaw supports a test that looks, in part, to whether the taxpayer knew or should have known that the Commissioner determined a deficiency or was misled. The references to a taxpayer’s knowledge or intent and/or to whether a taxpayer was misled in the cases on which the opinion of the Court relies are dicta reinforcing the Court’s conclusion in each case that the Commissioner made a determination in the notice of deficiency that passes jurisdictional muster. We should not elevate those references into a test that has no place in resolving the real jurisdictional issue--whether the Commissioner in the notice of deficiency made a determination with respect to the taxpayer that confers jurisdiction on this Court. The opinion of the Court has concluded, on the basis of the record as a whole, that, although the notice of deficiency was ambiguous, respondent determined an income tax deficiency with respect to petitioner and the notice is valid. No other analysis is needed or should be required.
PARIS, J., agrees with this concurring opinion.
*20 ASHFORD, J., concurring in the result only: I agree that we have jurisdiction over this case and therefore concur in the result reached by the opinion of the Court. I respectfully write separately to express my concerns and disagreement with the analysis in the opinion of the Court. The opinion of the Court delineates a two-prong approach (with both objective and subjective elements) to determining our deficiency jurisdiction that is, at best, unnecessary, and is, at worst, improper. This Court, like all Federal courts, is a court of limited jurisdiction; our jurisdiction and its extent are explicitly provided by statute. Sec. 7442. [1] Hence, any analysis of our jurisdiction should begin with and rely primarily on the text of the statutes establishing it. In the deficiency context, these are sections 6212, 6213, and 6214. However, the opinion of the Court mentions sections 6212 and 6213 only in passing and is devoid of any reference to section 6214. To be sure, we routinely gloss over these statutes in our opinions and instead cite a handful of well-trodden cases for jurisdictional principles, so this omission is not particularly surprising. For this case, though, in which the Court is making a broad, general statement regarding our deficiency jurisdiction, distinctly *21 and explicitly for the benefit of litigants in future cases, a closer reading of these statutes should be central to our opinion.
I believe that a straightforward interpretation of these statutes demonstrates that the analysis in the opinion of the Court lacks any basis in the statutory text and that many of our statements in past cases on which the opinion of the Court relies were unnecessary and inartful. Instead, guided by the wording of these statutes, I believe they base our deficiency jurisdiction primarily on the Commissioner’s substantive determination of a deficiency in a taxpayer’s Federal tax and require the issuance of a notice of deficiency thereafter to the taxpayer only as a procedural matter; we have no need or authority to consider a taxpayer’s understanding of the notice. Consequently, I would hold that we have jurisdiction in the instant case because respondent made such a substantive determination in petitioner’s Federal income tax and then properly issued him a notice of deficiency.
I. The Statutory Text
A. The Deficiency Procedures
Section 6214(a) establishes our deficiency jurisdiction. It provides:
Except as provided by section 7463, the Tax Court shall have
jurisdiction to redetermine the correct amount of the deficiency even
if the amount so redetermined is greater than the amount of the
*22
deficiency, notice of which has been mailed to the taxpayer, and to
determine whether any additional amount, or any addition to the tax
should be assessed, if claim therefor is asserted by the Secretary at or
before the hearing or a rehearing. [Emphasis added.]
From this provision we derive two well-known jurisdictional principles. The first
is that, once the Commissioner determines a deficiency for a taxpayer’s taxable
year and mails a notice of deficiency to the taxpayer, sec. 6212(a), and once the
taxpayer invokes our jurisdiction by filing a timely petition, sec. 6213(a), our
jurisdiction potentially extends to the taxpayer’s full tax situation for that year, not
just to the assertions in the notice of deficiency, Naftel v. Commissioner, 85 T.C.
