This case is before us on appeal from a judgment of the Tax Court. In the proceeding below, the Tax Court held that Appellee, the Estate of Frank Branson,
The Commissioner of Internal Revenue (“Commissioner”) appeals the Tax Court’s application of equitable recoupment to reduce the estate tax deficiency. The Commissioner argues, first, that the Tax Court has no jurisdiction to apply equitable re-coupment. In the alternative, the Commissioner contends that equitable recoupment is not available on the facts of this case.
We hold that the Tax Court did not exceed its limited jurisdictional grant when it considered the affirmative defense of equitable recoupment. We also affirm the Tax Court’s application of that doctrine in this case.
FACTS
Frank Branson (“Decedent”) died in November 1991. His daughter, Mary M. March, was named the executor and residuary beneficiary of his estate. As such, she assumed full individual liability for any additional taxes owed by the estate.
The estate contained stock in two separate closely held corporations (“Willits Stock” and “Savings Stock”). On the estate tax return, filed in 1992, the Willits stock was valued at $485 per share and the Savings stock at $181.50 per share. The executor was authorized to sell a certain portion of this stock (500 shares of Willits stock and 2800 shares of Savings stock) in order to pay applicable estate taxes. The Willits Stock sold for $850 per share and the Savings Stock sold for $335 per share, considerably higher than their reported value.
Under 26 U.S.C. § 1014(a)(1), the declared value of the stock was used as a basis for determining the gain from them sale. 1 Consistent with this statutory requirement, the difference between the stock’s reported value and its sale value (approximately $600,000) was reported as a capital gain on the estate tax return. The estate did not pay taxes on this gain, but rather distributed it immediately to March, the residuary beneficiary. March then declared this money as a capital gain on her 1992 income tax return. Under § 1014, March was also required to use the stock value declared on the estate tax return for the purpose of determining her capital gain from the sale. Consequently, she declared a capital gain of approximately $600,000, and paid the taxes due.
In 1995, the Commissioner determined a deficiency on Appellee’s estate tax return. The basis of this deficiency was the Commissioner’s conclusion that the Willits and Savings stocks were worth substantially more than the estate declared. After Ap-pellee contested the Commissioner’s notice of deficiency, the Tax Court concluded that the Willits Stock was worth $626 per share and the Savings Stock was worth $276 per share. The revaluation of the stock led to an estate tax deficiency. Since, pursuant to § 1014, the same valuation was used to determine March’s 1992 income tax liability, it necessarily followed that March had overpaid her income taxes in 1992. 2
March, however, failed to file a refund claim for her 1992 income tax overpayment within the applicable limitations period. Instead, she asked that her income tax overpayment be credited against the estate tax deficiency adjudicated in the Tax Court. The Tax Court agreed and this appeal followed.
I
Standard of Review
Whether the Tax Court has authority to apply the doctrine of equitable recoupment is a jurisdictional determination subject to de novo review.
I & O Pub. Co. Inc. v. Comm’r,
II
Jurisdiction
In deciding whether the Tax Court has jurisdiction to apply the doe-trine of equitable recoupment in this circumstance, we start by stating certain principles that are well-established and not in dispute. First, the Tax Court, like any federal court, is a court of limited jurisdiction. “Federal courts ... possess only that power authorized by Constitution and statute.”
Kokkonen v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am.,
Within that sphere, however, “the Tax Court exercises its judicial power in much the same way as the federal district courts exercise theirs.”
Freytag v. Comm’r,
Having set forth that which is not in dispute, we come to the issue at the heart of this appeal. Does the Tax Court’s statutory grant of authority prevent it from applying the equitable doctrine of recoupment when redetermining an estate tax deficiency? We find the answer to be “no.” Consequently, we hold that where, as here, the Tax Court has jurisdiction to redetermine an estate tax deficiency, it may exercise its equitable powers to recoup an income tax overpayment from the same tax year if all the criteria for an equitable recoupment claim are otherwise satisfied.
We first proceed to a brief description of the principles and purposes underlying the doctrine of equitable recoupment. We then examine the statutory authority delimiting the Tax Court’s jurisdiction. Finding no conflict between the two, we affirm the Tax Court’s exercise of jurisdiction and proceed to determine whether recoupment was properly granted on the facts of this case.
A. Equitable Recoupment
Generally, a party who has paid a tax that was not owed may sue for a refund under 26 U.S.C. § 6511. Refund suits, however, are subject to a strict statute of limitations. 26 U.S.C. § 6511(b)(1); § 6512(b)(3) (no credit or refund is allowed if taxpayer fails to file a refund claim or seek a redetermination in Tax Court within three years of when return was filed);
See also, Comm’r v. Lundy,
Equitable recoupment arises when a single “transaction, item or taxable event” is subject to two inconsistent taxes.
