DEL-CO WESTERN, A UTAH CORPORATION, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket No. 3414-14L.
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
Filed August 5, 2015.
T.C. Memo. 2015-142
LAUBER, Judge
Mark Hale Howard, for respondent.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
LAUBER, Judge: In this collection due process (CDP) case, petitioner timely sought review pursuant to
Background
JaNean Del‘Andrae served as the secretary and treasurer of petitioner, Del-Co Western (Del-Co or petitioner), and is married to Del-Co‘s principal shareholder. On February 16, 2011, she was indicted in the U.S. District Court for the District of Utah (District Court) on three counts of tax evasion. See
In connection with her plea, Del‘Andrae agreed to pay restitution of $88,152.50 to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) on account of Del-Co‘s 2004 and 2005 tax liabilities. Of this sum she agreed that $49,845.37 was payable on account of Del-Co‘s 2004 tax liability and that $38,307.13 was payable on account
On July 11, 2012, the District Court entered judgment against Del‘Andrae, ordering her to pay total restitution of $136,509.50. This amount comprised $88,152.50 on account of Del-Co‘s 2004 and 2005 tax liabilities, as set forth above, plus $48,357 of restitution for evasion of her 2005 joint income tax liability. Del‘Andrae wrote a check for $136,509.50, dated July 10, 2012, and drawn on Del-Co‘s bank account, in payment of the restitution ordered by the District Court.
On March 25, 2011, the IRS issued Del-Co a notice of deficiency for 2004, and Del-Co timely petitioned this Court. On February 14, 2013, the Court entered a stipulated decision determining against Del-Co for 2004 a deficiency of $70,021 and penalties of $44,145, for a total liability of $114,166. Del-Co W. v. Commissioner, T.C. Dkt. No. 13417-11 (Feb. 14, 2013). When Del-Co failed to pay this liability after notice and demand, the IRS sent Del-Co a Final Notice of Intent to Levy and Notice of Your Right to a Hearing. Del-Co timely requested a CDP hearing, stating the following reason as the basis for its hearing request:
The taxpayer paid $136,509.50 on 7/10/12 to the * * * [District Court] to settle a matter with IRS CID. * * * This payment needs to be applied and for some reason has not been. Many attempts have been made to find the payment in the IRS system. We do know that the check has been cashed. The documentation on the check is
attached. So no lien, levy or collection effort should continue against the taxpayer.
A CDP hearing was held, but petitioner was unable to satisfy the settlement officer (SO) that any portion of its $114,166 tax liability for 2004 had been paid. Petitioner raised no other issues. On February 7, 2014, the IRS issued Del-Co a notice of determination sustaining the levy. Del-Co timely petitioned this Court.
After this CDP case was docketed, respondent credited $49,845.37 to petitioner‘s 2004 account. This was the full amount of the credit available from the restitution payment that Del‘Andrae had made on behalf of Del-Co for 2004. Respondent contends that petitioner has now received the full relief it requested for 2004, the sole tax year at issue in this case, and hence that there is no remaining controversy to sustain the Court‘s jurisdiction.
Petitioner opposes the motion to dismiss, contending that the $38,307.13 restitution payment that Del‘Andrae made on behalf of Del-Co for 2005 should also be applied toward Del-Co‘s liability for 2004. Petitioner bases this contention on the assertion that the
Discussion
Respondent agrees that the SO erred in neglecting to credit petitioner‘s 2004 account with the $49,845.37 restitution payment that Del‘Andrae made on its behalf for 2004. Respondent has now rectified this error by crediting Del-Co‘s 2004 account with the full amount of that restitution payment. Not satisfied with this relief, petitioner contends that the IRS should also credit its 2004 account with the $38,307.13 restitution payment that Del‘Andrae made on its behalf for 2005. Because there is a genuine controversy between the parties on this latter issue, this case is not moot.
The gravamen of respondent‘s motion is that this Court lacks jurisdiction to consider the issue that petitioner wants us to decide, namely, its asserted entitlement to a credit from 2005 against its 2004 tax liability. We will accordingly recharacterize respondent‘s motion to dismiss as a Rule 121 motion for summary judgment on this jurisdictional question. Doing so will not prejudice petitioner, since all relevant facts are agreed and the dispositive question is a legal issue that petitioner fully addressed in responding to the motion. We conclude
Where (as here) there is no dispute as to the taxpayer‘s underlying tax liabilities, we review the IRS determination in a CDP case for abuse of discretion. Goza v. Commissioner, 114 T.C. 176, 182 (2000). An abuse of discretion exists when a determination is arbitrary, capricious, or without sound basis in fact or law. See Murphy v. Commissioner, 125 T.C. 301, 320 (2005), aff‘d, 469 F.3d 27 (1st Cir. 2006). In effect, petitioner contends that the SO abused her discretion in declining to credit its 2004 account with the $38,307.13 restitution payment that Del‘Andrae made toward its 2005 tax liability.2
In appropriate circumstances, we may determine in a CDP case whether a credit available from another tax year should be applied to the taxpayer‘s liability for the year before the Court (here, 2004). But we can do this only when a credit from another tax year indisputably exists; we do not have jurisdiction under sec-
An overpayment of a * * * [tax liability] that has been determined by the IRS or a court but has not been either refunded or applied to another liability may be an “available credit” that * * * could be taken into account in a CDP hearing to determine whether the tax at issue remains “unpaid” and whether the IRS can proceed with collection. But a mere claim of an overpayment is not an “available credit” but is instead a claim for a credit; and such a claim need not be resolved before the IRS can proceed with collection of the liability at issue. * * *
Neither the IRS nor any court has determined that Del-Co overpaid its tax for 2005. Indeed, the propositions upon which petitioner relies for its contention that the statute of limitations bars assessment of additional tax against it for 2005 seem highly debatable.3 In any event, Del-Co does not now have an “available credit” for 2005 that can be taken into account in determining the extent to which its tax liability for 2004 remains unpaid. At most, Del‘Andrae‘s restitution payment of $38,307.13 toward Del-Co‘s 2005 tax liability has given Del-Co a “claim for a credit” for 2005. Weber, 138 T.C. at 372. Such a claim “need not be re-
Petitioner received all of the relief to which it was entitled for 2004 when respondent credited its 2004 account with the $49,845.37 of restitution that Del‘Andrae paid on account of its 2004 tax liability.4 This leaves Del-Co with an unpaid liability in excess of $64,320 for 2004 that respondent may properly seek to collect by means of levy. The only issue remaining in the case is petitioner‘s claim of an overpayment credit from 2005. But because Del-Co does not have an “available credit” from 2005 that could be applied to its 2004 tax liability, we lack jurisdiction to consider its overpayment claim. See Burt v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2013-140; Precision Prosthetic v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2013-110. We will accordingly grant summary judgment in respondent‘s favor on this question.5
An appropriate order and decision will be entered.