527, 533 (1985). In particular, we have jurisdiction to find that a taxpayer’s
deficiency exceeds the deficiency reflected in the notice, where such an increase is
properly at issue. Davison v. Commissioner,
The second principle stemming from section 6214(a) is that we do not have
jurisdiction over a taxpayer to whom the Commissioner has not issued a notice of
deficiency. See Rule 13; Abrams v. Commissioner,
Hence, while our jurisdiction depends on the issuance of a notice of deficiency, it does not depend on the notice’s content. Indeed, not only does the notice’s content not affect our jurisdiction, it is not even particularly relevant to our adjudication of a case (although, as noted below, we have established rules conditioning the burden of proof therein on the notice’s content). Accordingly, section 6214 does not prescribe any specific requirements for the form or content of such a notice. Thus, when we refer to a “valid notice of deficiency” or a “notice of deficiency sufficient to confer jurisdiction on this Court”, we are stating a self- *25 fulfilling prophecy--if a document sent to a taxpayer constitutes a notice of deficiency under the Internal Revenue Code, then we have jurisdiction; there are no further requirements. [3]
Section 6212(a) addresses the question of what constitutes a notice of deficiency:
If the Secretary determines that there is a deficiency in respect of any tax imposed by subtitle A or B or chapter 41, 42, 43, or 44, he is
authorized to send notice of such deficiency to the taxpayer by certified mail or registered mail. Such notice shall include a notice to the taxpayer of the taxpayer’s right to contact a local office of the taxpayer advocate and the location and phone number of the appropriate office. [Emphasis added.]
This statute is particularly meaningful in context. It is codified in subtitle F of the
Code, “Procedure and Administration”, in the chapter establishing the
Commissioner’s authority to assess taxes due (specifically, chapter 63,
“Assessment”), as a restriction on that authority in the case of certain types of
taxes (subchapter B, “Deficiency Procedures in the Case of Income, Estate, Gift,
and Certain Excise Taxes”). Hence, the provision is part of the broader
procedures that Congress designed, starting with section 6201, for the
Commissioner to follow in determining, assessing, and collecting the appropriate
amount of tax that a taxpayer owes under the preceding five subtitles (the
substantive provisions of the Internal Revenue Code). The issuance of a notice of
deficiency is a specific step that the Commissioner must take at a specific point in
the process, and without doing so the Commissioner cannot move to the next step
of assessing tax he believes to be due from that taxpayer. Sec. 6213(a);
[4]
see
*27
Bregin v. Commissioner,
In other words, this provision is intended to protect taxpayers, ensuring that no taxpayer is assessed a tax before he or she is aware of it, but as with so many other such protections that Congress envisioned, it is designed as a procedural hurdle. The opinion of the Court focuses solely on this provision’s role as a
[4] (...continued) mailed to the taxpayer”. (Emphasis added.)
*28 taxpayer protection--if the goal is to notify taxpayers, it suggests, then our standard should be whether the taxpayers understand the notice. Further, because the opinion of the Court bases its reasoning entirely on caselaw rather than the statutes, it reflects a highly Tax-Court-centric view of the deficiency procedures. We are accustomed to thinking of notices of deficiency as a taxpayer’s “ticket to the Tax Court” and our starting point for a case, and as such expect these notices to include some basic information regarding the nature of the deficiencies they reflect from which we can start our inquiry. But while this is an important purpose that we can and do consider when assigning the burden of proof or limiting the Commissioner’s potential arguments at trial, it is not a statutory prerequisite for us to merely assert jurisdiction over a case.
Instead, the procedural hurdle that the statute explicitly prescribes for our jurisdiction to attach is much more minimal. The notice it requires is only that the Commissioner has determined a deficiency and, rather than leading exclusively to Tax Court review, Congress has, over time, structured the statute to ensure that taxpayers are given various options for responding to this information, whether or not they understand it. [6] A taxpayer can contact the Commissioner for more *29 information (i.e., via the National Taxpayer Advocate); file a petition for redetermination in the Tax Court (hence the requirement that the notice include the date by which he or she must do so); immediately pay some or all of the deficiency reflected in the notice (if it clearly states an amount); or do nothing, after which the Commissioner may assess the deficiency and send the taxpayer a bill for a specific amount. [7] Section 6212 does not explicitly privilege any one option over another, though the Commissioner is of course free to include additional information in the notice, such as the year, amount, and reasoning for his determination, to help a taxpayer reach his or her decision. The statute merely establishes a point in the process at which the Commissioner has acted and the impetus shifts back to the taxpayer to make the next move.