United States v. Dalm,
Because equitable recoupment has the potential to completely override the statute of limitations, the party raising an equitable recoupment claim must satisfy several criteria. First, the same “transaction, item or taxable event” must be subject to two taxes. Second, the taxes must be inconsistent in that the Tax Code authorizes only a single tax.
See Bull,
Finally, the court in which the recoupment claim is brought must independently have jurisdiction to adjudicate the claim. Equitable recoupment cannot be the “sole basis of jurisdiction.”
Dalm,
B. Tax Court Jurisdiction
In the present case, the Tax Court had jurisdiction to determine the estate tax deficiency. Its jurisdiction was invoked in the usual way contemplated by the Tax Code. First, the taxpayer estimated the value of closely held stock owned by the estate. This estimated value was included in the corpus of the estate and estate taxes were calculated based on the total value of the estate. A portion of the stock was then sold and the proceeds were used to pay taxes. The difference between the estimated value and the sale value of the stock was declared as a capital gain and distributed to March, the residuary beneficiary. The Commissioner, upon examination of the estate tax return, determined a deficiency and sent notice of such to the taxpayer pursuant to 26 U.S.C. § 6212. The taxpayer timely petitioned for redetermination of that deficiency in the Tax Court under 26 U.S.C. § 6213. Jurisdiction over the estate tax deficiency was therefore proper.
In redetermining the estate tax deficiency over which it had jurisdiction, the Tax Court was required to value the closed corporation stocks held by the estate. The valuation of those stocks affected not only the tax liability of the estate, but also the tax liability of the estate’s beneficiary to whom the gain from the stock sale was distributed. The Tax Court’s single determination that the stocks were undervalued led inexorably to the conclusion that Ap-pellee had both underpaid its estate taxes and overpaid its income taxes. The two taxes were inextricably intertwined because they were both based on the valuation of the same asset — the Willits and Savings stock.
The estate, consequently, raised the undisputed fact of the income tax overpayment as an affirmative defense to the finding of an estate tax deficiency. The Tax Court, having original jurisdiction to redetermine the estate tax deficiency, concluded that it also had jurisdiction to give effect to this affirmative defense and reduce the judgment accordingly. The Tax Court viewed its actions as only “considering such facts with relation to the share value included in both corpus and income so that this item may be examined in all its aspects, as is necessary to correctly redetermine the amount of the estate tax deficiency now before us.”
See Naftel v. Comm’r,
If this case had arisen in the district court, which shares with the Tax Court jurisdiction over federal tax cases, there is no question that Appellee could have raised the defense of equitable recoupment to reduce the estate tax deficiency.
Dalm,
As noted above, the Tax Court, within its specialized jurisdiction, “operates pretty indistinguishably from a federal district court.”
Flight Attendants Against UAL Offset (FAAUO) v. Comm’r,
More than simply “anomalous,” such a distinction would, in practice, work substantial prejudice against less affluent taxpayers. This is so because, although a taxpayer has a choice of fora in which he or she may dispute a notice of deficiency, only in the Tax Court may the taxpayer contest the Commissioner’s determination without first paying the amount in dispute.
Flora v. United States,
A limitation on the equitable doctrines available in the Tax Court would undermine both the taxpayer’s ability to choose to litigate in the Tax Court and the government’s effort to channel litigation into this forum. In
Bokum v. Comm’r,
If the Tax Court lacked authority to entertain a claim of equitable estoppel, taxpayers with such a claim would no longer have a choice of fora for their tax issues. They would effectively be forced to pay their taxes and sue for a refund, submitting all of their claims to the district courts.... Thus, taxpayers would essentially be denied the right to challenge deficiencies in the Tax Court if they wanted to assert an equitable es-toppel claim. This would be an unfair choice to pose to taxpayers, and would undermine the purpose of the Tax Court. We therefore conclude that the Tax Court did have jurisdiction over the Bokums’ equitable estoppel claim.
Bokum,
We recognize, of course, that neither anomalous nor unfair results can negate express statutory directives.
Lundy,
1. Statutory Provisions
For the proposition that the Tax Court lacks jurisdiction to consider an equitable recoupment defense, the Commissioner directs us to Sections 6214(b)
3
and 6512(b)
4
of the Tax Code. The Commissioner argues that, taken together, these sections “explicitly confer on the Tax Court jurisdiction to do no more than determine the amount of the deficiency before it.”
