OPINION
“Truth needs no disguise.”
We must decide whether the Tax Court’s finding of a pattern of government misconduct amounts to a fraud on the court and, if so, whether such a fraud requires a showing of prejudice to justify relief. We conclude that the misconduct, including its persistence and concealment, did indeed amount to a fraud on the court. Consistent with Supreme Court authority and the law of this Circuit, we hold that no showing of prejudice is required and, for the reasons that follow, we reverse the Tax Court determination that these taxpayers are not entitled to relief.
Factual Background & Procedural History
During the 1970s and 1980s, a group of individual taxpayers participated in an investment program and tax shelter designed and administered by Honolulu businessman Henry Kersting (“Kersting”). The investments, which came to bear Kersting’s name, consisted of a somewhat complicated program in which participants purchased stock with loans from Kersting-controlled entities financed by two layers of promissory notes.
In a Tax Court action brought by Kerst-ing on their behalf, program participants sought a redetermination of the deficiencies. Recognizing that the sheer number of affected taxpayers (approximately 1,800) made it impractical to try each case individually, the parties agreed to employ a “test case” approach to determine liability. To facilitate this process, the bulk of affected taxpayers signed stipulations (“piggyback agreements”) agreeing to be bound by the decision of a test case trial involving representative taxpayers. The agreed-upon process provided that two representatives would be chosen by the taxpayers’ attorneys and five by IRS attorneys. Approximately 1,300 taxpayers, some 500 already having settled, signed on to the piggyback agreements.
The test cases proceeded to a consolidated one-month trial before the Tax Court sitting in Honolulu. The Tax Court ultimately concluded that the taxpayers were
As it turns out, that which the Tax Court and other participants believed to be a legitimate, representative proceeding, binding on the test case petitioners and all those waiting in the wings, was anything but. Some time prior to the test case trial, Kenneth W. McWade (“McWade”), the IRS attorney trying the case, and William A. Sims (“Sims”), the IRS attorney with supervisory authority over it, had entered into secret settlement agreements with Thompson and another test ease petitioner, John R. Cravens (“Cravens”). Cravens was one of the taxpayer-selected test case representatives, chosen by taxpayer counsel because his payment of capital gains taxes upon exiting the Kersting investment program made him a particularly good representative.
A condition of their settlements required Thompson and Cravens to remain test case petitioners. McWade also convinced Cravens, who mistakenly believed his liability was finalized by the settlement, to proceed pro se. With respect to Thompson,
The deception continued with a coverup, which was carefully designed to prevent the Tax Court and other taxpayers from learning of the secret settlement agreements. At Kersting’s deposition, which McWade attended, Kersting’s lawyer objected to the presence of Thompson’s attorney because of rumors that Thompson was attempting to settle. Knowing that Thompson had, in fact, already settled, McWade remained silent. McWade then misled the Tax Court by failing to disclose the settlement when he moved to set aside the Thompson piggyback agreement, a pre-trial motion necessary to ensure Thompson’s status as a test case petitioner. Deceptive silence matured into overt misconduct when, during the course of the test case trial, it became apparent that Thompson was going to testify about his settlement. McWade quickly shifted his questions to unrelated matters.
The Tax Court’s test case determination left the remaining taxpayers — those who had signed on to the piggyback agreements — subject to judgment on the same adverse terms. This is when the McWade-Sims house of cards began to collapse. Thompson and Cravens, who had sat silent while the Tax Court entered judgment against them, pressured McWade and Sims to live up to the terms of their secret settlement agreements. It was now clear that the IRS would have to move to set aside the Thompson and Cravens judgments; McWade and Sims were forced to reveal the secret settlements necessitating the Tax Court’s entry of “revised” judgments in favor of Thompson and Cravens.