This interpretation follows from Congress’ use of the phrase “notice of such
deficiency” in section 6212(a) (emphasis added) (and the very similar wording of
section 6214(a): “the deficiency, notice of which has been mailed to the taxpayer”
(emphasis added)), which I read to be satisfied by notice only of the mere
existence of a deficiency determination by the Commissioner, on the simple
ground that it does not explicitly require any other specific information.
[8]
This is
in contrast to our dicta in cases such as Foster v. Commissioner,
Additionally, if section 6212 inherently required notices of deficiency to
include the amount and year of a deficiency, presumably Congress would have felt
no need to include such notices in section 7522, which it added to the Code in
1988. See Technical and Miscellaneous Revenue Act of 1988, Pub. L. No. 100-
647, sec. 6233(a),
SEC. 7522(a). General Rule.--Any notice to which this section applies shall describe the basis for, and identify the amounts (if any) of, the tax due, interest, additional amounts, additions to the tax, and assessable penalties included in such notice. An inadequate description under the preceding sentence shall not invalidate such notice.
(b) Notices to Which Section Applies.--This section shall apply to--
(1) any tax due notice or deficiency notice described in section 6155, 6212, or 6303, * * *
See also Shea v. Commissioner,
The notion of a notice of deficiency’s lacking even such fundamental
information is undoubtedly unsettling. But it is impossible to escape, especially
when we purport to delineate the outer bounds of our jurisdiction, that the statutes
do not explicitly require such information. By my reading of these statutes, any
document sent to a taxpayer that indicates that the Commissioner has reached a
deficiency determination is enough to satisfy the procedural hurdle of section
*33
6212. The notice at issue here, which states on its first page that respondent
“determined that there is a deficiency in * * * [petitioner’s] income tax”, is
sufficient for us to assert jurisdiction over this case under section 6214.
[10]
Cf. Scar
v. Commissioner,
B. The Determination Test
To elaborate, the notice of deficiency is a predicate for our jurisdiction, but
our jurisdiction does not derive from or attach to the notice of deficiency; our
jurisdiction is instead over the Commissioner’s determination that there is a
deficiency. See Hannan v. Commissioner,
The determination from which a taxpayer may appeal is one which fixes the amount of deficiency in tax. It is the final decision by which the controversy as to the deficiency is settled and terminated, and by which a final conclusion is reached relative thereto and the extent and measure of the deficiency defined. * * * As defined above a determination must be a settling of an existing controversy
susceptible of consideration, decision, and conclusion--and a
termination thereof. That which has not begun can not be terminated.
Terminal Wine Co. v. Commissioner,
Thus, our basic test for whether we have jurisdiction over a case should be:
did the Commissioner reach a (substantive) determination at the conclusion of an
examination, and did the Commissioner issue a (procedural) notice of deficiency
pursuant to that determination?
[12]
We routinely elide these questions, because we
rarely need to consider whether the Commissioner has not completed (or even
begun) an examination before issuing a notice of deficiency. However, that issue
distinctly arose in Scar v. Commissioner,
The opinion of the Court is an excellent example of how we confuse these substantive and procedural jurisdictional questions. It phrases its two-prong approach as “whether the notice objectively put a reasonable taxpayer on notice that the Commissioner determined a deficiency in tax for a particular year and amount. * * * [I]f * * * the notice is ambiguous * * * [t]hen our caselaw requires the party seeking to establish jurisdiction to establish that the Commissioner made a determination and that the taxpayer was not misled by the ambiguous notice.” See op. Ct. pp. 8-9. But we have jurisdiction over a deficiency determination, as a substantive matter, regardless of whether the notice of deficiency understandably reflects it or not, as long as a notice of deficiency was in fact issued, as a procedural matter.