Mueller v. Comm’r,
In carrying out this function, the Commissioner argues, the Tax Court may not determine a deficiency or overpayment for any tax not presented by an IRS notice of deficiency and disputed by the taxpayer. Because an equitable recoupment defense inherently requires the Tax Court to determine that the time-barred tax was overpaid, §§ 6214(b) and 6512(b) put equitable recoupment beyond the jurisdiction of the Tax Court.
We disagree with the Commissioner’s assessment of these statutory provisions and find nothing in the cited statutes that prevents the Tax Court from considering
Nor does Section 6512(b) prevent the Tax Court from using Appellee’s income tax overpayment to reduce its estate tax deficiency. That section of the Code provides that when the Tax Court has jurisdiction to determine a deficiency, it also has jurisdiction to determine an “overpayment of income tax for the same taxable year” and order that any overpayment be “credited or refunded to the taxpayer.” 26 U.S.C. § 6512(b)(1). In other words, where the jurisdiction of the Tax Court is properly invoked (as it was here), Section 6512(b) gives the Tax Court exclusive jurisdiction to determine not only whether the “deficiency was correct, but also whether a taxpayer’s claim that he has overpaid is correct.”
Naftel,
We have previously observed that § 6512(b) (read together with the exclusivity provisions of the code,
See
26 U.S.C. 7422(e)) gives the Tax Court “jurisdiction to decide the entire gamut of possible issues that [control] the determination of the amount of tax liability for the year in question.”
Russell v. United States,
After an examination of the relevant sections of the Tax Code, “[w]e are given no reason to suppose that statutes of limitations are intended to be administered differently in the Tax Court than in the federal district courts....”
FAAUO,
We also reject the Commissioner’s contention that our reading of the Tax Code is foreclosed by the Supreme Court’s decision in
Commissioner v. Gooch Milling & Elevator Co.,
The Court held that the Board of Tax Appeals had no jurisdiction to credit the 1935 overpayment against the 1936 deficiency. In reaching this conclusion, the Court relied primarily on Section 272(g) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939 (later amended and redesignated as Section 6214(b) of the present Code). The Court held that the legislative grant of jurisdiction presently codified in Section 6214(b) “confined [the Board] to a determination of the amount of deficiency or overpayment for the particular tax year as to which the Commissioner determines a deficiency and as to which the taxpayer seeks a review of the deficiency assessment.” Id. That section specifically prohibited the Board from determining whether a tax for a previous tax year had been overpaid. Because Respondent’s equitable recoupment defense “necessarily involved a determination of whether there was an overpayment during the 1935 fiscal year,” the Board was without jurisdiction to give effect to this defense. Id.
The Commissioner argues that
Gooch Milling
stands for the broad proposition that the Tax Court is without jurisdiction to apply the doctrine of equitable recoupment. Just as the Board of Tax Appeals
Gooch Milling
is distinguishable from the present appeal for several reasons. First,
Gooch Milling
involved an appeal from the Board of Tax Appeals, an administrative agency of the executive branch, rather than the Tax Court, an Article I court. The Tax Court’s authority to apply equitable doctrines,
see supra,
differentiates it “from its predecessor, the Board of Tax Appeals, which was held not to be a court and to have no equitable powers.”
Toscano v. Comm’r,
These differences are significant because, as noted above, 26 U.S.C. § 6214(b) only prohibits the Tax Court from determining whether taxes in other years have been overpaid or underpaid. It says nothing about determining overpayments of other taxes from the same year. “A careful reading of the
Gooch Milling
opinion, and of the relevant statute ... show[s] that it actually considered only the question of recoupment based on an overpayment in a year other than the year in dispute.”
Dalm,
Ill
Recoupment
Having concluded that the Tax Court had jurisdiction to consider an equitable recoupment defense, we must also determine whether the Tax Court erred in using March’s income tax overpayment to satisfy the estate tax deficiency in this case. As noted above, a party raising an equitable recoupment defense must satisfy four criteria. 7 In the present case, the Commissioner concedes that refund of the income tax overpayment is time-barred, and, further concedes that there is an identity of interest between the estate’s beneficiary and the estate subject to the estate tax deficiency. The Commissioner argues, however, that the two taxes do not satisfy the “same transaction” test and, therefore, were not treated inconsistently under the Code.
We hold that the Tax Court properly applied the doctrine in this case.
A. Same “transaction, item or taxable event”
In arguing that the estate tax and income tax at issue in this appeal were not a single transaction, the Commissioner relies on
Rothensies v. Elec. Storage Battery Co.,
Subsequent to
Rothensies,
the Fourth Circuit decided
United States v. Herring,
In
Bowcut,
we affirmed the district court’s grant of equitable recoupment in circumstances identical to those faced by the Fourth Circuit in
Herring.