After being asked to approve the set aside motions, senior IRS officials determined that McWade and Sims had engaged in active misconduct and informed the Tax Court of the secret settlements,
On remand, the Tax Court conducted the mandated evidentiary hearing. Incredibly, McWade’s pattern of deception continued with his persistent denial that the Thompson settlement was a vehicle for paying Thompson’s attorneys’ fees and his testimony that the Thompson settlement was attributable to a separate transaction. After making extensive findings concerning the government’s misconduct, the Tax Court surprisingly concluded that what had occurred was harmless error. While the bulk of the decision from the original test case proceeding was reinstated, the Tax Court did relieve the taxpayers of that portion of the original judgment which imposed increased interest penalties for negligence and “tax motivated transactions” and imposed costs and attorneys’ fees on
Standard of Review
We review the Tax Court’s refusal to grant a motion vacating a judgment on the basis of fraud on the court for abuse of discretion, Abatti v. Comm’r,
Discussion
Courts possess the inherent power to vacate or amend a judgment obtained by fraud on the court, Toscano v. CIR,
Here, the factual findings of the Tax Court support the conclusion that a fraud, plainly designed to corrupt the legitimacy of the truth-seeking process, was perpetrated on the trial court by McWade and Sims. The Tax Court, however, applied the wrong law when it imposed a requirement that taxpayers show prejudice as a result of the misconduct. Dixon v. Comm’r,
Prejudice is not an element of fraud on the court. Hazel-Atlas,
As the Supreme Court observed more than fifty years ago, “[t]ruth needs no disguise.” Hazel-Atlas,
Remedy
We have the inherent power to vacate the judgment of the Tax Court, fashion an appropriate remedy, Chambers v. NASCO, Inc.,
Here, it plainly would be unjust to remand for a new, third trial. The IRS had an opportunity to present its case fairly and properly. Instead its lawyers intentionally defrauded the Tax Court. The Tax Court had two opportunities to equitably resolve this situation and failed. Enormous amounts of time and judicial resources have been wasted. In addition, the IRS has done little to punish the misconduct
Conversely, we will not enter judgment eradicating all tax liability of these taxpayers. Such an extreme sanction, while within the court’s power, is not warranted under these facts. See Chambers,
The judgment of the Tax Court is reversed with directions to set aside the decision in Dixon v. Comm’r,
REVERSED AND REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS.
Notes
. Justice Hugo Black in Hazel-Atlas Glass Co. v. Hartford-Empire Co.,
. The Kersting investment consisted of the following: (i) corporate stock or stock subscription rights or investment certificates purchased by a loan from a Kersting company (a "Primary Note”); (ii) prepayment of interest on the Primary Note financed by a secondary or “leverage” note from another Kersting entity at a lower interest rate than the Primary Note; (iii) principal on the Primary Note paid by surrender of the stock or other underlying asset; and (iv) interest on the Primary Note paid by a distribution from the corporation whose stock was purchased with the Primary Note. Dixon v. Comm'r,
.Deductions were claimed pursuant to 26 U.S.C. § 163.
. Thompson had an ongoing dispute with Kersting over the validity of the investment certificates. Specifically, Kersting had threatened to initiate collection proceedings against Thompson. Therefore, Thompson had an interest in seeing that the certificates of investment were declared invalid and unenforceable. DeCastro, Thompson’s attorney, used the test case proceeding to elicit testimony from Thompson regarding the sham nature of the notes in order to bolster Thompson’s position in any subsequent litigation with Kerst-ing.
. In the Tax Court proceedings on remand, Judge Beghe pointed to the following exchange as evidence of this deception:
Mr. Thompson: The procedure went through a tax firm in Los Angeles known as Loeb & Loeb, and I wound up with the DeCastro Law Corporation by way of their direction, and made several discoveries that were startling to me. And of course, I settled. To be quite honest, I had to get out of this. I was not going to spend my life—
Mr. McWade: Well, let me—
Mr. Thompson: — doing all this.
Mr. McWade: Let me stop you here for a moment.
Mr. Thompson: Okay. I’m sorry. I beg your pardon.
Mr. McWade: Mr. Thompson, can you tell me: have we been successful in getting the lien removed from your house?
.Alexander was then embroiled in a legal battle with Kersting involving more than $4 million. Alexander’s animus towards Kerst-ing was made clear in a letter to the IRS ("When the Nazi knows that 1400 of his clients are going to be clobbered and that he will have the Criminal Investigative Division of the IRS coming down on him, I think he will be inclined to pay me my money.”).
. When one of the attorneys for the taxpayers asked Alexander if McWade had discussed a reduction of Alexander's tax deficiency in exchange for his testimony, Alexander responded, "Specifically, no.” McWade failed to correct this patently false statement.
. As the Tax Court proceeding on remand revealed, this disclosure was anything but complete, excluding, for example, the arrangement to "pay” (through a reduction in disallowed deductions) $60,000 to Thompson for his attorney fees.
. The Seventh Circuit reached a contrary decision in Drobny v. Commissioner,
. McWade and Sims were both suspended for two weeks without pay and transferred out of the Honolulu division. Sims accepted this censure and was transferred to the San Francisco Regional Counsel Office, where he was assigned nonsupervisory duties. McWade retired from the IRS, choosing not to accept the terms of the proposed disciplinary action but keeping the $1,000 bonus earlier paid him for his performance in the original Tax Court proceedings. We note that counsel for the Hongsermeier test case petitioners recently filed a grievance against McWade and Sims with the attorneys’ respective Bars.
. We leave to the Tax Court's discretion the fashioning of such judgments which, to the extent possible and practicable, should put these taxpayers in the same position as provided for in the Thompson settlement.
. This is the judgment entered following the original Tax Court proceeding, which bound the remaining "piggyback” taxpayers. This judgment was reinstated, with modification, following the Tax Court proceeding on remand. Dixon v. Comm’r,