Again, it is difficult and unsettling to attempt to philosophically untangle the abstract concept of the deficiency determination and its tangible representation in the notice of deficiency, but it is critical to understanding the Court of Appeals’ *37 holding in Scar and ultimately clarifies why a jurisdictional test focusing on the substantive determination rather than the procedural notice is preferable. Rather than getting bogged down in questions about whether a notice of deficiency is valid, by asserting our jurisdiction over essentially any notice that the Commissioner issues at the conclusion of an examination, we provide due process to as many taxpayers as possible. Declining jurisdiction where a notice does not represent a final determination does no harm to a taxpayer--once the examination is completed and a final determination reached, he or she will again have the opportunity to petition this Court for review. Holding instead, as the dissenters suggest, that some notices of deficiency are so inadequate that we do not have jurisdiction over the determinations they represent would increase rather than decrease confusion about our jurisdictional reach, particularly for taxpayers such as petitioner, who correctly read and followed the portion of the notice he received describing his right to further due process in this Court.
II. The Unique Facts of This Case
It is a longstanding principle that the party invoking this Court’s jurisdiction
bears the burden of demonstrating that it exists. La. Naval Stores, Inc. v.
Commissioner,
1991). In this case, though, neither party explicitly challenges the Court’s jurisdiction. As a result, petitioner, having filed a petition and thus initially invoked our jurisdiction, retains the burden of demonstrating that it exists. [13]
The opinion of the Court reaches a different conclusion. Although it acknowledges the principle in passing, it does not address how it generally applies in practice, and instead suggests that the Commissioner, not the taxpayer, bears the burden of demonstrating jurisdiction as part of the second prong of its approach. But that makes no sense in the context of this case, in which petitioner does not challenge the Court’s jurisdiction and respondent is likely indifferent as to whether we have jurisdiction--the parties have already agreed on terms for a *39 settlement, which they could simply enter into on their own were we to dismiss the case. In other words, respondent has no adversarial incentive to zealously argue his position here, and we should be very careful about promulgating new law on issues that are not fully in controversy.
The opinion of the Court raises even further questions by dividing the Commissioner’s burden of proof into two parts--an objective one (the Commissioner must prove that he made a determination) and a subjective one (the Commissioner must prove that the notice he issued did not mislead the taxpayer). In particular, it is difficult to envision any way that the Commissioner could carry the latter burden, of proving a taxpayer’s mental state, in a case where a taxpayer actively challenged our jurisdiction.
Most importantly, though, this part of the approach of the opinion of the Court is meaningless in context and in practice, because the fact establishing that petitioner was not misled is simply that petitioner filed a timely petition in response to the notice he received. In this way, the approach of the opinion of the Court is a solution in search of a problem--we will never find that we lack jurisdiction under it, because we will never be faced with a case in which a taxpayer has not filed a petition.
III. Practical Considerations
The appropriate remedy for a notice of deficiency with confusing or
inadequate content is not to declare that we do not have jurisdiction and refuse to
hear the case, as the dissenters would do, but to shift the burden of proof to the
Commissioner on any matter not reflected or incorrectly stated in the notice. This
is our well-established practice in cases where jurisdiction is not at issue. See,
e.g., Shea v. Commissioner,
Further, because of this rule, I fail to see how declining jurisdiction over a
petition filed in response to such a notice, or even suggesting that we might
decline jurisdiction over such a petition, as the opinion of the Court does, would
be in any way a taxpayer-friendly rule. Because the period of limitations on
assessment is tolled while a taxpayer’s petition is pending, sec. 6503(a)(1), even if
the petition is dismissed for lack of jurisdiction, see, e.g., Estate of Gudie v.
Commissioner,
Even in cases in which the Commissioner sends an inadequate notice of deficiency, the taxpayer does not petition us for redetermination, and tax is subsequently assessed, the taxpayer is not completely out of luck. The taxpayer has the option to pay the assessed tax and pursue a refund claim, after which he or she is entitled to file a suit for refund in a U.S. District Court or the U.S. Court of Federal Claims. Or, if the taxpayer does not become aware of the assessment until receiving a collection notice, the taxpayer can seek relief in a collections due process hearing, after which he or she is entitled to petition this Court for review. Although our caselaw probably would not allow us to find that a taxpayer who receives an inadequate notice of deficiency was not issued a notice of deficiency and thus is entitled to challenge his or her underlying liability under section 6330(c)(2)(B) (as Judge Foley correctly notes in his dissent, see Foley op. note 2, but which is true regardless of the outcome of this case), we could instead find that the Commissioner, in issuing an inadequate notice, failed to fulfill the necessary *42 administrative procedures, including those in the Internal Revenue Manual, under section 6330(c)(1).