Our decision in
Bowcut
did not directly address whether the two taxes satisfied the single transaction test, but we did note that the taxpayer was “seeking to recover the over-assessment of estate tax by recoupment from the very fund which, taken from the estate, had brought about the fact of over-assessment.”
Bowcut, 287
F.2d at 656. Thus, although we were not “called upon to discuss or pass judgment on [the] question” whether the two taxes constituted a single transaction, we affirmed the district court, which had rejected the government’s argument that the single transaction test was not met.
Bowcut,
The Commissioner understandably argues that
Herring
and
Bowcut
“represent the outer limit to which the ‘single transaction’ prerequisite for equitable recoupment can be stretched.”
9
But the holdings of
Therefore, we hold that the “single transaction” prerequisite to equitable recoupment is satisfied where the same item (the closed corporation stock) is taxed as both the corpus of the estate and income to the beneficiary. The government should not be permitted to reap the benefit of the higher valuation when collecting the estate tax and, simultaneously, reap the benefit of the lower valuation when collecting the beneficiary’s income tax.
This holding is consistent with the decisions of other circuits. In
O’Brien v. United States,
However, in dicta, the court noted that “the ‘single transaction’ test ... appears to be satisfied on these facts ... [because] inconsistent treatment of the same stock (in terms of valuation) has directly resulted in the overpayment of tax by the beneficiaries.”
Id.
at 1051 n. 16;
See also Boyle,
In short, the weight of Circuit court case law (and the IRS’s own rulings) support a finding that the estate’s tax deficiency and the beneficiary’s income tax overpayment were a single transaction for equitable re-coupment purposes. The deficiency and overpayment resulted from separate valuations of a single item (the Willits and Savings stock). The declared value of the item was increased in a Tax Court proceeding, resulting in an estate tax deficiency. The lower, erroneous value, however, had also been used (as required by 26 U.S.C. § 1014) to determine Appellee’s income tax liability. The interrelationship between the taxes is such that the inconsistent treatment of the same funds automatically resulted in double taxation and an unjust windfall to the government.
B. Appellee’s Lack of Diligence
Appellee received notice of the estate tax deficiency in March 1995. The statute of limitations for a refund of March’s income tax did not expire until April 1996. Upon receipt of the notice of deficiency, March still had thirteen months to file a protective claim for a refund, yet she failed to take advantage of this opportunity. The Commissioner argues that March’s lack of diligence in pursuing the refund claim renders her undeserving of the equitable remedy of recoupment.
A similar argument was raised by the government in
United States v. Bowcut,
Recognizing that Bull and Bowcut are controlling on this point, the Commissioner argues that Appellee’s negligence in this case was more egregious than previous taxpayers who have successfully raised an equitable recoupment defense. Appellee disputes this point. Resolution of this question, however, does not depend on whether Appellee was more or less negligent than previous taxpayers.
Even under a narrow reading of
Boiucut,
a taxpayer who was on notice of a possible overpayment five weeks before the expiration of the statute of limitations, yet failed to file a timely claim, could recoup that overpayment from an income tax deficiency. We find no principled distinction between
Bowcut
and the facts of the present case. It is true that the taxpayer here had thirteen months, rather than five weeks, to file a protective claim for a refund. However, we are unable to divine when a taxpayer’s lack of diligence would “cross the line” from excusable to legally significant. The Commissioner offers no judicially cog
IY
Conclusion
The Tax Court properly considered and correctly applied the doctrine of equitable recoupment in this case. The Tax Court has the authority to apply equitable doctrines in cases subject to its jurisdiction. As the estate tax deficiency was properly before that court, it was required to consider that deficiency in its totality. This required consideration of the affirmative defense of equitable recoupment. No provision of the Tax Code prevents the Tax Court from exercising this power. In addition, the estate satisfied all the criteria necessary to recoup its time barred overpayment from the adjudicated estate tax deficiency.
The judgment of the Tax Court is affirmed.
Notes
. 26 U.S.C. § 1014(a)(1) provides that "the basis of property in the hands of a person acquiring the property from a decedent or to whom the property passes from a decedent shall ... be the fair market value of the property at the date of the decedent's death.”
. The capital gain reported on March's income tax was determined by subtracting the
. 26 U.S.C. § 6214 Determination by the Tax Court
(b) Jurisdiction over other years and quarters. The Tax Court in redetermining a deficiency of income tax for any taxable year or of gift tax for any calendar year or calendar quarter shall consider such facts with relation to the taxes for other years or calendar quarters as may be necessary correctly to redetermine the amount of such deficiency, but in so doing shall have no jurisdiction to determine whether or not the tax for any other year or calendar quarter has been overpaid or underpaid.