In short, I believe that we can exercise jurisdiction over this case within the statutory confines Congress established and in a way that adequately protects future litigants and promotes consistent practice before us, without taking the same liberties as to these considerations that the opinion of the Court does. Consequently, I respectfully decline to join the opinion of the Court.
FOLEY, J., dissenting: The $0 deficiency notice at issue is invalid. It
certainly does not “fairly advise the taxpayer that the Commissioner has, in fact,
determined a deficiency and * * * specify the year and amount.” See Foster v.
Commissioner,
The existence of a deficiency is a notice’s most fundamental requirement. The Commissioner is not required to give the correct deficiency amount, but he is required to determine an amount, and $0 is not a deficiency. The opinion of the Court cites a myriad of cases referencing notices dating back to 1919, see op. Ct. pp. 6-13, yet none of those cases hold valid a notice which informs the taxpayer that he does not have a deficiency. [1]
At the May 18, 2016, hearing relating to the Court’s order to show cause, respondent’s counsel explained that “[the notice] can’t be something * * * where there hasn’t been a determination. There can’t be something where it’s so incomprehensible that a taxpayer couldn’t understand what’s going on.” Yet, when asked whether the notice unequivocally determines a deficiency, counsel replied:
I think that it unequivocally says that we’ve determined a deficiency. It just does not have the right amount on the first page. * * * But the fact that we made a determination is clear in this letter. How much it is, you have to look at the fifth page and look at the calculation to try and figure that out. Or look at your earlier correspondence, or pull out your return and see how much [sic] the tax credit you claimed. This notice does not fairly advise Mr. Dees that the Commissioner has determined a deficiency of a specific amount. It is merely a letter informing him *45 to begin a scavenger hunt for the Commissioner’s intent. Mr. Dees purchased TurboTax Audit Defense and thus was aided by counsel. Most taxpayers (i.e., low-income taxpayers eligible for the refundable credit at issue), however, do not have representation and will be unassisted in their quest to decipher these notices. [2] At the hearing to show cause the Court incredulously asked respondent’s counsel:
[W]hat you’re suggesting is that if a particular Petitioner got this notice and was able to divine from it that there’s a deficiency buried in there somewhere and filed a petition, your suggestion is that, well, we ought to have jurisdiction over that case?
Respondent’s counsel answered “Yes”, and the opinion of the Court has acquiesced by crafting a rule conferring validity on a notice informing petitioner of a $0 deficiency. Mr. Dees’ “notice of deficiency” informed him that he did not have a deficiency, and the opinion of the Court has rubberstamped it valid. Only *46 taxpayers with counsel at the ready and pro se taxpayers with extrasensory perception will be able to divine the meaning of these misleading missives.
COLVIN, VASQUEZ, GALE, GOEKE, GUSTAFSON, and MORRISON, JJ., agree with this dissent.
GUSTAFSON, J., dissenting: I join Judge Foley’s dissent, and I write separately to state my disagreement with a particular statement in the opinion of the Court: The opinion of the Court wrongly asserts that the notice issued to the petitioner “is not a ‘$0 deficiency notice’” because “[t]he attachment to the notice of deficiency informs Mr. Dees that he has a ‘Decrease to Refundable Credits’ of $484, which results in tax increase.” See op. Ct. note 3.
The question before us is not whether IRS personnel determined a deficiency in petitioner’s income tax (I assume they did), nor whether there is such a deficiency (I assume that there is), but whether “notice” of such a “deficiency” was “mailed” to petitioner, for purposes of section 6213(a). [1] I note the word “mailed” to stress the point that a notice of deficiency--on which our jurisdiction utterly depends--is a piece of paper that can be mailed. It is not enough that IRS personnel came to a conclusion that there is a deficiency, nor even that the taxpayer came to an understanding that the IRS had so concluded. Rather, the IRS must mail a notice of a deficiency. And what is a “deficiency” of which notice must be mailed?
To oversimplify, a “deficiency” is an amount of tax due that the taxpayer did not report on his return. But in fact the computation of a deficiency can be quite complicated. As relevant here, “deficiency” is defined in section 6211(a) as--
the amount by which the tax imposed by subtitle A * * * exceeds the excess of--
(1) the sum of
(A) the amount shown as the tax by the taxpayer upon his return, * * * plus
(B) the amounts previously assessed (or collected without assessment) as a deficiency, over--
(2) the amount of rebates, as defined in subsection (b)(2), made.
Subsection (b) of section 6211 adds these significant additional rules:
(b) Rules for Application of Subsection (a).-- For purposes of this section--
(1) The tax imposed by subtitle A and the tax shown on the return shall both be determined without regard to payment on account of estimated tax, without regard to the credit under section 31, without regard to the credit under section 33, and without regard to any credits resulting from the collection of amounts assessed under section 6851 or 6852 (relating to termination assessments).
(2) The term “rebate” means so much of an abatement, credit, refund, or other payment, as was made on the ground that the tax imposed by subtitle A or B or chapter 41, 42, 43, or 44 was less than the excess of the amount specified in subsection (a)(1) over the rebates previously made.
(3) The computation by the Secretary, pursuant to section 6014, of the tax imposed by chapter 1 shall be considered as having been made by the taxpayer and the tax so computed considered as shown by the taxpayer upon his return. (4) For purposes of subsection (a)-- (A) any excess of the sum of the credits allowable under sections 24(d), 25A by reason of subsection (i)(6) thereof, 32, 34, 35, 36, 36B, 168(k)(4), and 6431 over the tax imposed by subtitle A (determined without regard to such credits), and
(B) any excess of the sum of such credits as shown by the taxpayer on his return over the amount shown as the tax by the taxpayer on such return (determined without regard to such credits), shall be taken into account as negative amounts of tax. [Emphasis added.]
Thus, a deficiency is an “amount”--i.e., the amount by which the tax imposed exceeds the “excess” calculated by these complicated provisions in section 6211(a) and (b). A “notice” of a deficiency must therefore be a notice of this “amount”. But if the tax imposed does not exceed the “excess” defined in *50 section 6211(a) and (b), then the formula yields zero--i.e., zero excess of tax imposed over tax reported--and there is no deficiency.
As the opinion of the Court explains, this case involves one of the complications of section 6211(b): The IRS disallowed the refundable credit under section 36B that the taxpayer had claimed on his return; and, as the emphasized text above in section 6211(b)(4) indicates, an excess credit under section 36B is indeed a component of the deficiency calculation (taken into account as a negative amount of tax in figuring the tax reported by the taxpayer). However, in stating that such a disallowance “creates a deficiency in tax”, see op. Ct. note 2, the opinion of the Court is imprecise. Whether an excess credit under section 36B actually gives rise to a “deficiency” depends, of course, on the other terms of the deficiency calculation. A taxpayer who claims an excess credit under section 36B will have a deficiency only if all the components of the calculation taken together produce an “amount”. No component in itself “creates a deficiency”. If another component in the computation is taxpayer-favorable and offsets the excess credit, then at the bottom line there may be no deficiency.