. 26 U.S.C. § 6512 Limitations in case of petition to Tax Court
(b) Overpayment determined by Tax Court. (1) Jurisdiction to determine.... [I]f the Tax Court finds that there is no deficiency and further finds that the taxpayer has made an overpayment of income tax for the same taxable year, of gift tax for the same calendar year or calendar quarter, of estate tax in respect of the taxable estate of the same decedent, or of tax imposed by chapter 41, 42, 43, or 44 with respect to any act (or failure to act) to which such petition relates, in respect of which the Secretary determined the deficiency, or finds that there is a deficiency but that the taxpayer has made an overpayment of such tax, the Tax Court shall have jurisdiction to determine the amount of such overpayment, and such amount shall, when the decision of the Tax Court has become final, be credited or refunded to the taxpayer.
. Our reading of the relevant jurisdictional statutes differs somewhat from the Sixth Circuit’s reading of the same provisions. In
Estate of Mueller v. Comm’r, supra,
the Sixth Circuit held that the Tax Court does not have jurisdiction to consider a taxpayer’s equitable recoupment claim. That court read §§ 6214(b) and 6512(b) as restricting the Tax Court’s jurisdiction to recoup an overpayment to situations where "the overpayment concerns the same kind of tax and, as to income and gift taxes, only if it was paid in the same year."
Mueller,
We also note, however, that in
Mueller
the taxpayer sought recoupment of an income tax overpayment that was made in a different tax year from the estate tax deficiency before the Tax Court.
Id.
at 302 (redetermination of value of stock created an overpayment "in a previous year”). We have no occasion to pass upon the question whether the Tax Court would have jurisdiction to consider an equita
. In
Gooch Milling,
the taxpayer had originally reported a net loss for tire 1936 tax year. However, when the Commissioner adjusted the value of the company's 1936 opening inventory (by reducing its value by $237,104.33), respondent showed a net income of $93,828.83 with a tax liability of $14,951.85.
Gooch Milling & Elevator Co. v. Comm’r,
This adjustment in the valuation of the inventory also affected respondent’s 1935 tax liability because Gooch Milling's 1936 opening inventory was identical to its 1935 closing inventory. "The inventory serves a double purpose. It fixes stock on hand at the end of one fiscal year and at the same time determines the same fact for the beginning of the ensuing year.” Id. at 135. The valuations of the two should have been the same.
Applying the $237,104.33 reduction to the 1935 closing inventory would have resulted in a reduced income for the 1935 tax year and a consequent reduction in Gooch Milling’s 1935 tax burden. Because Gooch Milling had already paid its 1935 taxes based on the erroneous inventory valuation (and, consequently, based on an inflated income determination), it had overpaid its income taxes for that year. "The adjustment of the beginning inventory for the 1936 taxable year automatically changed the 1935 closing inventory and established the error in the basis for computing the 1935 tax.” Id. at 134; Id. at 135 ("The same fact that established a deficiency for the fiscal year 1936 establishes an overpayment for the fiscal year 1935....").
. See supra Section III(A). Equitable recoupment arises when 1) the same “transaction, item or taxable event” is subject to two taxes; 2) the taxes are inconsistent; 3) refund of the erroneous tax is lime-barred and; 4) there is an "identity of interest” between the party who paid the erroneous tax and the party seeking recoupment.
.
Bowcut,
furthermore, has been widely interpreted as approving the "single transaction” test first articulated in
Herring. Cf. Wilmington Trust Co. v. United States,
. The Commissioner has nevertheless adopted the
Herring/Bowcut
holdings in its own administrative procedures. Under Rev. Rul.
This ruling resulted from the Commissioner’s interpretation of Herring, Bowcut and other Circuit Court decisions. "Based on the availability of such legal defense, it would be proper for the taxpayer to claim in a proceeding before the Internal Revenue Service appropriate reduction in the deficiency, rather than be required to assert the claim of equitable recoupment in the Federal courts.” Rev. Rui. 71-56. This rule, moreover, has been applied broadly to permit recoupment of gift taxes from estate taxes, income taxes from excise taxes, and income taxes from estate taxes where the relation between the taxes is statutorily mandated. Arthur W. Andrews, Modern-Day Equitable Recoupment and the “Two Tax Effect": Avoidance of the Statutes of Limitation in Federal Tax Controversies, 28 Ariz. L.Rev. 595, 637 (1986) (citing cases decided under Rev. Rul. 71-56).