In this case, what the IRS mailed to petitioner was a letter, bearing the caption “Notice of Deficiency”, that stated: “We determined that there is a *51 deficiency in your income tax which is listed above”. However, “listed above” on the letter is the following:
Deficiency: $.00
The letter went on to say: “The computation at the end of this letter shows how we figured the deficiency”; but that computation at the end is as follows:
Tax Deficiency Computation
Change in Tax Shown on Return $ .00 Plus: Decrease to Refundable Credits 484.00 Tax Deficiency / Increase in Tax .00 Thus, the letter twice gives the amount of the deficiency as zero. Nowhere on the letter is there stated to be a deficiency in any other amount. If the difference between the tax imposed and the “excess” defined in section 6211(a) and (b) is zero, then by definition there is no deficiency. A notice that reports such a zero is not a notice of a deficiency; it is a notice of no deficiency. [2]
Admittedly, the IRS’s letter gives notice of disallowance of an excess credit claimed on the return. However, Congress has not given jurisdiction to the Tax Court when the IRS mails a notice of a disallowance. [3] We may acquire jurisdiction only when such a disallowance gives rise to a deficiency and only when the IRS mails notice of that deficiency. Here the IRS did not do so. Instead, the IRS mailed notice of a disallowance and of no deficiency. Therefore, the predicate for our deficiency jurisdiction under section 6213(a) is lacking, and I would dismiss this case for lack of jurisdiction.
COLVIN, FOLEY, VASQUEZ, GOEKE, and MORRISON, JJ., agree with this dissent.
Notes
[1] Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code (Code) in effect at all relevant times, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
[2] Section 6211 defines a deficiency and includes the disallowance of a
refundable credit under section 36B as a negative amount of tax. Sec. 6211(b)(4).
The Commissioner’s disallowance of the refundable credit creates a deficiency in
tax. See Voigt v. Commissioner,
[3] In his dissent Judge Foley characterizes the notice of deficiency as a “$0
deficiency notice” that “informs the taxpayer that the Commissioner has not
determined a deficiency”. See Foley op. p. 43. But it is not a “$0 deficiency
notice”. It is well settled that we look to the notice and all of the attachments to
determine whether the notice of deficiency is valid. See Saint Paul Bottling Co. v.
Commissioner,
[1] Sec. 7442 provides: “The Tax Court and its divisions shall have such jurisdiction as is conferred on them by this title, by chapters 1, 2, 3, and 4 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939, by title II and title III of the Revenue Act of 1926 (44 Stat. 10-87), or by laws enacted subsequent to February 26, 1926.”
[2] As established in these and other cases, we generally hold that we lack
jurisdiction to determine an increased deficiency unless the Commissioner asserts
such an increase before trial, i.e., as an affirmative allegation in his answer or a
later amendment thereto. See, e.g., Koufman v. Commissioner,
[2] (...continued)
[3] More accurately, there are no further requirements regarding the content of
the notice; there are other procedural requirements that the Commissioner must
respect when issuing such a notice. Indeed, the opinion of the Court cites Midland
Mortg. Co. v. Commissioner,
[4] Sec. 6213(a) provides in part: “Except as otherwise provided in section 6851, 6852, or 6861 no assessment of a deficiency in respect of any tax imposed by subtitle A or B, chapter 41, 42, 43, or 44 and no levy or proceeding in court for its collection shall be made, begun, or prosecuted until such notice has been (continued...)
[5] That is, except for its final sentence, added in the Internal Revenue Service
Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998 (RRA 1998), Pub. L. No. 105-206, sec.
1102(b),
[6] Judge Hand seems to have understood this as the notice’s main function, writing that “the notice [of deficiency] is only to advise the person who is to pay (continued...)
[6] (...continued)
the deficiency that the Commissioner means to assess him; anything that does this
unequivocally is good enough.” Olsen v. Helvering,
[7] In contrast to the statutes establishing the deficiency procedures, the provision authorizing the Commissioner to issue notice and demand for payment of an assessed tax explicitly requires that it include the amount of the tax. See sec. 6303(a) (“Where it is not otherwise provided by this title, the Secretary shall, as soon as practicable, and within 60 days, after the making of an assessment of a tax pursuant to section 6203, give notice to each person liable for the unpaid tax, stating the amount and demanding payment thereof.” (Emphasis added.)).
[8] In this way, a notice of deficiency is perhaps analogous to a notice from a bank that an account is overdrawn or from a lender that a person is in default on a mortgage or loan. Although it is helpful to know the amount of the overdraft or the specific payments missed, the mere fact of the overdraft or default is really the most useful piece of information for the recipient, and from that he or she can readily proceed to obtain more information, by either reviewing his or her records or requesting an explanation from the bank or lender.
[9] Notably, both the opinion of the Court here and the Court in Foster v.
Commissioner,
[10] Both dissents rest on the fact that the notice of deficiency reflects a
deficiency amount of “$.00”, and thus did not indicate that respondent determined
a deficiency. In particular, Judge Gustafson argues persuasively that a basic
characteristic of a deficiency, as defined under sec. 6211, is its amount, and that
this amount cannot be zero. See Gustafson op. pp. 50-51. But I disagree with
Judge Gustafson’s assertion that a correct recitation of this amount (or even an
incorrect recitation of some other amount, as long as it is not zero) is necessary for
a notice of deficiency to indicate the mere existence of a deficiency determination.
Instead, “the sufficiency of the notice must be determined from the language
used.” Estate of Schmalstig v. Commissioner,
[11] The Commissioner also treats notices of deficiency in this way--as an indication first and foremost that he has concluded his examination and is presenting the taxpayer with the details of his final determination. See generally Internal Revenue Manual pt. 4.8.9 (July 28, 2015) (describing the Commissioner’s internal procedures for issuing a notice of deficiency).
[12] Applying this test is straightforward in most cases, because when we are
asked to determine whether we have jurisdiction, it is almost always by the
Commissioner in the context of a motion to dismiss. Although petitioners always
have the burden of proving that we have jurisdiction in response to such a motion,
we should generally find that where the Commissioner indicates in support of his
motion that he has not examined or has not completed his examination of a
taxpayer’s return, it is logically impossible for the taxpayer to carry this burden.
See, e.g., Page v. Commissioner,
[13] For the sake of completeness, I believe petitioner carried this burden by attaching to his petition, per Rule 34(b)(8), a copy of the valid notice of deficiency that he received.
[1] See Miles Prod. Co. v. Commissioner,
[1] (...continued)
taxpayer); Burford v. Commissioner,
[2] While the notice in this case related to a refundable tax credit, the precedent here will extend to notices issued to increase tax liabilities. Some taxpayers receiving those notices will petition the Court. Their ticket to the Tax Court will also be a ticket to the gallows. Other taxpayers will not file petitions and may ultimately seek relief (i.e., pursuant to sec. 6320 or 6330) when the IRS attempts to collect. If we invalidate $0 deficiency notices, taxpayers would typically prevail in collection proceedings. Instead, our determination of whether the taxpayers were misled will now determine their fate.
[1] Section 6213(a) provides: “Within 90 days * * * after the notice of deficiency authorized in section 6212 is mailed * * *, the taxpayer may file a petition with the Tax Court for a redetermination of the deficiency.”
[2] Judge Ashford’s concurring opinion states that the notice required by sections 6212(a) and 6213(a) “is only that the Commissioner has determined a deficiency”. See Ashford op. p. 28. By this reasoning, the statutes would apparently be satisfied by a letter that stated: “We determined that there is a deficiency in your income tax, but we are not disclosing to you the amount of that deficiency.” (Such a letter would seem to give notice not of a “deficiency” (which is an “amount”) but instead of a determination. In fact, section 6212(a) provides: “If the Secretary determines that there is a deficiency in respect of any tax * * * he (continued...)
[2] (...continued) is authorized to send notice of such deficiency to the taxpayer”. (Emphasis added.) That is, the statute does not provide for a “notice of such determination”.) However, we need not reach that hypothetical circumstance, since the letter at issue here does state an amount, viz., zero, which by definition is not a deficiency. Judge Ashford acknowledges that a purported notice of deficiency “might” be undone if it contained “a clearly contradictory statement”, see Ashford op. note 10; but nothing could more clearly contradict a notice of a “deficiency” than a statement that the amount is zero.
[3] Where a disallowance does not give rise to a deficiency, the Tax Court
lacks jurisdiction. See Herbst Dep’t Store v. Commissioner,
